Samura, a Kuhaylat al-Jallala, in Russia
Samura (below) was the 1895 daughter of the desertbred Kuhaylat al-Jallala mare Saeeda.
Samura’s dam Saeeda was foaled in 1884, bred by the Misrab tribe of the Sba’ah. Imported by Stroganov on his first joint expedition with Prince Shcherbakov in 1888, Saeeda produced eight foals between 1891 and 1902, all but one by desertbred stallions; her eighth foal was sired by Abeyan.
Samura’s sire was the Krush stallion Emir-el-Arab, bred by Muhammad Ibn Smeyr of the Wuld Ali. At the time the Russian stud book was compiled, Samura had produced two colts, a chestnut colt by Sherrak in 1900, and a chestnut going grey colt by Sottamm el-Kreysh in 1902.
Photo from the History of Russia in Photographs.
Interesting, both the K. al-Jalala and the K. al-Sharif strains of which representatives were imported by the Russians were among the strains that the Shammar tribe took from the Sharif of Mecca. Both quintessentially Shammar strains.
I am saddened by the loss of these lines. What an addition to the Arabian horse breeding pool the continued existence of these lines would have been.
Yes, these Stroganov and Shcherbatov horses certainly were lovely sturdy animals. Without the two World Wars, imagine how much more diversity Russia, Poland and Hungary would have – so many horses disappeared then.