Why Are Horses Measured in Hands?
Why Are Horses Measured in Hands? Before man invented rulers and tape measures he often used his hands and feet to express the size of things. An old book published in 1561 says: “Foure grains of barlye make a fynger; foure fyngers a hande; foure hands a foote”.
When someone asks “How tall is this horse?” the answer usually comes in units known as the “hand.” It is a common unit of measurement now used only for quantifying the height of the horse. Today horses are still measured in hands. The measurement is taken from the ground to the withers, which is the highest part of the back lying between the shoulder blades. A hand is reckoned to be four inches, the assumed width of a man’s palm. Formerly it was taken as equal to three inches, when a man’s hand was smaller.
Early horses were probably around 12 hands (48 inches) at the withers, and one measuring 14 hands was exceptional. Some modern horses, however, reach 17 hands and occasionally 20 hands. A small horse under 14.2 hands is called a pony.
Tracing a tradition backward is a dicey proposition. We know that today a “hand” is 4 inches, with one inch increments, and the measurement is from level ground to the highest non-variable skeletal structure on the horse, the withers.
History suggests that at one time, perhaps 5,000 years ago, it was as rudimentary as stacking a man’s clenched fist one upon another, which tells us it was rather rough and inaccurate. At some point, horse owners, and especially traders, agreed that the “hand” will always represent 4 inches, and will always measure the height from level ground to the withers.
In the ancient Mediterranean cultures, the hand unit developed – along with other measures – based upon references people of the time could relate to, such as body parts (e.g., foot). The problem was whose foot, or whose hand? There were some inaccuracies.
According to encyclopaedic sources, the “hand” measurement was four fingers wide at one point in time, and at others it was four fingers and a thumb wide. The rules of trade demanded the same measurement everywhere, and the hand was eventually standardized by the Egyptians around 3,000 BC based upon a complex system including the “cubit.” Because of the enormous influence of the Egyptian culture, use of this system migrated to other countries and cultures.
In the Egyptian system, measurement was based on the cubit (sometimes mentioned in reference to the construction of the pyramids or Noah’s ark). The Egyptian cubit is generally recognized as having been the most widely accepted standard of linear measurement in the very ancient world.
The cubit was based on the length of the arm from the elbow to the extended fingertips, an arbitrary distinction, which was then standardized by a royal master cubit of black granite. It was kept in a royal vault and all the cubit sticks in use in Egypt were measured at regular intervals.
This was not a planned system. It evolved, growing out of custom and popular usage, unlike planned systems of measurement like the Metric or the International System of Units (ISU) that we are more familiar with today.
The standardized “hand” has become as good an increment to use in the determination of a horse’s height at the withers as any other. But it is by no means the only means.
Regardless of its origin, the hand has become a tradition of British measurement. In the rest of Europe however, height was – and still is – measured in metres and centimetres. In some places, like Europe and South Africa, there exists the dual situation of measurement in hands and centimetres.
How many inches are in a hand when measuring a horse?
A “Hand” is a unit of measure equal to 4 inches, used to measure the height of a horse at the highest point of the withers. The number of whole hands is properly followed by a period, then the remaining height in inches. Thus a horse who measures 5 feet and two inches at the withers would be designated “15.2 hands”.