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The first domesticated horses: 6,000 years of a complex story

05.13.26 | University of Helsinki

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Taming and domestication were not single events. They were a slow, stop-start process, full of setbacks, playing out over generations and across vast regions, before full domestication set in shortly before 2000 BCE.

"Horses were already being used in sophisticated, widespread ways before we could pin down full domestication. That gap reshapes how we understand human history," says
Professor Volker Heyd , co-lead author of the research.

“The role of horses in major historical developments is almost too vast to measure, hence the saying that the world was conquered on horseback,” Heyd says.

From the sweeping movements of Eurasian nomadic groups such as the Huns, Avars, Magyars, and the Mongol Empire, to their decisive use in warfare (well into World Wars I and II), horses have been central to human conflict and expansion. They also accompanied conquistadors over the Atlantic to the Americas and served as the primary means of transport across much of the world until the rise of industrialisation and motorisation.

Today, truly wild horses no longer exist. Even Przewalski's horse , long held up as a living relic of the wild, is now known to descend from early domesticated populations, showing how deeply humans have shaped horse populations over time .

The timing matters. Around 3,500 to 3,000 BCE, steppe populations began pushing east and west across Eurasia. They brought the wheel with them. Cattle pulled the first wagons. Horses came at the same time. A rider could cover ground in hours that a wagon took days to cross but both were key innovations in mobility and transport, revolutionizing human society.

Researchers now link that leap in mobility to the spread of Proto-Indo-European languages. The horse carried people. And with them, words. The languages spoken across much of Europe and Asia today trace back to those early riders and wagon drivers.

“Today, horses are a source of attraction, companionship, and friendship for many people. Therefore, it is important to learn about the earliest stages of human–horse relationships and how this unique partnership first emerged,” Volker Heyd says.

Science Advance

10.1126/sciadv.ady7336

Systematic review

Animals

Horse genetics, archaeology, and the beginning of riding

13-May-2026

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Suvi Uotinen
University of Helsinki
suvi.uotinen@helsinki.fi

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Helsinki. (2026, May 13). The first domesticated horses: 6,000 years of a complex story. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/19N6JW51/the-first-domesticated-horses-6000-years-of-a-complex-story.html
MLA:
"The first domesticated horses: 6,000 years of a complex story." Brightsurf News, May. 13 2026, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/19N6JW51/the-first-domesticated-horses-6000-years-of-a-complex-story.html.