Mumtaz Mahal | |
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Sire | The Tetrarch |
Grandsire | Roi Herode |
Dam | Lady Josephine |
Damsire | Sundridge |
Sex | Filly |
Foaled | 1921 |
Country | Great Britain |
Colour | Grey |
Breeder | Lady Sykes of Sledmere |
Owner | Aga Khan III |
Trainer | Richard C. Dawson |
Record | 10: 7–2–0 |
Earnings | £13,933 |
Major wins | |
Spring Stakes (1923) Queen Mary Stakes (1923) National Breeders Produce Stakes (1923) Molecomb Stakes (1923) Champagne Stakes (1923) King George Stakes (1924) Nunthorpe Stakes (1924) |
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Last updated on February 18, 2011 |
Mumtaz Mahal (1921 – 1945) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse who the National Sporting Library's Thoroughbred Heritage website says was "one of the most important broodmares of the 20th Century".
She was named for empress Mumtaz Mahal, wife of Mughal Empire ruler Shah Jahan of Taj Mahal fame. Bred by Lady Sykes at her Sledmere Stud in Driffield, East Riding of Yorkshire, Mumtaz Mahal was out of the mare Lady Josephine. Her sire was The Tetrarch, whom the Thoroughbred Heritage website also said was "probably the greatest two-year-old of all time", and that he was "possibly the greatest runner ever."
Prepared by trainer Richard C. Dawson at Whatcombe Stables in Wantage, Oxfordshire, at age two all of Mumtaz Mahal's races were at distances of either five or six furlongs. Quickly dubbed "The Flying Filly" because of her blazing speed, she set a new track record in the Spring Stakes at Newmarket Racecourse as part of her five important wins in 1923. In her last race that year, she finished second in the Imperial Produce Stakes on a track heavy with mud. At three Mumtaz Mahal finished second in her first distance test, the 1924 1,000 Guineas, and was fifth in the Coronation Stakes. Her handlers then entered her only in sprint races; she won the six-furlong King George Stakes and the five-furlong Nunthorpe Stakes.