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og. Bandos s. 1964 (Negatiw – Bandola by Witraż), bred by SK Janów Podlaski, sire line Ibrahim db. imp. 1907 to Antonin, female family of Mlecha or.ar. imp. 1845 to Jarczowce

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An outstanding sire, father of 128 offspring in Poland. Sam ran below average (Wp 0,87), but the relative genetic value (RGV) of his offspring in relation to their peers in terms of racing prowess was 437,10 - the highest among the 65 tested stallions. For 13 years he maintained a constant advantage of the largest group of offspring in relation to the largest peer group in terms of this feature.

Most of his offspring combined bravery and beauty - they won eight championships and four reserve champions of the Polish National Arabian Horse Shows, and in 8 years, stallions or mares by Bandos were in the top five in terms of the success rate.

Among them was the Derby winner Kabaret 1973 (out of Kreolka), Wp 5,55;, the winner of the Hamburg Derby Wist 1973 (out of Wilma), Wp 5,76; oak player Nawa 1973 (from Newa), Wp 1,90; triple-crowned Arra 1975 (out of Arba), Wp 5,06, after career Polish and European Champion; winners of the Comparative Pepton 1977 (out of Pemba), Wp 8,67, later Polish Champion and Złoty Potok 1981 (out of Zamieć), Wp 10,45. He hid in Janów Podlaski, Michałów and Kurozwęki.

At the age of 18 he was sold to the USA for a record in 1982. the sum of 806 thousand USD.

Author: Krystyna Chmiel for the project Winners100 stars

Below you will find links to related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library.

Entry updated: 22.06.2023/XNUMX/XNUMX


Publications in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

Click on the links below to access related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library (will open in a new tab):

“Top 10 Horses Sold at Auctions 1970” (2023) – Krystyna Chmiel

“An attempt to list the most famous stallions…” (2019) – A. Albera-Łojek…

"The Sadness of the Arabs" (2016) - Marek Grzybowski

"Horse and the case of Poland part. II” (1994) – Marek Grzybowski

"Ogier Bandos" (1988) - Andrzej Krzyształowicz

"Bandola" (1983) - Izabella Zawadzka

"The first championship of pure-bred Arabian horses and the 1979th auction in Janów Podlaski" (XNUMX) – Antoni Święcki

"Polish Arabians overseas" (1974) - Andrzej Krzyształowicz


Related Legends:

Mark Trela

Bow. vet. Arabian horse breeder, in the years 2000-2016 president of the Janów Podlaski Stud, vice-president of the World Federation of Arabian Horses (WAHO).

Read more…

Janów Podlaski Horse Stud

On October 6, 1816, Tsar Alexander I of Russia signed a decree establishing the State Stud Farm and Stallion Stud. The over 200-year history of this stud farm is a beautiful history of Polish and world Arabian horse breeding.

Read more…

SAW (PALAS – PIERZGA)

Winner of the European and World Championships in 1981. Director Andrzej Krzyształowicz burst into tears when he heard the Polish national anthem played in her honor in Paris. Bought by fashion designer Paulo Gucci - she left five daughters in Poland.

Read more…

PERFINKA (ESPARTO-PERFIRKA)

Perfinka (Esparto-Perfirka/Gazal Al Shaqab) with the American Golden Triple Crown. He is the third Polish horse to win this prestigious title. After Janów's Pogrom and Michałów's Wieża Mocy, the time has come for Perfinka z Białka.

Read more…


Gallery:

EN/EN

Breeder: Janów Podlaski Horse Stud
Patron:

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No one expected that the 46th Pride of Poland Auction in 2015 would go down in history, due to the record price for the horses sold, i.e. EUR 4,5 million, and above all for the price achieved by the gray, Janów-bred Pepita - 1 400 euros.

(...)

Pepita was born on January 29, 2005. In 2008, she ran at WTWK in Wrocławskie Partynice at distances of 5×2000 meters, 1×1800 and 1×1600, and her results out of 7 starts were 1xI, 1xII, 1xIII and 3xIV, which, as you can see, did not hurt her beauty, and was part of the philosophy Polish Arab who is supposed to be beautiful and brave. Its dimensions are 150 - 176 - 18,75. In 2010, she is fourth at the National Show in Janów, but already in 2014 she wins the mare class and becomes the Senior Mare Champion and Best in Show.

(...)

Pepita is the daughter of Michałów's multichampion, the gray Ekstern, who won all the shows in which he participated. In 2000 he became Polish National Senior Stallion Champion, All Nations Cup Champion in Aachen, European and World Champion. He also has the WAHO trophy, awarded in 2008 to an outstanding representative of purebred Arabian Polish breeding.

Pepita's mother - grey, with a beautiful coat from Janów, Pepesza is the daughter of the legendary Eukaliptus. She was born on February 1993, 6, and passed away on January 2018, 2006. She was sold at an auction in Janów in 135 for PLN XNUMX. euro. Her photo with the stable kitty won the cover of an auction catalogue. After the sale, the auctioneer said that this price also included this kitten. It is not known whether he went with his stablemate to Hennessy Arabians in Florida. She captivated with her type, swan neck, beautiful head and movement. In Janów, she left daughters Polifonia, Pernilla, Pensacola and Pepita, and sons Perseusz and Pegasus.
(...)

Pepita, the legendary mare from the Janów Stud, still gives her breeders reasons to be proud and satisfied. One should hope that both she and her offspring will bring a lot of positive experiences and joy to their new owners.

Read more... (click to go to the Polish Digital Equestrian Library)

Author of the entry: Jerzy Dudała

Click on the links below to access related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library (will open in a new tab):

“Top 10 Horses Sold at Auctions 1970” (2023) – Krystyna Chmiel

"PEPITA" (2020) - Jerzy Dudała

"The first championship of pure-bred Arabian horses and the 1979th auction in Janów Podlaski" (XNUMX) – Antoni Święcki




xo gray (Rittersporn – Jordi / Shagya X-3) born. 1937-03-02,
breeding SK Wojcieszków

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You can also read about Ramses on the site Wojcieszków commune.
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Yes dr. Stanislaw Deskur writes about the Polish stud dog of the century, founder of the most outstanding breeding line of sports horses in Germany:

Ramzes was bred at the Wojcieszków Stud and purchased at the beginning of 1940 for the State Stallion Stud in Janów Podlaski. At that time, there was no indication that this stallion would turn out to be the sire of the century in the future and his progeny would be successful in the most serious equestrian competitions on a global scale. Thanks to the messages of the director of the herd in Janów Podlaski, Eng. Tadeusz Marchowiecki, in whose area of ​​activity the Wojcieszków Stud was located, we know the history of Ramzes starting from the foal age.

As I mentioned, Ramses' sire was the Belgian Thoroughbred stallion Rittersporn, who competed with good results in steeplechase races in Germany. As part of war reparations, he went to Poland and was included in the State Stallion Stud in Janów Podlaski. He came from the line of the well-known stallion Le Sancy, who passed on talent for jumping.

Rittersporn, standing at the mating point in Łabunie near Zamość, produced 1926 very good competition horses in 1927 and 8 and gained an excellent reputation, so many cavalry officers wanted to have a horse by this stallion. Therefore, repairs after Rittersporna went to the army like the proverbial water. Nevertheless, the lists of horses registered by the Polish Equestrian Association published in the interwar period do not mention any other horses after Rittersporn - apart from the aforementioned eight - which had more significant equestrian achievements. Also in breeding, the offspring of this stallion did not stand out. Three of his sons were purchased for the State Stallion Herds, one of which was culled after two mating seasons. From the 3s and probably until the end of his life, Rittersporn stood at the Wojcieszków Stud (Łuków district). The stud had about 1930 breeding mares and belonged to Maria Zyberk-Plater, who - as director Marchowiecki described her - "didn't know about horses, but she liked them very much and fed them well". As the example of Rameses showed, in some cases these owner-breeder attributes could ensure success.

In 1929, Maria Plater bought a yearling filly named Jordi at an auction at the State Stud in Janów Podlaski, which the stud lacked, so in the opinion of local specialists, she did not promise hope that she would grow into a good stud mare,

Jordi had a very good background. Her grandmother, the mare Astarte, was born in the well-known Austrian stud Radowce (now Romania) and according to the nomenclature in force there, her original name was 264 Amurath-8. Jonia's pedigree (see attached pedigree of Ramesses) was imbued with oriental blood. She came from a family marked in Radowce with the Roman numeral III, dating back to the beginning of the XNUMXth century. Three-year-old Jordi was included in Wojcieszków as a broodmare. Unfortunately, Jordi broke her front leg. In the then state of veterinary knowledge, the mare was in danger of being killed, but the owner did not allow it.

The mare was hung on straps, and the veterinarian fixed the limb in wooden splints. The leg healed, but crookedly. The mare was limping badly and any use other than breeding was out of the question. At that time, a wooden stable with a grassy paddock was built in the park in Wojcieszków, and there Jordi, together with her successive foals, spent time every year from spring to late autumn. Her third successive foal was Ramzes. Director Marchowiecki often visited Wojcieszków on business and observed little Ramzes, who gave the impression that he would grow up to be a stallion suitable for breeding in the future. Unfortunately, little Ramzes was haunted by family misfortune. In early spring 1938, the well-developed and overgrown and always cheeky Ramzes, while playing with his peers, accidentally fell backwards so much that he could not get up for several days. Maria Plater also rejected the suggestion that Ramses was not worth suffering any longer and should be killed. Massages and warm compresses of the loins were used to the point where after a few days Ramses, supported by people, would stand up and unsteadily stand on his feet. In the following period, it was as if he was learning to walk, and the unsteady movement of his hindquarters persisted for a longer time. Nevertheless, this condition improved and in the summer of 1939, the uninitiated did not notice Ramses's previous paralysis of the lower back and no such ailment occurred in him later. As I mentioned earlier, Ramses was purchased for the Stallion Stud in Janów Podlaski in 1940. According to director Marchowiecki, he represented the type of handsome, caliber Polish Anglo-Arabian, about 160 cm tall, grey with a dark mane and tail, with a dry, shapely head with expressive eyes, a long neck, prominent withers, correct loins and a long and well-muscled back. He was deep, had limbs with a correct posture with slightly rounded front cannons. In movement, Ramzes was beyond reproach, because he had a long and gliding walk, an energetic trot and a long, covering a lot of ground gallop.

Throughout the war, in the mating seasons, Ramzes was sent to breeding stations in the vicinity of Kałuszyn. Every year after returning from the points - like all young stallions in the stallion herd in Janów Podlaski - he usually had to take part in heavy hunting runs twice a week, in an area bristling with many difficult obstacles. Ramesses was distinguished by good and precise jumps, but his disadvantage was an aversion to water obstacles, which he passed on to some of his descendants. He must have been a good riding horse, since he was constantly ridden during quadrilles by the herd's equerry at that time, and in the future by the director of the stud in Janów Podlaski, Eng. Andrzej Krzyształowicz. Regardless, Ramesses was harnessed and walked in four-horse teams.

In July 1944, Ramzes together with the entire Herd of Stallions from Janów Podlaski was evacuated, reaching Cleverhof L. Lubeki as the final stopping place. After the end of the war, most of the Polish breeding horses in Germany were returned to the country, leaving a few especially talented in the sport in western Germany to represent our breeding. Among them was Ramzes, then ridden by Lieutenant Bielecki.

When Lt. Bielecki emigrated to Canada, Baron Clemens von Nagel-Doornick, the owner of the Vornholz Stud (Westphalia), with about 30 stud mares, bought Ramzes. Baron von Nagel - as I mentioned in the previous "Wiadomości Zootechniczne" - was the commander of the stud in Racot during the war, and because he behaved decently, as testified by his Polish employees, he was able to take care of his horse breeding after the end of the war. His idea was to breed good horses, primarily for the discipline of dressage and show jumping, which would ensure the continuation of German equestrian achievements from the interwar period. Being the son of the director of the stud in Beberbeck, he had the opportunity to get to know these horses well and decided to implement his plans based on them. He found a few horses with Beberbeck blood, the rest in Germany. He used the stallion Oxyd (lrrlehrer-Oxalis) and Hanoverian mares by Beberbeck stallions. He also used the Polish stallion Zew, bred by Jezierski from Worotniów (Łuck poviat), descended from a Thoroughbred stallion and an original Beberbeck mare.

The first post-war German Olympic team was prepared in Vornholz, competing in the dressage discipline in Helsinki in 1952, riding horses bred in this stud according to the breeding concept discussed above. This team won the bronze medal. There were chances of the same horses being sent again to the 1956 Olympics in Stockholm, but one of the horses lame and had to be replaced. This team also came back with a bronze medal, and one of the horses from Vornholz also won an individual bronze medal. Further Olympic successes of Baron von Nagel's horses were impressive. In Tokyo in 1964, the West German team took first place in team dressage. Remus took part in this team, winning the silver medal individually. In Mexico in 1968, the West German team took the same place in the same competition, and Mariano, who participated in it, also received a silver medal. In Munich in 1972, the West German team, which won the gold medal in show jumping, featured the gelding Robin. These three horses - Remus, Mariano and Robin are already sons of Rameses. During the first years of his stay in Vornholz, Ramzes competed in equestrian competitions under the excellent German horseman Brinckmann, achieving good results on a national scale. Baron von Nagel probably wanted to check the working value of this stallion. Ramzes ended his sports career in 1948, breaking his leg in training. Certainly it was a bad omen, because as we remember, his mother also broke her leg, and his father - stallion Rittersporn broke his leg twice. In this case, Baron von Nagel may have feared a hereditary predisposition; fortunately, in Ramesses' offspring such cases did not occur.

The use of Ramzes in breeding could also be discouraged by the failures of the interwar period in Racot - attempts to combine Hanoverian and Holstein mares with Racovian stallions - which were certainly known to Baron von Nagel. In addition, in the history of horse breeding, there has never been a case where a sire with such a large infusion of oriental blood in his pedigree, as characterized by Ramses, produced progeny outstanding in equestrian sport. In this case, Baron von Nagel showed great breeding intuition, allocating the stallion boxing in Vomhoiz to Ramzes. Ramzes stayed there until his death in 1966. In the opinion of German breeding circles, no sire of local or foreign origin has ever achieved such positive results with local mares as this Polish Anglo-Arab. Ramzes gave birth to a large group of outstanding sports horses, distinguished also in breeding. There was a time when every famous rider in West Germany rode a horse descended from this stallion. Of the sons of Ramzes, Radetzki and Raimond stood out in the kennel. The great-great-grandson of the former, the stallion Rembrandt, described as a horse that had no equal when it comes to the dynamics of movement, under his young amazon Nicole Uphoff, won the individual and team gold medal at two consecutive Olympics - in Seoul in 1988 and in Barcelona in 1992. It was a feat not recorded in the history of the Olympic Games.

Raimond's son, the stallion Ramiro, is currently the sire of excellent jumping horses. His daughter Ratina-Z at the Olympics in Barcelona in 1992 won an individual silver and team gold medal for the Dutch team. In addition, under German top rider L. Beerbaum, she took first place in the 1993 World Cup in Gothenburg. At the last Olympics in Athens, Ramiro's son, the excellent jumping stallion Royal Kaliber, won a team silver and an individual bronze medal for the US team.


Author: Dr. Stanislaw Deskur
source: Horse Breeding in Poland (VII) – Ramzes
"Zootechnical News" (no. 4/2004)


License granted by Dr. Stanisław Deskur and the Institute of Zootechnics in Balice - Faculty of Horse Breeding, for BoberTeam, for the purposes of the Legends of Polish Equestrian project. Rights reserved.

Below you will find links to related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library.

Entry updated: 13.11.2023/XNUMX/XNUMX


Pedigree of Ogier Ramzes

Description:
red: Thoroughbred horses
blue: Arabian horses and kept clean
black: Arabian and Anglo-Arabian half-breds

Publications in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

Click on the links below to go to related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

"Ramses – 'celebrity' from Wojcieszków" (2020) – A Wiśniewska

"Horse breeding in Poland (VII)" (2004) - Stanisław Deskur

"Horse Breeding in Poland (VI)" (2004) - Stanisław Deskur

“Ramesses the stud dog of the century” (1996) – Gabrielle Pochmann-Mohrmann

"More about Ramses" (1996) - Andrzej Krzyształowicz

"Ambassador of Polish horse breeding in Western European horse riding" (1984) - Jan Grabowski

"Horse breeding for competitive riding" (1980) - Stanisław Deskur

"Ramesses" (1968) - Tadeusz Marchowiecki


Related Legends:

Mark Trela

Bow. vet. Arabian horse breeder, in the years 2000-2016 president of the Janów Podlaski Stud, vice-president of the World Federation of Arabian Horses (WAHO).

Read more…

Janów Podlaski Horse Stud

On October 6, 1816, Tsar Alexander I of Russia signed a decree establishing the State Stud Farm and Stallion Stud. The over 200-year history of this stud farm is a beautiful history of Polish and world Arabian horse breeding.

Read more…


Gallery:



Merited for breeding sport horses in the world. On her farm (Wojcieszków) an outstanding horse (father of sports horses) Ramzes was born.

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Born on November 5, 1872 in Passy near Warsaw.

She was the third of five children of Mr. Tadeusz Plater-Zyberek and Zofia Aleksandrowicz.

The Countess's father was an outstanding breeder and farmer. He started breeding horses in Wojcieszków, which until 1939 supplied military stables.

Stud in Wojcieszków - in the interwar years it had about 30 half-bred mares and stallions from PSO Janów Podlaski stationed there. Among other things, it was in Wojcieszków that the world-famous stallion Ramzes was born.

In 1929, Maria Plater Zyberk bought a faulty gray filly Jordi, born at the National Stud in Janów Podlaski, at an auction in Janów Podlaski. in 1928 by Schagya from Demeter by Bakszysz z from Astarte by Amurath (Weil) from Dahoman XII. Jordi, as a three-year-old, was included in the mother herd in Wojcieszków.

Ramzes' father, full English Rittersporn, who participated with good results in steeplechase races in Germany, from 1930, and probably until the end of his life, stayed and hid at Wojcieszków Stud (Łuków district).

The mare Jordi in 1937 gave birth to a colt named Ramzes.

In the first days of January 1940, the German occupiers began to organize the stud farm and herd of stallions in Janów Podlaski again. A dozen or so young stallions were imported from Kozienice, which had been saved from the training facility that existed there before the war, and stallions from East Prussia began to arrive. As he mentions in his article, “Ramzes” Tadeusz Marchowiecki: “I took advantage of the fact that they were looking for more stallions to buy, and I informed Gustaw Rau about Rittersporn's four sons in Wojcieszków. All stallions were purchased for the sum of 20. zlotys.”[2]

The countess also contributed to the founding of the parish Association of Polish Women's Youth. This association had its own banner, library, stall with devotional items, conducted retreats, organized agricultural courses. The members played volleyball, organized nativity plays, and sang in the choir. They participated in various courses, even went on horse-drawn trips to Łuków to the cinema. At Christmas, they organized a fundraiser for the poorest.

Countess Maria Plater-Zyberk, initially lived in Wojcieszków with her daughter Marylka, but the German administrator who was introduced there and the house was attacked several times caused them to move out of the palace without taking anything and to live in Warsaw in Krakowskie Przedmieście.

The memory of people and horses who made Poland famous all over the world has not been lost in the place of birth of Ramzes - the commune of Wojcieszków. Ms. Jadwiga Józwik, president of the Society of Friends of Wojcieszków, said: “We want Wojcieszków to finally become known to a wider circle of people. Our community can build its identity and future on the story of Ramses. In the 70th century we were a city. Back in the 3s of the last century, we were ranked first in horse breeding in the voivodeship. We have poor soils and there is no industry here, but there are excellent conditions for the development of tourism. I think that Ramses can become an attraction that, next to a beautiful church and a regional chamber with numerous exhibits, will attract people here and that agritourism will develop. Not only the commune, but also the county will benefit from it.”[XNUMX]

[1]http://wolabystrzyckafotografie.blogspot.com/2015/11/maria-plater-zyberk-hrabina-z.html, accessed on November 20.11.2019, 14, 00:XNUMX

[2] Horse of Poland, 1968 no. 4 p. 20

[3]http://www.lukow24.pl/wiadomosci/informacje/pomnik-konia-w-wojcieszkowie,p29687820, accessed on November 20.11.2019, 14, 20:XNUMX

Below you will find links to related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library.


Maria Plater-Zyberk died on October 4, 1964 in Warsaw. She was buried at the Powązki Cemetery in the family tombs of the Plater-Zyberk family.


Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

Click on the links below to access related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library (will open in a new tab):

"Ramses – 'celebrity' from Wojcieszków" (2020) – A Wiśniewska

"Ramesses" (1968) - Tadeusz Marchowiecki

EN/EN

Breeder: Janów Podlaski Horse Stud
Patron:

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oo bay (Ofir — Federation after Burgas or.ar.) born. 1938,
bred by SK Janów Podlaski

The story of the horse, which was not overcome by the war, and which, after a long wandering, wrote a great page in its new homeland, had a huge impact on Arabian horse breeding and had its own museum during its lifetime.

In 1938, the Janów Podlaski State Stud gave birth to, among others, four colts included in the "Big Four - 4W". These were the sons of Ofir: Witraż, Wielki Szlem, Witeź II and Wyrwidąb (later known in Germany as Wind).

Director Andrzej Krzyształowicz, who started working at the stud as an apprentice in 1937, cited the then-common opinion that the first batch of foals by Ofir promised great hopes. They were properly built, distinguished by their beauty and good moss. Unfortunately, most of them were lost in September 1939.

According to the then director of Janów Podlaski, a talented breeder, Stanisław Pohoski, Ofir was the best stallion bred in the last century in Poland. He was the son of Fr. Roman Sanguszko in Gumniska Kuhailan Haifi or. ar., recognized as the best Arabian ever brought to Poland. This stallion died after only two years of stud activity, leaving 1931 offspring, including the best one - Ofir.

Director Pohoski definitely valued Kuhailan type horses the most. This is probably why he placed Witezia in third place behind his peers - Witraż (from Makata to Fetysz) and Wielki Szlem (from Elegantka to Bakszysz), favored by him, if only because of the dam lines they came from. Witeź II son of the Federation by Burgas or. ar, a typical Saklawi mare, was smaller than them, but very elegant. (…)

Read more... (click to go to the Polish Digital Equestrian Library)

Author: Zenon Lipowicz

License granted by the family of Mr. Zenon Lipowicz for BoberTeam, for the purposes of the Legends of Polish Equestrian project

Below you will find links to related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library.

Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

Click on the links below to access related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library (will open in a new tab):

“Operation Cowboy” [link] (2018)

“The Perfect Horse” [excerpts] (2017) – Elizabeth Letts

"Pure White Race" [excerpts] (2014) - Frank Westerman

“With horses between the fronts” (2008) – Ehrenfried Brandts

"Witeź II - The Great Wanderer" (2007) - Zenon Lipowicz

"Witeź II - The Great Wanderer" [EN] (2007) - Zenon Lipowicz

“Horse Breeding in Poland (VII)” (2004) – Stanisław Deskur

“Horse Breeding in Poland (VI)” (2004) – Stanisław Deskur

“Big selling as a method of reducing state debts” (2002) – Marek Szewczyk

“Kuhailan Haifi lineage” (1984) – Roman Pankiewicz

“Polish ARABS” (1965) – Andrzej Krzyształowicz

EN/EN

Breeder: Janów Podlaski Horse Stud
Patron: Andrzej Novak-Zempliński

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oo bay (Kuhailan Haifi or. ar. — Dziwa by Aby Mlech) born on 1933, d. 1948, bred by SK Janów Podlaski

Ofir 1933, breeding Janów. He is considered the best stallion that was in Janów in the period between the First and Second World War.

victim-phenomenon
Prof. Witold Pruski writes about Ofir as follows:

“On the international arena, he would certainly not receive such recognition as in Poland and would not receive the best mares. In Janów, on the other hand, he left his best offspring with beautiful local mares, such as Witraż 1938, Wielki Szlem 1938 and Witeź II 1938. Unfortunately, Ofir bred in Janów for only three seasons, 1937—1939. Judging from the fact that in the first batch of progeny he produced three such excellent stallions as mentioned above, it can be assumed that he was a particularly suitable sire for Janów. However, he was not destined to stay at his home stud for long. He went to Tersk in the northern Caucasus, where he did not produce offspring of the same class as in Janów. He hid in Tersk in the years 1940-1948 and died there in 1948. He became the main continuator of the male line imported from Arabia in 1931 by Roman Prince Sanguszko - Kuhailan Haifi.”




The Horse Stud in Janów Podlaski is inextricably associated with the figure of its long-time director, who became a legend during his lifetime.

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He was born in Vienna on April 2, 1915.

Andrzej Krzyształowicz has been involved in agriculture since childhood thanks to his father, who at that time administered the Dzieduszycki estate in Zarzecze.

In 1923, the family moved to Łańcut, where Kazimierz Krzyształowicz became the general director of the estates of Count Alfred Potocki.

The numerous estates of the count also included Albigowa with a stud of Thoroughbred horses. There, under the supervision of the then manager of the stud, Bolesław Orłoś, the young man aroused his interest in horse breeding and horse riding. It was also there that he saw the first Arabian horse, namely the stallion Kafifana imported from Egypt. This horse was the owner's mascot and a source of pride and was presented to the count's numerous guests visiting the stud. Perhaps this first contact with an Arabian horse decided about the fate of the young man.

However, after graduating from high school in 1933 in Lviv, Andrzej Krzyształowicz decided to devote himself to aviation, which was very fashionable among young people at that time, and submitted documents to the school in Dęblin.

These plans were thwarted by minor health problems and eventually it was necessary to decide on a different profession. In this situation, the choice fell on the field closest to him since childhood, i.e. agriculture.

(...)

Read more... (click to go to the Polish Digital Equestrian Library)

Authors: Marek Trela, Czeslaw Czapliński

Below you will find links to related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library.

Entry updated: 12.04.2023/XNUMX/XNUMX


Andrzej Krzyształowicz died on September 19, 1998, aged 83. He was buried at the Roman Catholic Cemetery in Janów Podlaski (52.190278, 23.215833).


Publications in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

Click on the links below to access related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library (will open in a new tab):

"Andrzej Krzyształowicz" (2020) - Marek Trela

"Portrait with a story - Andrzej Krzyształowicz" [link] (2023) - Czesław Czapliński

"Director Krzyształowicz's Story" (2016) - Ewa Bagłaj

"1939 at the Janów Stud" (2007) - Andrzej Krzyształowicz

"Andrzej Krzyształowicz - memories from childhood and early youth" (2003) - Aldona Cholewianka-Kruszyńska

"In memory of my friend Eng. Andrzej Krzyształowicz” (2000) – Tadeusz Andrzejewski

"My memories of A. Krzyształowicz" (1998) - I. Jaworowski

"My life was interesting" (1998) - Izabella Pawelec-Zawadzka

"The first championship of pure-bred Arabian horses and the 1979th auction in Janów Podlaski" (XNUMX) – Antoni Święcki

"Memories from 30 years ago" (1976) - Andrzej Krzyształowicz

"Polish Arabians overseas" (1974) - Andrzej Krzyształowicz

"People of the Janów Stud" (1967) - Antoni Święcki

"Polish Arabs" (1965) - Andrzej Krzyształowicz


Related Legends:

Rider and Breeder, 1922-1939

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Gallery:




A groom from SK Janów Podlaski, who saved the valuable stallions Witraż and Wielki Szlem from death during the carpet bombing of Dresden.

He was born in 1898.

Jan Ziniewicz started working with horses as an 18-year-old young man in 1916, when the stud was evacuated deep into Russia during the First World War.

After returning to Poland, he worked as a groom in a stud with mares, and then with foals. In 1921, he started working in a racing stable. Every year in the season he went to the tracks in Lviv, Lublin, Piotrków and Przemyśl. In 1937 he won the Olsza Oaks and in the same season the Comparative Award on Lowelas (by Koheilan I).

He especially fondly remembers his stay in Lwów, where in 1939 the war found them. Under the command of trainer Szyszka, they rode to Białka, but their horses were taken there by the army. The following were lost to Polish breeding: Skrzyp, Kasztelan, Sumak, Rozmaryn, Robak, Rdest and Ramajana.

From Białka, they walked for 5 days to Janów Podlaski. During the occupation, Ziniewicz worked in the head stable as a groom. He took care of, among others, Witraż, Wielki Szlem and Werset. In 1943, he transported the stallion Witezia and two mares, Wierna and Zalotna, to the Hostownia Stud (Czechoslovakia).

During the evacuation of the stud farm in 1944, he initially took care of 8 horses. During a stop at the station in Biała, he had a great desire to return home, but he was alone in the carriage and "didn't have the heart to leave the horses unattended".

On February 13, 1945, he and his horses found themselves in Dresden at the time of the carpet bombing of that city. He led Witraż and Wielki Szlem. He did not let go of the horses even for a moment, even when incendiary bombs were falling next to them. He recalls the exceptional calmness with which our Arabians reacted to the "hell" around them. After the stud reached Nettelau, he was the commandant of the leading stable until he returned to Posadów in autumn 1946. As part of his leave, he went to Janów and stayed there (at the instigation of R. Kajetanowicz).

He worked there for 3 years with stallions and went with them to mating points. After returning to the Janów Stud, he moved to the head stable and worked there as a commandant until his retirement in 1963. His beloved horse was Wacpan, whom he took care of until his death.

Author: Antoni Święciki
Source: "People of the Janów Stud" (1967)

Entry updated: 31.05.2024/XNUMX/XNUMX


Jan Ziniewicz died on April 26, 1975 at the age of 77. He was buried at the Roman Catholic Cemetery in Janów Podlaski (52.190278, 23.215833).


Publications in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

Click on the links below to access related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library (will open in a new tab):

"People of the Janów Stud" (1967) - Antoni Święcki


Mark Trela

Bow. vet. Arabian horse breeder, in the years 2000-2016 president of the Janów Podlaski Stud, vice-president of the World Federation of Arabian Horses (WAHO).

Read more…

Janów Podlaski Horse Stud

On October 6, 1816, Tsar Alexander I of Russia signed a decree establishing the State Stud Farm and Stallion Stud. The over 200-year history of this stud farm is a beautiful history of Polish and world Arabian horse breeding.

Read more…


Gallery:

Jan Ziniewicz with Almifar (grandson of Witraż) and Czort (son of Wielki Szlem)

EN/EN


Breeder: Janów Podlaski Horse Stud
Patron:

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z. bay (Ofir – Makata by Fetysz) born. June 01.06.1938, 1957, d. XNUMX, bred by SK Janów Podlaski

When rebuilding Janów Podlaski in 1940, the Germans appointed Witraż as its first leading stallion. He was a horse of outstanding beauty, which he passed on to his offspring. It operated in Janów, Albigowa and Nowy Dwór until 1956 inclusive.

He left 14 stallions, 4 of which were used in the country: Como 1949, Celebes 1949, Banio 1951 and Muharyt 1957, and 10 were sold for export. He also sired 27 excellent mares, 7 of which became mothers of as many as 14 top stallions. The "Queen of Polish Arabs" Bandola 1948 was also his daughter. At the shows, the offspring of Witraż were most distinguished by:
— Celina 1949 — champion of Great Britain,
— Bask 1956 — US champion and sire of champions, who had an epochal influence on American breeding,
— Arwistawa 1958, the first winner of the US and Canadian champion titles, was his granddaughter,
— Aladdin 1975 USA champion, father of many champions, considered the successor of Bask is also his grandson.

Stained glass has played a significant role in the world's thoroughbred horse breeding. Even in Australia, Aladdin's son has recently become the national champion. After Skowronek, Witraż is the most distinguished Polish stallion in the world and will remain so for some time.

Unfortunately, Witraż lived in times when the export of Arabian horses from Poland was just beginning. Had he lived today, his influence would have been immeasurably greater.

It is difficult to find an Arabian in Poland today that does not have the blood of Witraż in it.

source: study by Roman Pankiewicz,
License granted by the family of Mr. Roman Pankiewicz for BoberTeam, for the purposes of the Legends of Polish Horsemanship project

Click on the links below to go to related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

"Kuhailan haifi's bloodline" (1984) - Roman Pankiewicz

EN/EN

Breeder: Janów Podlaski Horse Stud
Patron:

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Wielki Szlem (out of Elegant by Bakszysz) bay born. 1938, dimensions 147-191-19,5 cm

He was the son of a mare that could easily be called a pearl of Polish breeding. She produced such stallions as: Jaszmak, Lowelas, Opal, Rosomak, Skarabeusz and Wielki Szlem, and only two of them were sons of one sire. Elegantka gave good progeny with each stallion. Her daughter Kamea 1929 also founded a valuable family.

Wielki Szlem started covering mares in 1940 in Pelkinie, then it was Janów mares (on evacuation in Germany), and from 1947 it was active in Nowy Dwór. In the years 1956—57 he was a sire in Albigowa. In Pelkinie and Nowy Dwór he met very different mares, among which they were also weaker in terms of beauty and exterior. His great merit was the leveling of this material. In total, Wielki Szlem produced 51 mares and 10 stallions, of which Miech Pełkiński, Anarchist, Czardasz, Czort and Duch were used for breeding in Poland.

Grand Szlem's daughters turned out to be very valuable mothers, giving many stallions used for breeding in the country. And so Gahdar 1942 was given by Abu Afasa, Mira 1942 - Mir Saida, dialect 1946 - Gwarny, Angara 1947 - Arax, Bint Munira 1948 - Badr Bedura, Cerekiew 1951 - Carycin, Diska 1950 - Drama, Ellenai 1956 - Eleuzis, Elf and Elbrus.

Wielki Szlem passed on great racing prowess to his offspring. Of his descendants, the classic prizes were won by: Omar - 1944 - Derby, Czardasz 1949 - Derby and Comparative, Czort 1949 - 2 times Comparative, Don Lambro 1950 - Derby, Dyska 1950 - Oaks, Kochana 1952 - Oaks.

source: study by Roman Pankiewicz,
License granted by the family of Mr. Roman Pankiewicz for BoberTeam, for the purposes of the Legends of Polish Horsemanship project

Click on the links below to go to related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

"Kuhailan haifi's bloodline" (1984) - Roman Pankiewicz