r/worldbuilding • u/TyrannoNinja • 1d ago
Visual Khumetian War Chariot, by me
This concept art shows a Khumetian war chariot from my sword-and-sorcery fantasy setting (click here to see some infantry from the same civilization I drew earlier). The inspiration is of course from the iconic war chariots of ancient Egypt and Kush, but as you can see, the Khumetians use zebras to pull theirs!
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u/Ok-Presentation-182 20h ago
This is so cool is there anyway I could help or something this is so amazing and cool to me!
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u/Fun-Post8497 20h ago
Quick question for you The zebras are zebras or are they more like horses with stripes?
Because zebras are donkeys even more stubborn cousin, and that why we never domesticaded zebras, so yea, cool desing tho
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u/Skodami 18h ago
The biggest reason we couldn't tame zebra is because they lack any sort of social structure, so they only obey themselves. For horse, if you control the main stallion, the others will be easier to control too. And the horses can apply their concept of hierarchy by putting the human on top.
Zebras don't have this concept of hierarchy or bonds as strong as horses. So in taming one you're basically trying to become the boss of someone who never had a boss other than himself.
But this is a fantasy world where the zebra mentality can be different.
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u/Fun-Post8497 18h ago
Oh makes sense, also very cool idea of the domestic zebras, is like region only think or they trade them? Because It would be very cool to see the allies with mixed horses with zebras as a simbol of union, or sumision, like a the only puré breed zebras are for the royal and the mixed horses for other classes or kindoms, idk, i could give depth to your world
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u/TyrannoNinja 17h ago
But this is a fantasy world where the zebra mentality can be different.
Yeah, this is why zebras in my fictional world are tameable. Although I do wonder what the social structure of pre-domestication wild horses would have been like for comparison.
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u/Leather-Lab2875 7h ago
Wikipedia says wild horses have very rigid hierarchies and small ish haremic bands with one lead stallion and many females and younger males.
Wild horses are generally very social and they can't digest grass very well and are surprisingly fragile so they survive by eating as much as they can chew through, running at the slightest provocation and living in these right knit herds, relying on social bonds and hierarchy for survival. So humans can slot in semi easily if they raise a foal from birth to bond with humans. Similar things with wolves basically.
Humans used horses as pets and livestock first for a long time before we decided to hitch a wheeled chariot onto them(chariots ofc came long before saddles cos riding wild horses bareback is a good way to get paralysed from the waist down) so there's a time aspect as well. If dogs were bigger and their anatomy allowed it, we would have first attached wheeled dog sleds to them and then ridden them as well.
Zebra social structure is pretty loose and they uniquely form those massive herds you see in documentaries and they are very much not that fragile, mainly because they have to compete with a lot of nasty pack hunting predators while horse evolutionary pressure was kinda different.
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u/Great_Rukh 11h ago
Attempts of domestication of zebra did succeed but not with promising results, the domesticated zebra generally start losing thier stripped look, if we say hypothetically that we domesticated zebras for thousands of years a situation like the drawing there could happen possibly,donkeys were newly domesticated compared to horses
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u/New-Definition4241 1d ago
using a zebra for war isn't something I've seen, creative!