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    Saddles, style and skill

    LISBON (AFP) – Stable hand Catarina Cabaca carefully braided the mane of a Lusitano thoroughbred in the distinctive Portuguese style that’s just been added to United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization’s (UNESCO) list of intangible cultural heritage.

    She was weaving the mane at the prestigious Portuguese School of Equestrian Art in Lisbon, where dressage is taught as it was practised at the Portuguese royal court in the 18th Century.

    “We prepare them just like in the old days,” she told AFP while crafting a traditional three-strand plait, ahead of a dressage performance at the school.

    UNESCO, which added Portuguese traditional dressage to its list in December, called the practice a “source of collective identity” characterised by the rider’s traditional outfit and position on the saddle.

    One of the bastions of this practice is the school in Lisbon, where equestrians ride on chamois or tapir skin saddles while dressed in burgundy velvet coats, high leather boots and black tricorn hats.

    Riders from the Lisbon School of Equestrian Art perform with a Lusitano horse during a show at Lisbon School of Equestrian Art in Belem, Lisbon. PHOTO: AFP

    They perform choreographed exercises in the tradition of Portugal’s centuries-old equestrian art.

    “We are the guardians of this national art,” said the administrator of Parques de Sintra Luis Calaim, the public entity that runs the equestrian school.

    For 46-year-old rider Carlos Tomas, who has been with the school for nearly two decades, the recognition is “a responsibility” as “we play an important role in (this art’s) preservation and transmission”.

    The harmony between the rider and animal is key, but so is the Lusitano horse, a long-standing thoroughbred originating from Portugal, widely admired for its strength and agile gait, but also its docility and obedience.

    “It’s a unique horse, different from all the other races.

    “I see it as a Portuguese product of excellence, like olive oil or cork,” said a squire at the Portuguese School of Equestrian Art, Joao Pedro Rodrigues. Aside from the Portuguese School of Equestrian Art, this art continues to be practised thanks to the work of numerous breeders, artisans and riders in Portugal and abroad.

    With its addition to the UNESCO list, Portuguese equestrian art joins other traditions of the Iberian country, such as fado, popular traditional songs imbued with melancholy, recognised in 2011.

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