Dictionary Definition
burro n : small donkey used as a pack
animal
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- a small donkey
Italian
Etymology
From Latin butyrumNoun
Portuguese
Noun
burro m (plural burros)Spanish
Etymology
From borricoNoun
- donkey, especially one used as a pack animal.
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
The donkey or ass, Equus asinus, is a member of
the Equidae
or horse family, and an odd-toed
ungulate. The words donkey and ass are applied to the domesticated
E. asinus. The animal considered to be its wild ancestor is the
African
Wild Ass, also E. asinus.
Colloquially, the term "ass" is often used today
to refer to a larger, horse-sized animal, and "donkey"
to a smaller, pony-sized
one. In the western United
States, a small donkey is sometimes called a burro. A male
donkey or ass is called a jack, a female a jenny, and
offspring less than one year old, a foal (male: colt, female
filly).
While different species of the Equidae family can
interbreed, offspring are almost always sterile. Nonetheless,
horse/donkey hybrids
are popular for their durability and vigor. A mule is the offspring of a jack
(male) donkey and a mare (female
horse). The much rarer successful mating of a male horse and a
female donkey produces a hinny.
Asses were first
domesticated around 3000 BCE, approximately the same time as
the horse, and have spread
around the world. They continue to fill important roles in many
places today and domesticated species are increasing in numbers
(although the African wild ass and another relative, the Onager, are endangered
species). As "beasts of
burden" and companions, asses and donkeys have worked together
with humans for centuries.
Characteristics
Donkeys range considerably in size, depending on breed and management. Most domestic donkeys range from 0.9 to over 1.4 m tall, though the Mammoth Jack breed is taller, and the Andalucian-Cordobesan breed of southern Spain can reach up to 1.6 m high.Donkeys are adapted to marginal desert lands, and have many
traits that are unique to the species as a result. Wild donkeys
live separated from each other, unlike tight wild horse and
feral
horse herds. Donkeys have developed very loud vocalizations,
which help keep in contact with other donkeys over the wide spaces
of the desert. The best-known call is referred to a "bray," which
can be heard for over three kilometers. Donkeys have larger ears
than horses. Their longer ears may pick up more distant sounds, and
may help cool the donkey's blood. Donkeys in the wild can defend
themselves with a powerful kick of their hind legs as well as by
biting and striking with their front feet.
Donkeys' tough digestive
system is somewhat less prone to colic than
that of horses, can break down near-inedible vegetation and extract
moisture from food very efficiently. As a rule, donkeys need
smaller amounts of feed
than horses of comparable height and weight. Because they are
easy
keepers, if overfed, donkeys are also quite susceptible to
developing a condition called laminitis.
Etymology of the name
Until recent times, the synonym ass was commonly used to refer to Equus asinus (e.g., as in jackass, meaning "male donkey"); ass has clear cognates in most other Indo-European languages. However, its homonymity in the United States with the vulgar term ass for "buttocks" probably influenced its gradual replacement by donkey when referring to Equus asinus. The word donkey is an etymologically obscure word. The first written use dates to 1785. No credible cognate for donkey has yet been identified. Hypotheses on its derivation include the following:- Perhaps a diminutive of dun (dull grayish-brown), a typical donkey colour. The African Wild Ass was domesticated around 4,000 BCE. The donkey became an important pack animal for people living in the Egyptian and Nubian regions as they can easily carry 20% to 30% of their own body weight and can also be used as a farming and dairy animal. By 1800 B.C., the ass had reached the Middle East, where the trading city of Damascus was referred to as the “City of Asses” in cuneiform texts. Syria produced at least three breeds of donkeys, including a saddle breed with a graceful, easy gait. These were favored by women.
For the Greeks, the donkey
was associated with the Syrian god of wine, Dionysus. The
Romans also
valued the ass and would use it as a sacrificial animal.
Equines had become extinct in the Western
Hemisphere at the end of the last Ice Age. However,
horses and donkeys were brought back to the Americas by the
Conquistadors.
In 1495, the ass first appeared in the New World when
Christopher
Columbus brought four jacks and two jennys. It is from this
bloodline that many of the mules which the Conquistadors
used while they explored the Americas were
produced. Shortly after America became independent, President
George
Washington imported the first mammoth jack stock into the
country. Because the existing Jack donkeys in the New World at the
time lacked the size and strength he sought to produce quality work
mules, he imported donkeys from Spain and France, some
standing over 1.63 m tall. One of the donkeys Washington received
from the Marquis
de Lafayette, named "Knight of Malta," stood 1.43 m and thus
was regarded as a great disappointment. Viewing this donkey as
unfit for producing mules, Washington instead bred Knight of Malta
to his jennys and, in doing so, created an American line of Mammoth
Jacks (a breed name that includes both males and females).
Despite these early appearances of donkeys in
America, the donkey did not find widespread distribution in America
until it was found useful as a pack animal by miners, particularly the gold prospectors, of
the mid-1800s. Miners preferred this animal due to its ability to
carry tools, supplies, and ore. Their sociable disposition and
adaptation to human companionship allowed many miners to lead their
donkeys without ropes. They simply followed behind their owner. As
mining became less an occupation of the individual prospector and
more of an industrial underground operation, the miners' donkeys
lost their jobs, and many were simply turned loose into the
American deserts. Descendants of these donkeys, now feral, can still be seen roaming
the Southwest today.
By the early 20th century, donkeys began to be
used less as working
animals and instead kept as pets in the United States and other
wealthier nations, while remaining an important work animal in many
poorer regions. The donkey as a pet is best portrayed by the
appearance of the miniature donkey in 1929. Robert Green imported
miniature donkeys to the United States and was a lifetime advocate
of the breed. Mr. Green is perhaps best quoted when he said
"Miniature Donkeys possess the affectionate nature of a
Newfoundland, the resignation of a cow, the durability of a mule,
the courage of a tiger, and the intellectual capability only
slightly inferior to man's." Standing only 32-40 inches, many
families recognized the potential of miniature donkeys as pets and
companions for their children.
Although the donkey fell from public notice and
became viewed as a comical, stubborn beast which was considered
“cute” at best, the donkey has recently regained some popularity in
North
America as a mount, for pulling wagons, and even as a guard
animal. Some standard species are ideal for guarding herds of
sheep against predators, since most donkeys
have a natural wariness toward coyotes and other canines and will
keep them away from the herd.
Economic use
Donkeys have a reputation for stubbornness, but
this is due to some handlers' misinterpretation of their
highly-developed sense of self-preservation. It is difficult to
force or frighten a donkey into doing something it sees as contrary
to its own best interest..
Although formal studies of their behaviour and cognition
are rather limited, donkeys appear to be quite intelligent,
cautious, friendly, playful, and eager to learn. They are often
pastured or stabled with horses and ponies, and are thought to have
a calming effect on nervous horses. If a donkey is introduced to a
mare
and foal, the foal will
often turn to the donkey for support after it has been weaned from
its mother.
Once a person has earned their confidence they
can be willing and companionable partners and very dependable in
work. For this reason, they are now commonly kept as pets in countries where their use as
beasts of burden has disappeared. They are also popular for giving
rides to
children in holiday resorts or other leisure contexts.
Present status
There are about 44 million donkeys today.
China has the
most with 11 million, followed by Ethiopia and
Mexico. Some
researchers think the real number is higher since many donkeys go
uncounted.
The vast majority of donkeys are used for the
same types of work that they have been doing for 6000 years. Their
most common role is for transport, whether riding, pack transport,
or pulling carts. They may also be used for farm tillage,
threshing, raising water, milling, and other jobs. Other donkeys
are used to sire mules, as companions for horses, to guard sheep, and as pets. A few are
milked or raised for meat In prosperous countries, the welfare of
donkeys both at home and abroad has recently become a concern and a
number of sanctuaries for retired and rescued donkeys have been set
up. The largest is the Donkey Sanctuary of England, which also
supports donkey welfare projects in Egypt, Ethiopia, India, Kenya, and
Mexico.
Donkeys in warfare
Donkeys have been used throughout history for transportation of supplies, pulling wagons, and, in a few cases, as riding animals. During World War I a British stretcher bearer, John Simpson Kirkpatrick, serving with the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps, used a donkey named Duffy to rescue wounded soldiers, carrying them to safety in Gallipoli. There is a statue of John Simpson Kirkpatrick and his donkey in his home town, South Shields.According to British food writer Matthew
Fort, donkeys were until recently used in the Italian
Army. The Mountain Fusiliers each had a donkey to carry their
gear and in extreme circumstances, the animal could be eaten. In 2006, security
forces in Afghanistan
prevented a man taking a donkey which he had laden with 30 kg (66lb) of
explosives
and a number of landmines, which would have
been set off by a remote controlled detonator, from entering a
town in Zabul
Province.
Types of donkeys
Domestic donkey breeds
An incomplete list of domestic donkey breeds includes the:- Mammoth Donkey
- Poitou Donkey: The Poitou Donkey breed was developed in France for the sole purpose of producing mules. It is a large donkey breed with a very long shaggy coat and no dorsal stripe.
- American Spotted Donkey
- Cypriot Donkey
- Miniature Mediterranean Donkey
- Standard Donkey
- Abyssinian Donkey
- Spotted Ass
- Mammoth Jack
Burro
The Spanish brought
donkeys, called "burros" in Spanish, to North
America, where they were prized for their hardiness in arid
country and became the beast of
burden of choice by early prospectors in the Southwest United
States. In the western United States the word "burro" is often used
interchangeably with the word "donkey" by English speakers.
Sometimes the distinction is made with smaller donkeys, descended
from Mexican stock, called "burros," while those descended from
stock imported directly from Europe are called "donkeys."
The wild burros (or more accurately, feral burros) on the western
rangelands descend from animals that ran away, were abandoned, or
were freed. Wild burros in the United States were protected by
Public Law 92-195, The
Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971. These animals,
considered to be a living legacy, are periodically at risk when
there are severe drought conditions. To reduce herd populations and
preserve grazing land, the
Bureau of Land Management conducts roundups of burro herds and
holds public auctions.
Wild burros can make good pets when treated well
and trained properly. They are clever and curious. When trust has
been established, they appreciate, and even seek, attention and
grooming.
Donkey hybrids
A male donkey (jack) can be crossed with a female horse to produce a mule. A male horse can be crossed with a female donkey (jennet or jenny) to produce a hinny. (In the United Kingdom, the word hinny is not used). A female donkey in the UK is called a mare, or jenny and the word jennet in the UK is more commonly applied to the offspring of a female donkey and a male horse, regardless of whether the foal is female or male.Horse-donkey hybrids
are almost always sterile because horses have
64 chromosomes
whereas donkeys have 62, producing offspring with 63 chromosomes.
Mules are much more common than hinnies. This is believed to be
caused by two factors, the first being proven in cat hybrids, that
when the chromosome count of the male is the higher, fertility
rates drop (as in the case of stallion x jennet). The lower
progesterone production of the jenny may also lead to early
embryonic loss. In addition, there are less-scientific reasons: Due
to different mating
behavior, jacks are often more willing to cover mares than
stallions are to breed jennys. Further, mares are usually larger
than jennys and thus have more room for the ensuing foal to grow in
the womb, resulting in a larger animal at birth. It is commonly
believed that mules are more easily handled and also physically
stronger than hinnies, making them more desirable for breeders to
produce, and it is unquestioned that mules are more common in total
number.
The offspring of a zebra-donkey cross is called a
zonkey, zebroid,
zebrass, or zedonk; zebra mule is an older term, but still used in
some regions today. The foregoing terms generally refer to hybrids
produced by breeding a male zebra to a female donkey. Zebra hinny,
zebret and zebrinny all refer to the cross of a female zebra with a
male donkey. Zebrinnies are rarer than zedonkies because female
zebras in captivity are most valuable when used to produce
full-blooded zebras. There are not enough female zebras breeding in
captivity to spare them for hybridizing; there is no such
limitation on the number of female donkeys breeding.
For at least the past century, a few donkeys and
burros in Mexico have been painted with white stripes to amuse
tourists. These are not hybrids.
An animal which may look like a zebra-donkey
hybrid because of its distinctly striped hindquarters and hind legs
is the okapi, which has no
relationship to either of those species. Okapi are most closely
related to the giraffe.
In addition to the rear stripes, okapi have some striping near the
top of their forelegs.
Wild Ass, Onager, and Kiang
With domestication of almost all donkeys, few species now exist in the wild. Some of them are the African Wild Ass (Equus africanus) and its subspecies Somalian Wild Ass (Equus africanus somaliensis). The Asiatic wild ass or Onager, Equus hemionus, and its relative the Kiang, Equus kiang, are closely related wild species.There was another extinct subspecies called the
Yukon Wild
Ass (Equus asinus lambei). In the wild the asses can reach top
speeds equalling zebras
and even most horses.
Cultural references
The long history of human use of donkeys means that there is a rich store of cultural references to them.Religion and myth
- Several were buried in Hor-Aha's tomb
- The ass was a symbol of the Greek god Dionysus, particularly in relationship to his companion, Silenus.
- Greek mythology includes the story of King Midas who judged against Apollo in favor of Pan during a musical contest, and had his ears changed to those of a donkey as punishment.
- There are numerous references to the donkey ("hamor" or "chamor" חמור) in the Hebrew Bible, (Old Testament). It mostly appears reflecting the natural environment of Israel and as an aspect of the agricultural economy. Ownership of many donkeys is a sign of God’s blessing. The Bible often specifies whether a person rode donkeys, since this was used to indicate a person’s wealth in much the same way luxury cars do today. (Horses at that time were used solely for war, powerful kings such as Solomon being the only ones who could afford to import them from Egypt.)
- In Genesis the King of Shechem (the modern Nablus), killed by Jacob's sons, is called "Hamor" - showing that at the time this animal was held in high enough esteem that it was no disrespect for royalty to use its name as their first name. (See Dinah, Shechem, Animal names as first names in Hebrew).
- In Numbers 22:22-41 "The Lord opened the mouth of the donkey" (vs. 28) and it speaks to Balaam. In Judges 15:13-17 where the hero Samson slays Philistines with the jawbone of an ass. Additional references can be found in Deuteronomy 22:10, Job 11:12, Proverbs 26:3 and elsewhere.
- The most common Greek word for ass appears roughly 100 times in the Biblical text. In the Gospels, Jesus rides a donkey into Jerusalem (Mark 11:1 in which colt refers to a donkey colt).
- Traditionally, Mary is portrayed as riding a donkey while pregnant. Legend has it that the cross on the donkey’s shoulders comes from the shadow of Christ’s crucifixion, placing the donkey at the foot of the cross. It was once believed that hair cut from this cross and hung from a child’s neck in a bag would prevent fits and convulsions.
- In both Jewish and Christian traditions, the messiah (Jesus Christ in the later case) was often described as riding on a donkey. As noted, in the context of the Hebrew Bible this connoted wealth and affluence befitting the House of David, as at the time commoners are described as simply going on foot. However, in later times when the aristocracy used horses, depicting the messiah as riding a donkey came to have an opposite connotation, as indicating a simple, sober way of life and avoiding luxury. The same connotation is evident in the description of saints such as Francis of Assisi as riding donkeys.
- In contemporary Israel, the term "Messiah's Donkey" (Chamoro Shel Mashiach חמורו של משיח) stands at the center of a controversial religious-political doctrine, attributed to Rabbi Avraham Yitchak Hacohen Cook, under which it was the Heavenly-imposed "task" of secular Zionists to build up a Jewish State, but once the state is established they are fated to give place to the Religious who are ordained to lead the state. The secularists in this analogy are "The Donkey" while the religious who are fated to supplant them are a collective "Messiach". A book on the subject, published in 1998 by the militant secularist Sefi Rechlevsky, aroused a major controversy in the Israeli public opinion.
- Muhammad, the prophet of Islam said that dogs and donkeys - if they pass in front of men in prayer - they will void or nullify that prayer. He also said that "when you hear the braying of donkeys, seek Refuge with Allah from Satan for (their braying indicates) that they have seen a devil."
Fable and folklore
Literature
Any number of donkeys appear in world literary works- In William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, the character Bottom has his head turned into that of a donkey by Puck who was told by Oberon, king of the fairies, to change it.
- In Don Quixote, Sancho Panza rides a donkey named Rucio.
- Eeyore, the gloomy donkey from A.A. Milne's Winnie-the-Pooh books.
- Benjamin, the skeptical donkey from George Orwell's Animal Farm.
- In Pinocchio, naughty boys turn into donkeys and are sold off to hard labour by the evil Coachman. In the book, Pinocchio turns into a donkey for a time.
- Puzzle in CS Lewis's The Last Battle.
- Platero in Juan Ramon Jimenez's Platero and I
Film
- Donkey is the name of a fictional donkey (voiced by Eddie Murphy) in the animated movies Shrek, Shrek 2 and Shrek the Third, all from DreamWorks Pictures.
- A donkey is the central character of the film Au hasard Balthazar by Robert Bresson.
- The Disney film Fantasia (1940) features a Dionysian character on a donkey.
Proverb and idiom
- A German proverb claims a donkey can wear a lion suit but its ear will still stick out and give it away.
- English proverbs include "better be the head of an ass than the tail of a horse", "if an ass goes a-traveling, he'll not come back a horse", and "better ride on an ass that carries me home than a horse that throws me" (though all these are now obsolete).
- Classical Greek expressions about donkeys included: onos pros eortēn = "a donkey at the festival" (gets all the work); onos hyetai = "a donkey is rained on" (i.e. he is unaffected or insensitive), onos pros phatnēn = "a donkey at a feed trough" (like the English expression "in clover").
- British colloquial expressions also include "donkey's years" which means for a long time or for many years, "to talk the hind leg off a donkey" means to tire somebody with one's talk.
Pub names
- The Jack and Jenny is a common pub-name in Britain.
Advertising
- Budweiser used a donkey in advertising during Super Bowl in 2004, called the Budweiser donkey he trains to be a Budweiser Clydesdale complete with hair extensions.
Insult and vulgarity
- The donkey has long been a symbol of ignorance. Examples can be found in Aesop's Fables, Apuleius's The Golden Ass (The Metamorphoses of Lucius Apuleius) and Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
- Because of its connection with ignorance, in modern slang, referring to someone as a dumbass means that they are unintelligent. Many people would find this term vulgar and rude.
- In contrast, to refer to someone as a jackass in modern slang provides a connotation of being obnoxious, rude, and thoughtless, with or without the added connotation of stupidity. This usage is also considered vulgar. A less vulgar substitute is donkey itself.
- The unmodified word ass has entered common use in the English language as a term used to describe a person who is stubborn, foolish, or disagreeable.
- In football, especially in the United Kingdom, a player who is considered unskilful, and to rely overly on his physical attributes to cover up his technical shortcomings, is often dubbed a "donkey."
- In horse racing in the British Isles, unsuccessful horses are often labeled donkeys.
- The term "donkey" is frequently used to refer to unskilled poker players, especially those playing in a predictably loose and unthinking fashion. Compare "patzer" in chess.
- In Arabic, حمار (ḥemar), meaning "donkey", is a derogatory term that refers to someone of very limited intelligence. Another usage is حمار شغل (ḥemar shuġl, literally "work donkey"), roughly equivalent in meaning to workaholic but with a distinct derogatory note and typically implying that the work is routine and non-creative; for example, someone might say, "Give that job to Ali, he's a work donkey anyway and he won't mind."
Politics
- In an election under a preferential voting system, a vote that simply writes down preferences in the order of the candidates (1 at the top, then 2, and so on) is called a donkey vote.
- The donkey is also the symbol for the Democratic Party of the United States, originating in a cartoon by Thomas Nast of Harper's Weekly (Nast also originated the elephant as the symbol of the Republican Party (United States).
See also
- Jenny (donkey) ("Jennet" was a type of medieval horse)
- Hinny
- Mule
- Ponui donkey
- Safe Haven for Donkeys in the Holy Land
- Burro Racing
Notes
References
- Blench, R. 2000. The History and Spread of Donkeys in Africa. Animal Traction Network for Eastern and Southern Africa (ATNESA)
- Clutton-Brook, J. 1999. A Natural History of Domesticated Mammals. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521634954
- The Donkey Sanctuary (DS). 2006. Website. http://www.thedonkeysanctuary.org.uk/site/1/Home.html (accessed December 2, 2006).
- Huffman, B. 2006. The Ultimate Ungulate Page: Equus asinus. (accessed December 2, 2006).
- International Museum of the Horse (IMH). 1998. Donkey. (accessed December 3, 2006).
- Nowak, R. M., and J. L. Paradiso. 1983. Walker's Mammals of the World. Baltimore, Maryland, USA : The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801825253
- Oklahoma State University (OSU). 2006. Breeds of Livestock. (accessed December 3, 2006).
- Starkey, P. and M. Starkey. 1997. Regional and World trends in Donkey Populations. Animal Traction Network for Eastern and Southern Africa (ATNESA) [http://216.109.125.130/search/cache?p=donkey+population&fr=yfp-t-501&toggle=1&ei=UTF-8&u=www.atnesa.org/donkeys/donkeys-starkey-populations.pdf&w=donkey+population&d=NKJ_s5IFNnz9&icp=1&.intl=us]
External links
- American Donkey and Mule Society Zebra Hybrids
- Animal Traction Network for Eastern and Southern Africa
- Biennial Donkey and Mule Conference, held in early October 2007 on the island of Hydra, Greece
- Breeds of livestock - Poitou Donkey
- Donkey Shelter Inc. Victoria (Australia)
- Freshfields Donkey Village, home of The Michael Elliott Trust
- Island Farm Donkey Sanctuary in Oxfordshire
- LongearsMall.com – Online Donkey & Mule Community and Resource Directory
- Longhopes Donkey Shelter, Colorado
- National Wild Horse and Burro Program
- Nerja Donkey Sanctuary, Spain
- Peaceful Valley Donkey Rescue, Tehachapi, CA
- SPANA (Society for the Protection of Animals Abroad) helps working animals in some of the world's poorest countries.
- The American Donkey and Mule Society
- The Donkey Sanctuary, Sidmouth, Devon The UK's largest Donkey Sanctuary
- Yankee Donkey and Mule Society
burro in Arabic: حمار
burro in Aragonese: Guarán
burro in Aymara: Asnu
burro in Bambara: Fali
burro in Breton: Azen
burro in Bulgarian: Магаре
burro in Catalan: Ase
burro in Czech: Osel domácí
burro in Corsican: Sumere
burro in Danish: Æsel
burro in German: Hausesel
burro in Navajo: Télii
burro in Modern Greek (1453-): Γάιδαρος
burro in Emiliano-Romagnolo: Èsen
burro in Spanish: Equus asinus
burro in Esperanto: Azeno
burro in Persian: خر
burro in French: Âne
burro in Galician: Burro
burro in Korean: 당나귀
burro in Croatian: Domaći magarac
burro in Ido: Asno
burro in Indonesian: Keledai
burro in Italian: Equus asinus
burro in Hebrew: חמור הבית
burro in Georgian: ვირი
burro in Latin: Asinus
burro in Luxembourgish: Iesel
burro in Lithuanian: Laukinis asilas
burro in Limburgan: Aezel
burro in Hungarian: Háziszamár
burro in Malayalam: കഴുത
burro in Min Dong Chinese: Lè̤
burro in Dutch: Ezel (dier)
burro in Japanese: ロバ
burro in Norwegian: Esel
burro in Norwegian Nynorsk: Esel
burro in Occitan (post 1500): Equus asinus
burro in Polish: Osioł
burro in Portuguese: Asno
burro in Romanian: Măgar
burro in Quechua: Asnu
burro in Russian: Осёл
burro in Sardinian: Àinu
burro in Sicilian: Sceccu
burro in Simple English: Donkey
burro in Slovenian: Osel
burro in Serbian: Магарац
burro in Finnish: Aasi
burro in Swedish: Åsna
burro in Tamil: கழுதை
burro in Telugu: గాడిద
burro in Thai: ลา
burro in Tajik: Хар
burro in Turkish: Eşek
burro in Ukrainian: Віслюк
burro in Walloon: Ågne
burro in Dimli: Her
burro in Chinese: 驴