Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 11, 2026

Jennet

A jennet or Spanish jennet was a small Spanish horse. It was noted for a smooth naturally ambling gait, compact and well-muscled build, and a good disposition. The jennet was an ideal light riding horse, and as such spread across Europe and provided some of the foundation bloodstock for several horse breeds in the Americas.

Last revised
Jun 11, 2026
Read time
≈ 3 min
Length
699 w
Citations
8
Source
A medieval jennet. source ↗

A jennet or Spanish jennet was a small Spanish horse.1 It was noted for a smooth naturally ambling gait, compact and well-muscled build, and a good disposition. The jennet was an ideal light riding horse, and as such spread across Europe and provided some of the foundation bloodstock for several horse breeds in the Americas.

Etymology

According to the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, "jennet" referred to a small Spanish horse. The 2000 edition of the American Heritage Dictionary also defines "jennet", with the alternative spelling genet, as a small Spanish saddle horse. The "jennet" described a type, rather than a breed of horse, and thus is not used today; the term was in regular use during the Middle Ages to refer to a specific type of horse, usually one of Iberian or Barb extraction, often gaited.

In the etymology provided by the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, "jennet" is derived from the French genet, from Spanish jinete, a light horseman who rides à la jineta, explained as "with his legs tucked up." This referred to their style of riding with shorter stirrups, which they preferred for closer collection of the horse. The term is taken to be a corruption of Zenata, a Berber tribe famed for its cavalry.23 Felipe Maíllo Salgado has linked the medieval terms jinete and jineta to the history of Spanish cavalry and their lexical development.4 In English and French, the word came to refer to the horse rather than the style of riding.5 In Spanish, that meaning has developed in modern times. The American Heritage Dictionary's etymology is similar, citing the Middle English genet, from Old French; from the Catalan ginet, of Arabic and, ultimately, of Berber origin.6

Modern descendants and recreated breeds

The modern Spanish Jennet Horse, Paso Fino and Peruvian Paso breeds probably most closely resemble the original jennet. In the treatise Il Cavallarizzo written by Claudio Corte in 1562, three years after the end of the Great Italian Wars, the author describes at length the qualities of the ginecti (jennets) as horses useful for war.

According to Corte, the jennets were one of the most commonly used horses by the Spanish light cavalry. Spanish heavy cavalry used a different breed which Corte refers to as "Villanos". However, there is no mention of the Andalusian as a war horse in Corte's book, indicating that that breed either did not exist or was not used for war during the rise of Spain as a major European Power in 1494–1562.7 The castle of Venafro in the Italian region of Molise (which was under Spanish rule in the 1500s) has numerous frescos portraying the ginecti (jennets), which seem to closely resemble a modern-day Criollo horse or a Peruvian Paso8

See also

See also

References

References

  1. Bennett, Deb. "The Spanish Mustang: The Origin and Relationships of the Mustang, Barb, and Arabian Horse" Archived 2008-05-06 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "jinete". Diccionario de la lengua española. Real Academia Española. Retrieved 7 May 2026.
  3. Corriente, Federico (1996). "Hacia una revisión de los arabismos y otras voces con étimos del romance andalusí o lenguas medio-orientales en el Diccionario de la Real Academia Española" (PDF). Boletín de la Real Academia Española. 76: 153–195. Retrieved 7 May 2026.
  4. Maíllo Salgado, Felipe (1982). "Jinete, Jineta y sus derivados: contribución al estudio del medievo español y al de su léxico". Studia Philologica Salmanticensia (6): 105–117. Retrieved 7 May 2026.
  5. One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Jennet". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 321.
  6. "jennet", American Heritage Dictionary
  7. "An ancient horsemanship Italian book. Original title: Il Cavallarizzo di Messer Claudio Corte di Pavia, nel quale si tratta della natura de' Cavalli del modo di domargli, e frenarli, e di tutto quello, che à Cavalli, e à buon Cavalerizzo s'appartiene". 1562.
  8. "I cavalli di Enrico Pandone nel Castello di Venafro".
External links