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Federico Caprilli

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the high aristocracy spread out, he was transferred to a cavalry regiment in southern Italy where he nonetheless continued his experimentations with great success in equestrian competitions. As a consequence, the General Inspector of the Cavalry, H.R.H. the Count of Turin, and the Commander of the Cavalry School of Pinerolo (near Turin), soon realised the genius and the value of Caprilli's methods and called him as chief instructor at the Cavalry School of Pinerolo as well as its subsidiary in Tor di Quinto (near Rome). After a year of training, members of the schools had made great progress. The horses became so willing that riders completed the training course without reins.
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could easily hover above the saddle, with the thigh and lower leg providing the rider with support. Over the fence, the rider kept his seat out of the saddle, leaned slightly forward, and allowed his hands to follow the horse's mouth forward. His center of gravity was placed directly over the horse's, making the job of jumping as easy as possible. On landing, the rider remained slightly forward, instead of inclining backward as in the old seat. This position was held not only over fixed, upright obstacles, but
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horse's jumping movement and most importantly one that would not touch the horse's mouth. Caprilli also wanted to train a horse that could think for itself, without needing the rider's guidance, and did not like "spot" jumping, where the rider tried to add in or lengthen the stride of the horse before the fence.
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This position had serious problems, first and foremost because the horse was uncomfortable being hit in the mouth over every obstacle. The position also kept the rider's weight directly on the back of the horse, and pushed the rider behind the motion, sending his center of gravity behind the horse's.
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Caprilli's position made horses much more willing to jump obstacles, now that they were free of interference. However, his "rebellion" against the "classic" position earned him the hostility of the Italian Royal Army establishment, so that when rumours of his turbulent sentimental life with women of
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The horse was allowed to lengthen its stride, instead of approaching the fence in a very collect, stiff manner. The rider was positioned more forward at all times, including on the flat, so that his body mirrored the more lengthened frame of the horse, and the stirrup was shortened so that the seat
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The old jumping seat involved the rider using long stirrups, keeping his legs pushed out in front of him, and his body leaning back, pulling the reins, as the horse took the fence. This position was adopted because it used to be believed that the hindquarters and hocks were more flexible and better
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Caprilli examined horses free jumping (without tack or rider), using photographs to document their shape over fences, and found that they always landed on their forelegs. He then developed his theory on the position the rider should take while over a fence: one that would not interfere with the
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The Caprilli Papers, Federico Caprili. Translated and edited by Major Piero Santini. J.A.Allen, London, 1967. Caprilli. Vita e scritti, Carlo Giubbilei, Bramante Edizioni Equestri, Milano, 1976. Le passioni del dragone, Lucio Lami, Mursia, Milano, 2009.
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Due to such developments, the Italian cavalry began to dominate international competition, and riders came from countries around the world to study Caprilli's system. The style spread worldwide, helped by the fact that Caprilli demonstrated at the
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shock absorbers than the fragile front legs. By leaning back and pulling the horse's head up, the riders tried to encourage the horse to land hind legs first (or at least with all four legs), to decrease the impact on the front legs.
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over the fence. The rider therefore interfered with the horse's jumping movement, making it more difficult (and sometimes painful) for the animal to clear the obstacle, and made many horses sour to jumping.
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in 1907, after inexplicably losing consciousness while riding at pass a horse he was testing, thus falling and hitting his head on the sharp edge of the footpath.
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The weight on the horse's back, in addition to the upward pull on the head, made it impossible for the horse to round up in a natural
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The old jumping seat: leaning back to "save" the horse's legs. Note the horse's inverted frame and poor technique.
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cavalry officer and equestrian who revolutionized the jumping seat. His position, now called the "
268: 83: 327: 322: 43: 8: 211: 186: 127: 123: 182: 164: 197: 139: 306: 39: 218: 150: 130:," formed the modern-day technique used by all jumping riders today. 21: 304: 256:but its sources remain unclear because it lacks 48:introducing citations to additional sources 287:Learn how and when to remove this message 196: 149: 122:(8 April 1868 - 6 December 1907) was an 110: 38:Relevant discussion may be found on the 171: 145: 305: 228: 15: 13: 14: 339: 201:Captain Caprilli jumping in Italy 233: 31:relies largely or entirely on a 20: 192: 1: 224: 133: 7: 10: 344: 120:Captain Federico Caprilli 242:This article includes a 271:more precise citations. 313:Classical horsemanship 202: 155: 116: 318:Show jumping trainers 200: 153: 138:Caprilli was born in 114: 172:Caprilli's technique 146:The old jumping seat 44:improve this article 59:"Federico Caprilli" 244:list of references 212:1906 Olympic Games 203: 156: 117: 297: 296: 289: 217:Caprilli died in 183:up and down banks 109: 108: 94: 335: 292: 285: 281: 278: 272: 267:this article by 258:inline citations 237: 236: 229: 104: 101: 95: 93: 52: 24: 16: 343: 342: 338: 337: 336: 334: 333: 332: 303: 302: 293: 282: 276: 273: 262: 248:related reading 238: 234: 227: 195: 174: 148: 136: 115:Circa 1911-1915 105: 99: 96: 53: 51: 37: 25: 12: 11: 5: 341: 331: 330: 325: 320: 315: 295: 294: 277:September 2010 252:external links 241: 239: 232: 226: 223: 194: 191: 173: 170: 147: 144: 140:Livorno, Italy 135: 132: 107: 106: 100:September 2010 42:. Please help 28: 26: 19: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 340: 329: 326: 324: 321: 319: 316: 314: 311: 310: 308: 301: 291: 288: 280: 270: 266: 260: 259: 253: 249: 245: 240: 231: 230: 222: 220: 215: 213: 207: 199: 190: 188: 184: 178: 169: 166: 160: 152: 143: 141: 131: 129: 125: 121: 113: 103: 92: 89: 85: 82: 78: 75: 71: 68: 64: 61: –  60: 56: 55:Find sources: 49: 45: 41: 35: 34: 33:single source 29:This article 27: 23: 18: 17: 298: 283: 274: 263:Please help 255: 219:Turin, Italy 216: 208: 204: 193:Implications 179: 175: 161: 157: 137: 128:forward seat 119: 118: 97: 87: 80: 73: 66: 54: 30: 328:1907 deaths 323:1868 births 269:introducing 307:Categories 225:References 134:Early life 70:newspapers 185:and over 40:talk page 265:improve 187:ditches 165:bascule 124:Italian 84:scholar 86:  79:  72:  65:  57:  250:, or 91:JSTOR 77:books 63:news 46:by 309:: 254:, 246:, 214:. 189:. 142:. 290:) 284:( 279:) 275:( 261:. 102:) 98:( 88:· 81:· 74:· 67:· 50:. 36:.

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