Tammenzael Extended Pedigree
Tammenzael
| Tammen Zakim [m] 2014 Saklawi Jedran Chestnut Heavy Rabicano/Sabino |
Tammen Laheeb [m] 1999 Kuheilan Chestnut minimal sabino (rabicano carrier) |
Tammen [r] 1982 Dahman Shahwan Chestnut (rabicano/sabino carrier) |
Abenhetep [r] 1976 Kuheilan Bay (rabicano/sabino carrier) |
| Talgana [r] 1978 Dahman Shahwan Grey (chestnut base) |
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| AK Khattaara [r] 1979 Kuheilan Grey (chestnut base; rabicano/sabino carrier) |
Ibn Moniet El Nefous [r] 1964 Saklawi Jedran Grey (chestnut base; rabicano/sabino carrier) |
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| *Omnia [r] 1966 Kuheilan Grey (bay base; most likely rabicano/sabino carrier) |
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| Zakim El Moniet [m] 2011 Saklawi Jedran Chestnut minimal rabicano |
Zaki Ibn Farid CR [r] 2008 Dahman Shahwan Chestnut minimal rabicano/sabino |
Anaza El Farid [r] 1988 Dahman Shahwan Bay (rabicano carrier) |
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| Bint Aliah Halima [r] 1997 Dahman Shahwan Black minimal rabicano (sabino carrier) |
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| OT Sara Moniet RSI [r] 2004 Saklawi Jedran Chestnut minimal rabicano (sabino carrier) |
Rave on Ravenwood [r] 1989 Dahman Shahwan Chestnut (rabicano carrier) |
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| OT Dysara RSI [r] 1998 Saklawi Jedran Chestnut (rabicano carrier) |
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| *Seraphina Malakh [m] 2006 Hadban Enzahi Chestnut minimal rabicano |
Tammen Malakh [m] 1998 Hadban Enzahi Chestnut (rabicano/sabino carrier) Full Swayze lines! |
Tammen [r] 1982 Dahman Shahwan Chestnut (rabicano carrier) |
Abenhetep [r] 1976 Kuheilan Bay (rabicano/sabino carrier) |
| Talgana [r] 1978 Dahman Shahwan Grey (chestnut base) |
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| Abya [r] 1984 Hadban Enzahi Bay (rabicano/sabino carrier) |
Abenhetep [r] 1976 Kuheilan Bay (rabicano/sabino carrier) |
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| Shams Al Doha [r] 1975 Hadban Enzahi Bay (likely rabicano/sabino) |
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| Al Shah Samira [r] 1999 Hadban Enzahi Chestnut minimal rabicano |
El Thay Moufid [r] 1994 Dahman Shahwan Fleabitten Grey (bay base; likely rabicano/sabino carrier) |
El Thay Mansour [r] 1986 Saklawi Jedran Fleabitten Grey (bay base; likely rabicano/sabino carrier) |
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| El Thay Bint Mofeedah [r] 1990 Dahman Shahwan Grey (bay base; most likely rabicano/sabino carrier) |
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| Safiniya Bint Halim Shah [r] 1995 Hadban Enzahi Grey (likely chestnut base; probable rabicano carrier) |
El Thay Thamam (GER [r] 1983 Hadban Enzahi Grey (chestnut base; likely rabicano/sabino carrier) |
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| Halim Shah I- [r] 1990 Hadban Enzahi Grey (probable bay base; rabicano/sabino carrier) |

Tammen Zakim: [M] A Tammen Laheeb [M] and Zakim El Moniet [M] son, and a Tammen [R] grandson, with 13 traces to rare Saklawi Jedran mare, Basilisk [R]. He is a Halter Color Class winner with a winning personality which has also garnered him multiple wins in Scene-type classes, making him one of the most successful Ambassador Horses of Silk Road Arabians.

Tammen Laheeb: [M] A direct Tammen [R] son, out of AK Khattaara [R], an *Omnia [R] daughter and *Morafic [R] granddaughter; pure Kuheilan in the tail-line. Sire of Tammen Zakim [M], our up-and-coming stud and a consistent winner in the halter showring.
Tammen: [R] The great chestnut stallion owned by Patrick Swayze and Lisa Niemi; 2002 and 2005 Egyptian Event Leading Halter and Performance Sire; 2004 and 2006 Leading Performance Sire. A producer of fantastic get, especially mares (Tammen produced only 23 sons out of a foal crop of 86, one of which was Kuhaylan Roh), we chose Tammen as a model and source for our breeding program at Blue Jackal Arabians in 2010, and continue those lines now here at Silk Road Arabians, not because of the celebrity status of his owner, but because of how Patrick Swayze used that status to further the educational programs of the Arabian Horse Association, and most especially their programs for Youths. After all, the entire purpose of including real horses in model horse pedigrees is to educate: to ignite an undying interest in the real horses and the real breeds.
Abenhetep: [R] Appearing twice in this pedigree, Abenhetep [R] was a regional halter winner and sire of other regional winners in halter and performance, as well as a paternal brother to National Champions in western pleasure and to National winners in English pleasure and at halter. His dam, *Omnia [R], was a 3/4 sister to National Champion Park and Native Costume and National Champion Sire *Sakr+++ [R].
*Ibn Hafiza: [R] Imported from Egypt by Gleannloch Stud in 1970 at age 11 to serve as an outcrop stallion for Nazeer mares, he was a half brother to Sultan [R], and the sire of multiple halter and performance champions.
*Talal: [R] A Nazeer [R] son, he ran in over forty races, six of which he won, with a total of twenty-seven finishes in the ribbons before he was imported to the U.S. at age 10. He was also a trained dancing horse, though he refused to do so on-cue, hence his sale overseas. Later in life, he was seen dancing on his own, without a rider or a saddle. (Apparently dancing was great, so long as it was his idea!) He was the winner of multiple halter championships and was proclaimed National Top Ten at the age of 12.
*Omnia: [R] Bred by the Egyptian Agricultural Organization, she was imported to the U.S. in 1968 by Douglas B. Marshall of Gleannloch Farms, Texas, and became one of their most influential Foundation Mares. Pure-in-the-tail-line Kuheilan, she was an Alaa El Din [R] daughter and a Nazeer [R] granddaughter.
*Alaa El Din: [R] A Nazeer [R] son, he was a successful race horse in Egypt, running a total of 6 races, out of which he won 1, placed 2nd in another, 3rd in another, and 4th in the rest. He was also the sire of several race-winners. He went on to also sire *Faleh [R], a Legion of Merit winner, as well as two-time National Champion in Native Costume who also competed in a 100-mile endurance race. Yet, like Tammen [R], perhaps Alaa El Din’s [R] greatest contributions to the Arabian world were his daughters, who have been described by the famous German Arabian Breeder, Dr. Nagel as “the most beautiful flowers of Egyptian Arabian horse breeding.”
Moniet El Nefous: [R] Often referred to as the “Queen” of Egyptian Arabian broodmares, this flaxen chestnut mare bred by the Royal Agricultural Society in Egypt was pure-in-strain Saklawi Jedran and produced thirteen influential foals in her lifetime, including Bint Moniet El Nefous [R] and *Tuhotmos [R], the number one sire of the Egyptian Agricultural Organization’s breeding program until his exportation in 1973, after which he sired National Champion horses in Dressage and Trail as well as halter.
*Morafic: [R] A Nazeer [R] son, Morafic was imported to Gleannloch Farms in 1965 as a nine-year-old. Prior to that, he was a source of national pride in Egypt, leaving behind 56 get at the time of his exportation, eleven of whom would also later be exported to the U.S. He went on to become one of the most influential sires in Arabian history, and certainly the most influential sire at Gleannloch, siring numerous National Champions and stamping future generations with his refined head and dark eyes via get who became influential sires in their own right, including The Egyptian Prince [R].

Zakim El Moniet: [M] An OT Sara Moniet RSI [R] daughter, she is a Huntseat Pleasure winner, with multiple finishes in the ribbons at Halter. Entering her second decade of life, she is leaving the English showring behind, in favor of Reining and Cow Horse competitons.
OT Sara Moniet RSI: [R] Arabian Horse Association 2011 Distance Horse of the Year; High Point 50-99 mile Endurance horse; recipient of the American Endurance Ride Conference War Mare Award and the Belesemo Arabians Pioneer Award for the Heavyweight Division; recipient of the Drinkers of the Wind performance award by the Institute of the Desert Arabian Horse.
Ruminaja Ali: [R] U.S. Reserve National Champion and multi-U.S. National Champion, as well as sire of National Champions in halter and performance.
Shaikh Al Badi: [R] A *Morafic [R] son; a multi-class A halter champion as well as U.S. National Futurity Reserve Champion and a leading sire of champion horses.
*Ansata Ibn Halima: [R] Perhaps the most legendary Arabian sire in history; U.S. Top Ten Stallion in 1966, 1967, and 1969. Son of Nazeer [R], one of the most influential SEA sires in human history, and possibly also the ultimate source of the “rabicano gene” in modern Arabian horses.
Thee Desperado: [R] Egyptian Event Junior Champion Colt in 1991, Reserve Champion Stallion at the U.S. Nationals, Unanimous Grand Champion Stallion at Scottsdale in 1994, as well as leading Egyptian Event halter sire for 12 years straight from 1996 to 2007.
Alcibiades: [R] A consistent producer of “flashy” rabicano get, he was pure-in-strain Saklawi Jedran in the tail line, by *Rashad Ibn Nazeer [R] (listed as 1955 bay, a Nazeer [R] son) and out of *Bint Moniet El Nefous [R] (listed as 1957 chestnut, a Nazeer [R] daughter)

*Seraphina Malakh: [M] Making her debut at the World Equestrian Games in Normandy, France in 2014, she is the imported daughter of French mare Al Shah Samira [R] and Silk Road’s Foundation Stallion, Tammen Malakh [M]. Thus far, she is producing some very flashy foals for us, and we also have high hopes for her as a Western Dressage and Ranch Riding prospect.

Tammen Malakh: [M] A direct Tammen [R] son, out of Abya [R], an Abenhetep [R] daughter; pure Hadban Enzahi in the tail-line. Sire of our multiple-halter-ribbon-winner and Foundation Mare, Inshirah Moniet Aydan [M], as well as our up-and-coming stud, Tammenhetep [M].
Ansata Halim Shah: [R] Son of one of the world’s most influential Arabian sires, *Ansata Ibn Halima [R], and grandson of Nazeer [R], he was an international champion and sire of international champions and has been acclaimed as one of the most influential Egyptian Arabian sires to date, worldwide. His influence is felt at least three times in this pedigree.
*Bint Shaams: [R] Listed in 1983 Arabian Horse Registry records as a 1956 grey mare bred in Egypt by the EAO and imported by Gleannloch in 1970, she is the odd offspring of two non-grey parents, which is utterly incompatible with the general laws of coat color inheritance. This suggests that she may have been a maximum sabino, though neither parent obviously carries sabino traits, either.