HAUTE ÉCOLE
The Official Magazine of the Lipizzan Association of North America | Volume 24 (1) : 2016
In Memoriam: Dr. Jaromir Oulehla
1943-2016
5
The sun went down before it was evening,
... and we thought we had so much time...
In our deep pain, we cannot trust just words. We can only pray for the soul of my unforgettable husband, our father, father-in-law and grandfather,
We thank you for your love and caring.
Wife
Daughter and Son-In-Law
Grandson
on behalf of all relatives
Because good acts do not wither, the members of the family ask that you refrain from sending wreaths and floral tributes and instead contribute a donation in the name of
the deceased to the social fund of the Rotary Club of Bad Ischl.
Anlanger Funeral Home
On Saturday, January 23, 2016, unexpectedly, God, The Lord, called him to Him in his 73rd year of life. Modesty, fulfilling his duty to others, love for his family, and his profession marked his life. He lives on in our hearts. The funeral service for our dearly departed will be held on Friday, January 29, 2016 at 1:00 p.m. in the parish church in Bad Ischl. Interment will follow.
CONTENTS
Lipizzan Association
of North America
—L.A.N.A.—
www.lipizzan.org
Registration & General Information
133 Seabury Drive
Bar Harbor, Maine 04609 USA
Membership
Post Office Box 426
Valley City, Ohio 44280 USA
Haute École
Merchandise/LANA Store
www.lipizzan.org/store.html
www.facebook.com/LipizzanAssociationofNorthAmerica
Board of Directors
Dr. Delphi Toth
Chair of the Board
330-607-3750
John Nicholas Iannuzzi, J.D.
Legal Counsel, Registrar
Andrea Iannuzzi
Associate Registrar
Gary Lashinsky
Melody Hull
James Conrad
Elisabeth Gürtler
Director, Spanish Riding School
Johann Riegler
Former Chief Rider, Spanish Riding School
Dr. Jaromir Oulehla †
Former Director of the Spanish Riding School & Piber
© Haute École Magazine
2016 All Rights Reserved
No part of this publication may be reproduced
without the prior written consent of the Lipizzan
Association of North America.
Formal Notice - Original 2
- English translation 3
Family Portrait 5
A Brief Biography of Dr. Jaromir Oulehla
by Dr. Delphi Toth 6
My Memories of Jaromir Oulehla
by Gary Lashinsky 8
The Breeding of Lipizzaner Horses: a definitive historical treatise on the history, background, bloodlines, and principle of the Lipizzan horse by Dr. Jaromir Oulehla 9
LANA Online Database 15
LANA Membership Renewal 16
In Memoriam: Dr. Jaromir OUlehla
A Brief Biography of Dr. Jaromir Oulehla
During the 451-year history of the Lipizzan breed, there have been extraordinary individuals who have stepped in to save, protect, preserve, and perpetuate this magnificent breed of horse. Dr. Jaromir Oulehla, a veterinarian originally from Czechoslovakia, was one of those people. All of us who now enjoy the company of our Lipizzans owe him a debt of gratitude for his dedication to the breed. Here are some details of his life that you may not already know. — by Dr. Delphi Toth
It is with great sadness that we relay news of the death of our dear friend, Dr. Jaromir Oulehla, retired Director of both the Spanish Riding School and the Federal Stud Farm in Piber. Dr. Oulehla was also a long-time valued member of LANA’s Board of Directors. Jaromir Oulehla spent his earliest years in Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic). He was born in Groß Meseritsch on September 23, 1943 and educated at the Veterinary University in Brno where he was awarded his Doctorate in Veterinary Medicine. He began his veterinary practice in the town of Jihlava. The late 1960s was a turbulent time in Czechoslovakia, as then leader Alexander Dubček tried to restore some rights to the Czech people by decentralizing and democratizing the rigid stifling Communist system that had been imposed by the Soviet Union after World War II. This attempt to initiate more Western political reforms was called the “Prague Spring.” The Soviet Union, which held Czechoslovakia as one of their most tightly controlled satellite
countries, reacted by launching a military invasion of 500,000 troops, with tanks, who forcefully stopped the people from moving towards more freedom. In the small city in which Dr. Oulehla had set up his practice, a man set himself on fire in the town square to protest the Soviet invasion. It was an intense and terrible time for the people of Czechoslovakia. Young Veterinarian Dr. Oulehla, with his wife, Hana, and only child, daughter Petra, joined the approximately 200,000 Czechs who fled to the West after this re-imposition of oppressive control by the Soviets. They went to Vienna where Dr. Oulehla affiliated with the University of Vienna Veterinary Medicine and Research Institute. There he lectured and worked in Equine Internal Medicine, investigating contagious diseases specific to horses. He was Consultant at the Federal Stallion Barn in Stadl-Paura, where Austrian Warmbloods were inspected and licensed annually for breeding. Along with other Veterinary experts, he was called to the Piber Stud Farm during the crisis outbreak of an abortigenic variant strain of Equine Herpesvirus Type 1 (EHV-1) which killed about 10 broodmares and 30 potential foals. This outbreak was devastating to the small breeding population in Piber. Dr. Oulehla was central to controlling this outbreak. As the new Head of the Piber Stud Farm, beginning in 1983, he worked to protect and build the future of the endangered breeding program at Piber. His energy and success in Piber was noted in Vienna. In 1985, he became Head of the Spanish Riding School in Vienna as well, the first person ever to hold both director positions simultaneously.
6
Dr. Oulehla served in Vienna and Piber until
January 2001 when the Spanish Riding School and the Stud Farm at Piber were taken from under the direct control of the Austrian government and privatized.
During his years as Director of the Spanish Riding School in Vienna and the Stud Farm in Piber, Dr. Oulehla modernized some aspects of these traditional institutions, using his current Veterinary knowledge to gently change the facilities, priorities, populations, and procedures. The ability to quarantine became more important. He studied the bloodlines, stallion and mare families, then increased the population and widened the gene pool by selectively adding from other Lipizzan stud farms, further protecting the breeding horses from risk from another disease outbreak for which this isolated herd had no resistance. To familiarize the world with the elegant Lipizzans and the beauty of classical dressage, he expanded the frequency and scope of tours by the performing stallions, while also reducing their workload to protect them from overuse injuries. He encouraged active contacts among the world’s Lipizzan breeding groups with the intention of improving adherence to the breed standard and thereby improving the choices made of which mares and stallions should be bred, and to whom. He conducted clinics for judging Lipizzans. He travelled widely to conduct evaluations, including in the USA, beginning in 1986. He published two definitive works on the Lipizzan: Die Spanische Reitschule zu Wein (with Mazakarini and Brabec) in 1986 and Breeding Standards in the Lipizzan Horse Population in 1996.
After his early retirement in 2000, Dr. Oulehla continued his active involvement with the Lipizzan breed, consulting with American, Austrian, British, and Australian breeding associations, as well as private breeding farms worldwide. As noted above, he also served on the Board of Directors of our own Lipizzan Association of North America (LANA), providing sage guidance on breeding and writing scholarly articles for our magazine. One of the articles he wrote for us on breeding Lipizzans is included in this issue. We will miss his intensity, his passionate concern for our breed, his generosity, and his kindness.
7
My Memories of Jaromir Oulehla
by Gary Lashinsky
We first met in Washington, D.C., at the performance here of the Spanish Riding School in 1990. He was also conducting a Seminar for U.S. Lipizzan owners and breeders. Although my company was a bit at odds with the Spanish Riding School in Vienna because we produced the “World Famous Lipizzaner Stallion Show” which the Spanish Riding School believed infringed on their exclusive turf, Dr. Oulehla was ever the gentleman in our interactions from the start. He was so very knowledgeable about the breed that I knew I must get to know him better! That did eventually happen, as he was coming to the U.S.A. again in 1994 to do Lipizzan evaluations for several breeding farms, and we arranged that he came to our farm that year also.
It was such a pleasure to have him here evaluating our horses. He quickly became a dear friend and so much a part of our great and very successful breeding program for many years!
It was always such a joy to see him and my wife, Libby, having coffee and going over horse papers (although Jaromir didn’t need to see papers but one time) and discussing who to breed with who and WHY! Libby was always taking notes like crazy. His mind was incredible when it came to the horses, and the things that he remembered about the bloodlines, specific mares, specific stallions, etc. It was as though he had a photographic memory!
One of my favorite memories was when Dr. Oulehla was again in Orlando, Florida doing evaluations of our horses and helping us set up the breeding for the next year. We had a Dodge Viper Club Christmas dinner scheduled during the time that he was here and so we just took him along. Great food, music and friends. I looked up, only to see Libby on the dance floor with Jaromir! She just had to get him a little more involved in the evening! He didn’t dance any more that evening, but spent a lot of time talking to the Viper people. Everyone learned something new that evening, some about
horses, some about racing cars such as the Dodge Viper. A n o t h e r G R E A T memory was dur ing an evaluation, when he told me that a stallion that I had purchased at a Spanish Riding School auction years before in Münster, Germany could “breed with an alligator and it would STILL be a full Lipizzan.” That horse was Favory Bora who became very well known in the Dressage competition circuit, under the training and care of Michael Poulin. Unfortunately, Bora passed away at a young age from a very little known disease with
no cure. When I spoke with Dr. Oulehla about it, he was aware of the disease, and was heartbroken by the loss of Favory Bora; he also concurred that everything had been done that could have been. Dr. Oulehla’s sudden death is a horrible loss to us all in the Lipizzan world and to all of his Family and to his many friends around the world. There will never be another like him!
Dr. Jaromir Oulehla is survived by his loving wife Hana, daughter Petra, and beloved grandson Philipp Jaromir.
Rest in Peace, Dr. Oulehla, and know that we in the Lipizzan world will be forever grateful for all that you did for the horses, and we will do everything possible to keep YOUR legacy going.
Our deepest love and condolences to Hana, Petra and Philipp Jaromir.
MAY HIS SPIRIT ALWAYS GUIDE US ALL!
8
The Breeding of Lipizzaner Horses: a definitive historical treatise on the history, background, bloodlines, and principle of the Lipizzan horse
by Dr. Jaromir Oulehla
University Dozent and Doctor of Veterinary Medicine
Director of the Spanish Riding School in Vienna and of the Lipizzan Stud Farm in Piber, 1983- 2001
Member of LANA’s Board of Directors
The following article was contributed to LANA’s Haute École
by Dr. Oulehla in 2012. We are reprinting it, to remind us of
his profound depth of knowledge about breeding Lipizzans.
—The Lipizzan Association of North America (LANA)
For more than 400 years, the goal of Lipizzaner breeding
has been strictly to produce horses that meet precisely Vienna’s
imperial and royal needs, to produce horses that meet the
requirements of the Spanish Riding School, and to produce
horses that perpetuate special attributes and qualifications for
classical riding-art, as well as for pulling imperial carriages. Only
the proven best ones were allowed to pass on their attributes.
This strict selection – based on exterior attributes, interior
attributes and talent – made this breed
renowned worldwide. Today, Lipizzaners
are still very popular, due to their
exclusivity, kindness and versatile
usability.
Resulting from this double task –
being a riding horse as well as a carriage
horse – some “defects” might occur,
such as that the saddle-position is less
than excellent or that the scapular region
and pace do not meet exactly the
requirements for sport horses nowadays.
It is difficult to make corrections
here, because these characteristics are
deeply embodied genetically. A fast re-
breeding would bring a wide deviation; a
radical change in the basis of breeding is
not possible, because there are too few
single individuals to execute a hard
selection. A long-term correction of less
advantageous characteristics could be tried using huge intuition.
Because this breed is extraordinary consolidated, a cross-breeding
of two Lipizzaner breeding-lines is also possible. Diverse
refinement theories, aiming at bringing in Arab, Andalusian,
Lusitano or other horses, are to be rejected. Multiple historic
experiences show that when efforts were made to do this, typical
Lipizzaner characteristics were lost. Breeding outreach has to be
found within the breed itself.
In order to keep Lipizzaner horses as a cultural heritage in a
pure form, the European Commission settled the breeding rules
and goals – that had been evaluated and developed in the Federal
Stud Farm Piber - in the European Union on January 11th 1992.
All members of the European Union, who want to gain official
governmental legitimization as purebred breeding organizations,
have to follow these rules which are outlined below.
9
(a) The Lipizzaner is the oldest breed of horses in
Europe concerning selection, tradition and
culture.
(b) The phenotype of the Lipizzaner breed draws
attention to its use, and the Lipizzaner proves to
be particularly well-suited for classical
horsemanship (haute école), for driving sports,
for dressage and for leisure sports.
(c) The Lipizzaner is an extremely expressive horse,
its bearing is noble, the overall impression is
harmonious, the frame is square to oblong, rarely
rectangular.
(d) The stick measure is ideally between 153 cm and
158 cm.
(e) The head is expressive with large black eyes, a
broad, flat forehead, finely chiselled jaw,
adequate lower jaw movement, a straight nose
line with a tolerable Roman nose.
(f) The neck conforms with the requirements of the
Baroque with a relatively strongly curved upper
line and raised keeping.
(g) The saddle position conforms with the
requirements for a riding horse.
(h) The shoulders should be long and sloping, the
breast deep and broad.
(i) The back is broad, muscular and well enclosed;
the flank is powerful.
(j) The croup is harmonious and well proportioned.
(k) The horse has relatively short, powerful, dry
extremities, clear sinews, powerful joints, and
hard, neatly formed hooves.
(l) A typical and important feature is the rather high
knee action which contributes to the elegance,
harmony and beauty of the parade step. The
step is energetic, elastic, rhythmic and high-
stepping.
(m) There is a predominance of the traditional white
or grey colour.
(n) The inner characteristics of the Lipizzaner are
hardness, endurance, contentment, ability to
learn, pleasure in walking, obedience, willingness,
patience and good humour.
The following details must be entered in the Record of
Origin:
(a) Name
The name of a stallion is composed of the sire’s
name and the dam’s name.
(For example: Pluto Presciana)
The naming of mares shall be the responsibility
of the officially
registered breeding organizations or associations.
The rules for registration of the Lipizzaner
breeding organizations and associations are
collected and filed in the stud-book of origin.
(b) Sex, colour, markings and branding.
(c) In the case of electronic marking, the relevant
coding should be entered; the breeding
organization or association keeps a register
which is open for inspection regarding the use of
chips for electronic marking.
(d) Height at the withers, chest measurement,
cannon-bone circumference and date of
measuring the animal.
(e) From the year 2000, blood group or DNA micro-
satellite analysis.
(f) The record of origin must contain at least five
generations. If complete genealogical
documentation is available, only two generations
need to be entered.
(g) The place of foaling (country) and the date of
foaling should be noted.
(h) In the parent generation, the following should
also be noted:
- Name of associated mare’s family
- Section of the stud-book of sire and dam
depending on the subdivision of the stud-
book.
(i) The record of origin contains the name of the
breeding organization or association.
(j) Date of elimination/departure
Definition of the features of the breed
Record of Origin
10
The stud-book of a Lipizzaner breeding
organization must be subdivided at least into the
following sections:
(a) Register of foals
All foals born must be entered in the register of
foals with the data listed under the points listed
above, (a) to (i) as applicable to foals. The entry
should be based on a valid breeding certificate.
(b) Main book
The main book should be kept separately for
mares and stallions.
A Lipizzaner horse should be entered in the
main book at the earliest at three years of age. This
entry represents registration as a breeding horse.
Only Lipizzaners whose origin can be traced
back without gaps in all sections of their lineage to the
founder of the sire’s lineage and also the dam’s
lineage shall be registered.
All recognized stallion lines of descent and mare
families are listed below. No other mare families or
stallion lines of descent will be acknowledged.
At 36 months, mares should be at least 148 cm
in height, stallions at least 150 cm. For use in “haute
école,” the horses may be between 153 cm and 158
cm in height.
Additional criteria for an entry in the main book
are specified by the officially registered breeding
organizations or associations. They are based on the
definition of the features of the breed, the breeding
goal of the organization and possibly on performance
criteria.
If performance criteria for the entry of the
mares and stallions are specified in accordance with
the national animal breeding provisions, they must
relate to the breed and contain the following points:
In riding – fulfilment of a Class L dressage
exercise or
In driving – fulfilment of a Class L dressage
exercise for one- or two-horse vehicles.
The records in the main book contain all data
listed above in Record of Origin, letters (a) – (j).
Moreover, an exterior description at the time of
making the entry should be noted. For stallions,
coverings and offspring should be recorded in a cover
register.
(a) Traditionally, stallions are allocated to the
stallion lines of descent; the records must show
an unbroken lineage which can be traced back
to the founder of the sire’s line of descent and
also the dam’s family.
(b) In the case of mares, allocation to a
thoroughbred Lipizzaner lineage is traditionally
implemented. Also, with mares, it must be
possible to trace an unbroken, thoroughbred
lineage on both the dam’s and the sire’s side.
(c) If during the classification of Lipizzaner horses
in the course of breeding work in the stud farm
or breeding organization alternations have to be
made with reference to generation numbers or
stud-farm numbers, these alterations must be
entered in a register which show the allocation
in a clear and comprehensible manner.
(d) From the year 2000, blood group or DNA micro
-satellite analyses must be carried out at the age
of a yearling. A data-bank of these analyses
must be kept. The results should be enclosed
with the proof of origin.
(e) The recognized stallion lines of descent and
mare families of the Lipizzaner breed are listed
below.
No other stallion lines of descent or mare
families will be acknowledged.
Subdivisions of the stud-book
Principles for drawing up pedigrees
11
Stallion Lines of Descent
The six Classical stallion lines of descent are:
Pluto
Maestoso
Neapolitano
Conversano
Favory
Siglavy
Two more stallion lines of descent
Tulipan and
Incitato
are classified as equivalent to the six classical lines of
descent, provided that exclusively thoroughbred
Lipizzaners are proven on the sire’s and the dam’s
side.
Mare Families
Within the framework of basic research
carried out by Oulelha and Jurkovic in 1989, after the
frontiers to the East European States had been
opened, the stud-books of all Lipizzaner stud farms
were inspected and studied. The mare families,
recorded on the basis of this information by Oulelha
in 1996 for his university lectureship thesis and listed
below, can be regarded as complete. The stud-book
for mares has been closed on this basis.
Registered Stallion Lines of Descent
and Mare Families
CLASSICAL MARE FAMILIES
Serial Num-
ber
Name of Fam-ily
Founder of Family Place/year of foal-
ing Origin
1 SARDINIA Sardinia
(Lipizzan, 1776) Lipizza
2 SPADIGLIA Spadiglia
(Lipizza, 1778) Lipizza
3 ARGENTINA Argentina
(Lipizza. 1767) Lipizza
4 AFRICA Africa
(Kladrub, 1747) Kladrub/Lipizza
5 ALMERINA Almerina
(Kladrub, 1769) Kladrub/Lipizza
6 PRESCIANA/
BRADA-MANTE
Presciana/Bradamante (Kladrub,
1782/1777)
Kladrub/Lipizza
7 ENG-
LANDERIA Englanderia
(Kladrub, 1773) Kladrub/Lipizza
8 EUROPA Europa
(Kladrub, 1774) Kladrub/Lipizza
9 FISTULA Fistula
(Koptschan, 1771) Koptschan
10 IVANKA Ivanka
(Koptschan, 1754) Koptschan
11 DEFLORATA Deflorata
(Frederiksborg, 1767)
Frederiksborg
12 GIDRANE 184 Gidrane
(orig. Arab, 1841) Lipizza
13 DJEBRIN 100 Generale Junior
(Babolna, 1824) Radautz/Lipizza
14 MERCURIO 60 Freies Gestüt (Radautz, 1806)
Radautz/Lipizza
15 THEODOR-
OSTO
Theodorosta (Bukovina, before
1870) Lipizza
16 CAPRIOLA Capriola
(Kladrub, 1785) Kladrub
17 RAVA Rava
(Kladrub, 1755) Kladrub
18 SAFFA Saffa
(Koptschan, 1768) Koptschan/
Lipizza
19 SOLLA Solla
(Kladrub, 1777) Kladrub/Lipizza
(The families of numbers 4, 6, 13, 16, 18 and 19 will
be provisionally recognized as stud families; the
definitive recognition will take place after a
common examination of the historical documents.)
12
MARE FAMILIES OF HUNGARIAN ORIGIN
Item
No. Family Name
Family founder Birthplace and year
Originating
from
1 542 MAGYAR 542 Magyar Kanca Mezöhegyes
2 759 ORIGINAL
MOLDAVIAN
759 Original
Moldavian (Mezöhegyes, 1804)
Mezöhegyes
3 2064 NEAP. LEPKES 236 Origin
Holsteinian (Mezöhegyes, before
Mezöhegyes
4 2070 MADAR VI 236 Origin Moldavian Mezöhegyes
5 2038 NEAP. JUCI 56 Siglavy Bagdady Babolna
6 502 MOSZGO Komamasszony Terezovac
7 2052 NEAP. Szerena II Tata
8 81 MAESTOSO 101 Siglavy II Tat
9 TOPLICA SIGLAVY Siglavy II Mozsgö
10 222 ALIAS/e. ANNA 280 Galsar Pusztazer
11 2214 ALPAR/e. Arabella Pusztazer
12 PALLAVICINI Nusi Pusztazer
13 2004 ALNOK/e. Hazzard Pusztazer
14 501 KARST PARTA Unkown Lipica?
MARE FAMILIES OF ROMANIAN ORIGIN
Ite
m
No.
Family Name Originating from
1 936 Origin Transylvania
(Mezöhegyes, 1786) Mezöhegyes
2 461 Moldavian
(Mezöhegyes, 1782) Mezöhegyes
3
410 TURTSY
(Count Karolyi, Siebenb.
1801)
Mezöhegyes
4 48 FAVORY X-4
(Fagaras, 1909) Fagaras/Mezöhegyes
5 5 FAVORY XV-8
(Fagaras, 1912) Fagaras/Mezöhegyes
6 14 TULIPAN-14
(Fagaras, 1915) Fagaras/Mezöhegyes
7 84 Tulipan-4
(Fagaras, 1916) Fagaras/Mezöhegyes
8 36 NEAPOLITANO-1
(Fagaras, 1914)
Fagaras/Mezöhegyes
Lipica?
9 PALMYRA
(Lipica, 1870) Lipica
10 49 HIDAS
(Count Andrassy, 1909) Simbata de Jos
11
22 MAESTOTO
BASOVICA
(PRIVAT, 1912)
Simbata de Jos
12 319 Original Moldavian
(1787) Mezöhegyes
13 318 MAESTOSO VII
Mezöhegyes Mezöhegyes
MARE FAMILIES OF SLOVENIAN ORIGIN
Item
No. Family Name
Family founder
Birthplace and
year
Originat-
ing from
1 REBECCA-
THAIS
Rebecca
(Arabian Orlovnyak
1942)
Lipica
MARE FAMILIES FROM KLADRUB –
CROSSBRED AROUND
Ite
m
No.
Crossbreeding Father/Mother Originating
from
1 Noblessa
(Kladrub 1907)
Generalissimus
Famosa
(Kladrub
1897)
(Kladrub
1897)
13
MARE FAMILIES OF CROATIAN ORIGIN
Item
No.
Family
Name
Family founder
Birthplace and
year
Originating
from
1 RENDES
Rendes
(Turkish, before
1847)
Vucovar
(Count Eltz)
2 HAMAD-
FLORA
111 Hamad
(Arabian Bab.
+1850)
Vucovar
(Count Eltz)
3 ELJEN-
ODALISKA
Nanczi
(E, 1904)
Vucovar
(Count Eltz)
4 MISS
WOOD
Miss Wood
(Irish, 1890)
Vucovar
(Count Eltz)
5 FRUSKA Fruska
(1857)
Vucovar
(Count Eltz)
6 TRAVIATA
Traviata
Cabana, before
1913)
Cabana
(from Jank-
ovic)
7 MERGIT
Margit
(Cabana, before
1902)
Cabana
(from Jank-
ovic)
8 MIMA/
NANA
1 Vanda
(Danivar, 1898) Danivar
9 ALKA Alka
(Dakovo)
Dakovo
(Lipica?)
10 KAROLINA Darolina
(Dakovo, 1885)
Dakovo
(Lipica?)
11 MUNJA Munja
(Dakovo, 1905
Dakovo
(Lipica?)
12 ANAMONE
Maestoso XXXIX
Mezöhegyes
+1860)
Mezöhegyes
13 ERCEL
Ercel
(Terezovac, +
1880)
Terezovac
(from Jank-
ovic)
14 CZIRKA
Czirka
(Terezovac, mid
19th Century)
Terezovac
(from Jank-
ovic)
ARABIAN STALLIONS AND MARE AFTER 1900
USED FOR CROSSBREEDING
Ite
m
No.
Crossbreeding Father/Mother Originating
from
1 Miecznik ox
(Jan. Podl. 1931)
Fetisz
Koalicija
(Jan. Podl.
1937)
(Radautz
1918)
2 Lotnik ox
(Dobuzek 1938)
Opal
Mokka
(Jan. Podl.
1933)
(Jan. Podl.
1933)
3 Trypolis ox
(Jan. Podl. 1937)
Eawer Bay
Kahira
(Jan. Podl.
1923)
(Jan. Podl.
1929)
4
132 Amurath Ba-
tosta XIX
(Lipik 1950)
781 Amurath
Shagya
10 Batosta
(Sar. 1932)
(St. 1940)
5 413 Shagya X-5
(Radautz 1912)
Shagya X
117 Amurath-2
(Radautz
1899)
(Radautz
1898)
6 Kadina XXIII 29 Siglavy III (1929)
7 Shagya XXXIII
(Babolna 1942)
Shagya XXI
109 Shagya
XXIII
(Babolna
1924)
(Babolna)
14
With LANA’s online Pedigree Database you can research ~ 5,000 living and historic Lipizzans and trace lineage back through the generations to founding mares and stallions. All members received an invitation by email. If you did not notice yours, please contact us and we will issue another invitation:
15
L.A.N.A. MEMBERSHIP
RENEWAL NOTICE
July 2016 — June 2017
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You may renew on-line by PayPal or Credit Card through our secure website by going to:
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Or you may renew by mail and send a check with the completed information form to:
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