Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Domestication of the Horse (Encore)
Episode Date: December 21, 2025Sometime around 5,500 years ago, an event took place on the Eurasian steppes that fundamentally changed the world. We don’t know who did it or exactly when it took place, but it was one of the si...ngle greatest moments in all of human history. It ushered in revolutions in agriculture, transportation, and warfare, and its impact can still be witnessed around the world today. Learn more about the domestication of the horse and how it impacted the world on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Chubbies Get 20% off your purchase at Chubbies with the promo code DAILY at checkout! Aura Frames Exclusive $35 off Carver Mat at https://on.auraframes.com/DAILY. Promo Code DAILY DripDrop Go to dripdrop.com and use promo code EVERYTHING for 20% off your first order. Uncommon Goods Go to uncommongoods.com/DAILY for 15% off! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The following is an encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily.
Sometime around 5,500 years ago, an event took place on the Eurasian steps that fundamentally changed the world.
We don't know who did it, more exactly when it took place, but it was one of the single greatest moments in all of human history.
It ushered in revolutions in agriculture, transportation, and warfare, and its impact can still be witnessed around the world today.
Learn more about the domestication of the horse and how it impacted the world.
On this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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The story of horses does not begin with their domestication by humans.
In fact, the human horse relationship doesn't even begin with domestication.
The modern domesticated horse has the taxonomic name of Equus Cabalus.
It can trace its evolutionary roots back about 50 million years to a small dog-sized creature called
Eohippus that lived in forests.
If you remember back to my episode on how horses spread in North America,
most of the evolution of the horse actually took place in North America
millions of years before humans ever arrived.
During the various ice ages, they migrated from North America into Asia via the Bering Land Bridge,
where they took a separate evolutionary path.
The North American variant of the horse went extinct about 11 to 10,000 years ago,
possibly due to overhunting by humans, along with changes to their climate.
Over in Eurasia, we know that horses were hunted by humans,
alongside other large herbivores for at least 30,000 years, as is evidenced by cave paintings
that show horses. This is a very important distinction that makes horses very different from other
domesticated animals such as cats and dogs. The domestication of cats and dogs is believed to
have sort of just happened, if you recall my previous episodes on the subject. Horses, however,
were hunted for food. They wouldn't have just wandered into camp and become friendly with the people
sitting around a fire. Had such a thing happened, most Paleolithic humans would have probably
thought to themselves, hey, free meal. Horses were far from the first domesticated herbivores that
were used as food. Sheep, goats, and cattle had been domesticated thousands of years before horses were.
They were domesticated insofar as they were herded and moved from place to place. They would have
been kept in pens, possibly milked and sheared, but otherwise weren't domesticated in the same way that
dogs were. This at least provides an idea as to what the first people to domesticate horses
might have been thinking. They probably viewed domestication as something akin to how they used
cattle or sheep. It was simply an easier way to get access to horse meat than constantly having to
hunt them. All modern domesticated horses are distended from a single group, indicating that there
was a single domestication event, somewhere. And for the longest time, there were competing
theories as to where horses were first domesticated.
One of the contenders was the Iberian Peninsula.
We know from fossil and archaeological evidence that horses had been there for at least
50,000 years.
Another contender was Siberia where horses had been found buried with human beings.
Yet another theory, and this one has a bit more evidence, is that horse domestication
occurred in central modern-day Kazakhstan, about 1,600 kilometers northwest of the Caspian Sea.
Their archaeological digs have found the remains of an ancient people known as the bowtie.
The entire bowtie culture seemed to have revolved around horses.
They ate them, milk them, and used their skins.
Archaeological evidence shows that they were building corrals and pens for horses.
Non-human remains and the location are almost all horses,
and the teeth from horse skulls indicate that they may have used bits.
Even pottery from the site shows evidence of mare's milk.
The date of the artifacts found at the Bowtie site go back about 5,000 to 5,500 years.
However, it really wasn't known if the horses they worked with were truly domesticated.
They may have been similar to reindeer used by the Sami people in Nordic countries,
which are considered semi-domesticated.
Later DNA evidence found that the horses used at the Bow-tie site were not, in fact, the ancestors
of today's domestic horses.
They were, however, related to one of the last truly wild, as opposed to feral horses in the world,
the Shavalsky horses which can be found in Mongolia.
So if horses weren't domesticated in Kazakhstan, where were the first horses domesticated?
The best answer we have to that question comes from genetic evidence, from modern horses as well as from ancient horses.
The area where horses were probably first domesticated was located in a region including
eastern Ukraine above the Black Sea, Russia north of the Caucasus, around the Volga River,
and in western Kazakhstan.
One of the things that the genetic study of early horses found is that all modern domesticated
horses are descended from a single male stallion and about 77 female mares.
The genetic analysis of ancient horses raises several possibilities.
One is perhaps that the bowtie culture did independently domesticate horses, but their horses
just weren't the ones that happened to have caught on. Perhaps there was something about them
that made them more difficult to tame or made them less docile. The other possibility is that
the Chevalski horses in Mongolia, long thought to be the last truly wild horses on earth,
are in fact not wild horses. Given their genetic relationship with the bow tie horses, they might
actually be the descendants of those formerly domesticated horses.
One of the events that had to have happened early after domestication was the discovery
that horses could be ridden and used to pull carts. In fact, this would have radically changed
the perception and value of horses from something beyond mere cattle that could be used for food and
milk. Horses allowed humans to travel further and faster than they could on foot. In fact, from the
domestication of horses until the 19th century, the fastest anybody could travel on land was the
speed of a horse. What isn't known, and may never be known, is if riding horses by sitting on them
or driving horses by having them pull a cart or a chariot came first. You would think that
riding would have come first just because there's very little to it, just climb on the back of a
horse, even if it means just putting a child up there. However, there isn't much in the way of
archaeological evidence to support this. We have very ancient images and artifacts consisting of ancient
chariots and carts. Things that would support riding, such as bridles and blankets, wouldn't
survive well to be later found by archaeologists. If horse domestication did indeed take place
between the Black Sea and the North Caspian Sea, it would have been the ideal location to have
horses spread to other cultures given its central location between Asia, Europe, and the Middle East.
For about the first thousand years, horse technology, and it really was a technology, didn't spread very far.
The group that's often credited with the explosion in horses is the Shintoshta culture,
which inhabited the steps around 2100 to 1800 BC.
The Shintoshta had developed chariots with spoked wheels, and by all accounts had developed a mastery over horses.
They were nomadic and used horses to conquer many peoples who lived on the steps.
and in the process of doing so they brought horses with them, possibly replacing any previous
domestications using other species of horse like the bowtie. Their efforts, either purposefully or
inadvertently, brought horses to a wide number of people in and around the steps during the Bronze Age.
These people soon discovered that these animals were not to be prized for their meat like a goat
or a cow, but rather for what they could do. Horses could pull wheeled carts with far more goods
that can ever be carried by hand. They could pull a plow to help cultivate more crops,
and they could allow you to travel swiftly as well as give a significant advantage in battle.
As horses spread, they began to be selectively bred. The colors of coats of horses underwent a wide
diversification, and the size of horses began to increase as horses were bred for strength and speed.
To this extent, horses are very similar to dogs insofar as different breeds, which sometimes
look dramatically different from each other, are all actually a single species.
Horses became prized assets, often the greatest source of wealth in a community,
and horses also found their way into the mythology of many cultures.
Oxen had been domesticated about the same time or a little earlier than horses.
When cultures with domesticated oxen came across horses,
they often found them to be superior.
Horses are faster, more agile, versatile, and are easier to train.
They could be used in the field as well as in combat and could travel much longer distances.
The spread of horses across both Europe and Asia is often credited with the rise of civilizations
and empires of both continents.
Without horses, much of what we know about the ancient world wouldn't have been possible.
Many have wondered if the people of Eurasia just got lucky.
If a species of easy-to-domesticate draft animals hadn't been there, then history would look very different today.
And it also raises the question, why didn't other parts of the world domesticate something equivalent to the horse?
In particular, sub-Saharan Africa and the Americas.
In Africa, there is one animal in particular that would seem to be a great candidate as a horse substitute, the zebra.
Zebras are members of the genus Equus, along with horses. They have hooves in a mane and
look very much like horses, especially if you're willing to ignore their stripes. Yet,
zebras were never domesticated, and the fact they weren't domesticated wasn't for a lack of
trying. Zebras are simply different creatures. They can be very aggressive and tend to panic.
They aren't as strong as horses, are challenging to breed in captivity, and they don't have a
hierarchical social structure like horses, which can be taken advantage of, to,
tame horses. Likewise in South America, llamas and alpacas were domesticated, but they had nowhere
near the size and strength of a horse. They couldn't carry the same burdens or travel as fast.
And just to end, if you want to engage in a bit of alternate history, you can imagine what might
have happened in North America if horses hadn't gone extinct 10 to 11,000 years ago. It really isn't
too much of a stretch to imagine Native peoples in North America domesticating horses thousands
of years ago. If they had been able to harness the speed and power of horses, the historical
trajectory of the world may have been radically different. I've covered the origins of many
different inventions and discoveries in previous episodes, and I've also covered the
domestication of various animals, from cats and dogs to chickens. However, there is a very strong
case to be made that the domestication of horses was the single most important step in human
history. It would be right up there with the wheel and the discovery of fire. Well, we might not
use or even sea horses as much anymore. None of what we have today would probably exist if it
wasn't for the domestication of the horse. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles
Daniel. The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer. My big thanks go to everyone
who supports the show over on Patreon. Your support helps make this podcast possible. And I also want to
remind everyone about the community groups on Facebook and Discord. That's where everything
happens that's outside the podcast. And links to those are available in the show notes.
As always, if you leave a review on any major podcast app or in the above community groups,
you too can have it read in the show.
