Category
page 1Writers on horsemanship

Xenophon
Xenophon of Athens (; ; 355/354 BC) was a Greek military leader, philosopher, and historian. At the age of 30, he was elected as one of the leaders of the retreating Greek mercenaries, the Ten Thousand, who had been part of Cyrus the Younger's attempt to seize control of the Achaemenid Empire. As the military historian Theodore Ayrault Dodge wrote, "the centuries since have devised nothing to surpass the genius of this warrior".

Reiner Klimke
German equestrian (1936–1999)
William Cavendish, 1st Duke of Newcastle
English polymath and aristocrat (1592-1676)

Kikkuli
Kikkuli was the Hurrian "master horse trainer [assussanni] of the land of Mitanni" (LÚA-AŠ-ŠU-UŠ-ŠA-AN-NI ŠA KUR URUMI-IT-TA-AN-NI) and author of a chariot horse training text written primarily in the Hittite language (as well as an Old Indo-Aryan language as seen in numerals and loan-words), dating to the Hittite New Kingdom (around 1400 BCE). The text is notable both for the information it provides about the development of Hittite, an Indo-European language, Hurrian, and for its content. The text was inscribed on cuneiform tablets discovered during excavations of Boğazkale and Ḫattuša in 190
Alois Podhajsky
Austrian equestrian (1898–1973)

François Robichon de La Guérinière
Guérinière
François Baucher
French riding master
Antoine de Pluvinel
equestrian
Fairman Rogers
American academic (1833–1900)

Sophie Thalmann
French model

Jacques de Solleysel
French writer
James Fillis
English-born French riding master
Federico Grisone
Neapolitan riding-master