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Crioulo

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crioulo
The breed dates back to a 1535 shipment of 100 Spanish stallions and mares to Rio de la Plata imported by Buenos Aires founder, Pedro de Mendoza.

 


Crioulo
The Crioulo is from Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil. It is a variety of Criollo or native horse of the region.

The crioulo is tractable, intelligent, willing, and sensible. The crioulo horses average 1.45 m (14.1 hh). The maximum height for stallions and geldings is 1.50 m (14.3 hh) high and the minimum height is 1.38 m (13.2 hh).

The Crioulo is a variety of the Latin American creole breed, and like their cousins throughout the area are a cross between African & European breeds. This particular strain is found in southern Brazil, near the border of Uruguay.
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Crioulo Horse
The Crioulo is from Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil. It is a variety of Criollo or native horse of the region.

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The crioulo (in Portuguese) or "criollo" (in Spanish) that is the native horse of Argentina (1918), Uruguay (1923), Brazil (1932) and Paraguay, may have the best endurance of any horse breed in the world next to the Arabian.

Also Known By: Nordestino, Crioulo Brasileiro, Curraleiro, Sertanejo
The Northeastern is a light horse breed developed in northeastern Brazil beginning in the 16th century from Portuguese stock.

CRIOULO HORSE
A Brazilian horse, the Crioulo was developed in Brazil, in a region called Rio Grande do Sul. As a descendant of the Criollo, it is the region's native horse.
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In 1938, 70% of the registered crioulos were culled because they did not possess the phenotype aspired by Dr. Solanet and his followers.

It appears, with slight variations in height and refinement of type, as the Criollo of Argentina and Uruguay, the Crioulo ofBrazil, the Casten and Morochuco types of Peru, the Cabello Chileno ofChile and the Llanero of Venezuela.

The name of the breed (Criollo in Spanish and Crioulo in Portuguese) was referred to Spanish and Portuguese pure-bred humans and animals that were born in Americas. Today it is simply referred to native breeds of Americas.

The word Criollo means "of Spanish origin", and refers to a variety of related South American horses, including the Crioulo Braziliero, from Brazil, and the tough Lianero cattle horse from Venezuela, which, allowing for regional differences, ...

site, complete and continually enriched, tells about the origins of the horse of the Pampa, describes its characteristics, a complete discription of Criollo colors and particularities and presents a summary of other Latin American breeds (crioulo, ...

More than 50% of all registered horses in this part of South America still reflect the influence and characteristics of the famous horses of the Conquistadors, the Jennet. Here, the Mangalarga, Crioulo and Campolina breeds account for 350,000 horses, ...

Here, the Mangalarga Marchador, Crioulo and Campolina breeds account for 350,000 horses, twice as many as Quarter Horses. The most popular of them is the Mangalarga Marchador, the National Horse of Brasil.

See also: Criollo, Saddle, Black, Barb, Bay