James Fillis
Fillis in Saint Petersburg in about 1902
Born17 December 1834 (1834-12-17)[1]
London
Died3 May 1913 (1913-05-04) (aged 78)[2]
Paris
Service/branchRussian Imperial Army (1898–1909)
RankColonel
AwardsOrder of St. Stanislaus (3rd class)
Order of St. Anne (1st class)
Signature
Fillis on Germinal at the backwards canter

James Fillis (17 December 1834 – 3 May 1913) was a British-born French horseman and riding master. He had a profound influence on the development of the haute école of dressage in both France and Russia.[3] He travelled widely in Europe, and lived for about twelve years in Russia. He believed he had ridden over a hundred and fifty thousand horses in his lifetime.[3]

Life

Fillis was born in London on 17 December 1834, into family of circus performers and horse trainers. His father Thomas Fillis died in 1842, and the young Fillis went to live in Paris.[1] There are indications that he found work in the circus of Louis Soullier, and it may have been there that he met the noted riding-master François Baucher; he was never a pupil of Baucher, but between 1847 and 1850 followed him on various journeys to Austria, the Italian peninsula and Switzerland.[1] He left the circus for a time, and found employment as a piqueur-chef in the stables of Richard Wallace in Paris. From 1851 he worked as an écuyer or horse-trainer for Victor Franconi, the director of the Cirque des Champs-Élysées[1][3]

In about 1855 he began to study under François Caron, a former écuyer en chef to the Russian cavalry. From 1859 he was active as a trainer and instructor in his own right.[1]

In 1889 there was a suggestion that he might become écuyer en chef to the Cadre Noir of the École Nationale d'Équitation at Saumur, in Maine-et-Loire in western France; this did not happen, as he was not a soldier.[3]

In the autumn of 1897 Fillis travelled to Saint Petersburg to perform at the Circus Ciniselli; he took four horses, three Thoroughbreds and Maestoso, a Lipizzaner he had bought in Vienna in 1894.[3] His work with them was much admired, and early in 1898 he received an invitation to court, where the Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich, who was at the time inspector-general of the cavalry, asked him to organise a course of instruction for the officers of the Imperial house.[3] The results he obtained in thirty training sessions were such that he was offered the position of écuyer en chef of the training school for cavalry officers, with the military rank of colonel. He was also put in charge of the stables of the Grand Duke.[3] He retired in 1909, and in 1910 returned to France, where he went to live at Saint-Germain-en-Laye. He died in Paris on 3 May 1913.[3][2]

In 2019 a statue of him was raised in the Manezh of Moscow.[3]

Theory and teaching

In his preface to Breaking and Riding (1890), Fillis states his fundamental principle thus:

"it is necessary for a horse to be correctly balanced and light in forward movements and propulsion, in order that the rider may obtain the most powerful effects with the least exertion"

His motto was "en avant", "forward".[4] His method of equitation consisted, in his own words, of:

"distribution of weight by the height of the neck bent at the poll and not at the withers; propulsion by means of the hocks being brought under the body; and lightness by loosening of the lower jaw"

Fillis was also accredited with a particular style of holding the reins of a double bridle, whereby the snaffle rein passes over the index finger and the curb rein under the little finger, however, he himself referred to this as the "French" way in his book Breaking and Riding.

Published works

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Gabriel Cortès (11 September 2015). James Fillis, l'écuyer professeur (in French). Les Jours du Cheval. Accessed July 2021.
  2. 1 2 James Fillis (1834-1913). Bibliothèque nationale de France. Accessed July 2021.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Gabriel Cortès (27 September 2019). James Fillis, l’art équestre français au service de la Russie (in French). Le Courrier de Russie. Accessed July 2021.
  4. James Fillis, M. H. Hayes (translator) (1902). Breaking and Riding. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons

Further reading

  • Alois Podhajsky (1967). The Complete Training of Horse and Rider. Doubleday and Company.
  • Philippe Karl (2008). Twisted Truths of Modern Dressage: A Search for a Classical Alternative. Cadmos.
  • Gabriel Cortès (2016). James Fillis, l’écuyer de l’Europe (in French). Paris: Belin. ISBN 9782701196473; translated as:
    • Gabriel Cortès, N.A. Disterlo (2017). Всадник Европы: жизнь и наследие Джеймса Филлиса, старшего преподавателя Офицерской кавалерийской школы Санкт-Петербурга = Vsadnik Evropy: zhiznʹ i nasledie Dzheĭmsa Fillisa, starshego prepodavateli︠a︡ Ofit︠s︡erskoĭ kavaleriĭskoĭ shkoly Sankt-Peterburga (in Russian). Moskva: Pi︠a︡tyĭ Rim. ISBN 9785990826656.
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