Brandenburger
The Brandenburger is a German breed of warmblood sport horse from the state of Brandenburg in north-eastern Germany. From the 1960s – when Brandenburg was in East Germany – it was included in the stud-book of the or 'light warmblood'. Following the re-unification of Germany it again had its own stud-book. In 2003 it was included in the stud-book of the, which also included the Sachsen-Anhaltiner Warmblut, the and the ; the Bavarian Warmblood, the Württemberger and the Zweibrücker were added to it in 2014.
Like other German warmblood breeds, it is bred to compete in dressage, in show-jumping and in the three-day event. The successful dressage mare Poetin was a Brandenburger.
History
The Brandenburger originates in the Margraviate of Brandenburg, where horse-breeding is documented from the fifteenth century. It is closely associated with the, established in 1788 by the Prussian king Friedrich Wilhelm II in Neustadt, in the landkreis of Ostprignitz-Ruppin in north-western Brandenburg. It was bred principally as a military mount.A breed association, the italic=no, was established in 1922, and a stud-book was started; the association was dissolved in 1949, after the end of the Second World War. From the 1960s, when Germany was divided and Brandenburg was in East Germany, the Brandenburger and the Mecklenburger were merged in the stud-book of the or 'light warmblood'; there was some cross-breeding with Hanoverian, Thoroughbred and Trakehner stock.
After the fall of the Berlin Wall and the re-unification of Germany, a new association – the italic=no – was formed; in 2007 this merged with the italic=no to form the italic=no From 2003 the Brandenburger was included in the stud-book of the, which also included the Sachsen-Anhaltiner Warmblut, the and the ; to these the Bavarian Warmblood, the Württemberger and the Zweibrücker were added in 2014.
In the early twenty-first century there were approximately 70 stallions and mares registered.