Gallery
Byerley Turk
Sex: M, Stallion
Birth Year: 1679
Record(s):
Earnings:
Offspring in the gallery:
= The Byerley Turk. Foundation sire for US trotters and Norwegian coldblood trotters and UK Thoroughbred lines. The story of the Byerley Turk begins at the seige of Buda in Hungary in 1688, when a fine brown charger was taken from a captured Turkish officer by Captain Robert Byerley of the Sixth Dragoon Guards under King William III of Orange. The horse was believed to be about eight years old at the time, placing his year of birth at around 1679. The stallion served as Byerley's war horse when he was dispatched to Ireland in 1689 during King William's War. In 1690, public records show a race meeting was held in the spring at Down Royal in Northern Ireland, at which the top prize, the Silver Bell, was won by Captain Byerley's charger. Later that same year, the stallion was used during the Battle of the Boyne, July 12, 1690, versus the forces of King James II. [His biography up to this point closely parallels that of the Lister Turk, also captured at the seige of Buda and taken to Ireland to serve in the Battle of the Boyne. The Byerley Turk first entered stud in England, at the family seat at Middridge Grange, County Durham and later stood at Byerley's Goldsborough Hall, near Knaresborough, in Yorkshire. It is said that he covered few "bred" mares during either period of his stud career, which makes the results even more remarkable. He was known to be at stud as late as 1701, the year he sired Basto (foaled in 1702). It's possible that his remains are buried somewhere on the Goldsborough estate. The Byerly Turk was reportedly a dark brown horse with the strong oriental or Arabian features of large eyes, arched neck and high carriage of the tail. Many of his offspring were also noted to have been either bay or black.