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→ A Celebration of Anatolia’s Heritage, Spirit, and Timeless Beauty.

Across the windswept steppes of Anatolia, beneath the volcanic skies of Cappadocia, the Yılkı horses still roam — living echoes of a forgotten world.

More than a story about horses, this book is an emotional journey through heritage, memory, resilience, and humanity’s enduring relationship with the natural world.

Beneath the golden light of Cappadocia, where volcanic plains meet sculpted valleys and the wind carries whispers of history, the Yılkı Horses are the remnants of a bond broken, survivors of a tradition both practical and painful. Neither fully wild nor truly domestic, these herds embody resilience, freedom, and the enduring spirit of Anatolia.

This book weaves together their past and present: the etymology of their name, the history of Anatolia’s horse culture, and the landscapes that shaped them. Through fine art imagery and narrative, it honours not only the Yılkı Horses but also the land and people entwined with their fate. Here, story, history, geography, and spirit converge, offering a glimpse into a world where beauty and hardship coexist. These horses deserve a place in our collective memory as a symbol of our capacity to embrace resilience, respect, and deep connection between animals and humans.

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“As an equine photographer, I have travelled the world capturing the grace of horses. Yet no place has left its mark on me like the windswept steppes of Central Anatolia, nor any horse moved me like the Yılkı. Their story—born from centuries of use, abandonment, and survival—demanded to be told.

Nur Tucker

Across the sweeping plains of Anatolia, where history was born and empires rose and fell, the horse has been at the heart of human life for thousands of years. From the sacred chariots of the Hittites to the majestic Nisean steeds of the Persians, from the fearless warriors of the Seljuks to the legendary cavalry of the Ottoman Empire, Anatolia’s story cannot be told without its horses.

Today, this heritage lives on in the Yılkı horses of Cappadocia. Semi-wild herds roaming beneath golden skies, ancient valleys, and sculpted volcanic plains.

Once loyal workhorses serving generations of Anatolian families, they were released to the wild when modernization reshaped rural life.

Against the odds, they survived, enduring bitter winters, scarce grazing, and predators, becoming a living symbol of freedom, resilience, and identity.

With over 100 award-winning fine-art photographs and immersive storytelling, The Untold Story of the Yılkı Horse invites the world to discover a side of Türkiye rarely seen.

It celebrates the natural splendour of Cappadocia, honours Anatolia’s equestrian traditions, and preserves a narrative deeply rooted in our shared cultural memory.

A visual journey, this book is also an opportunity to showcase Türkiye to the world. Its history, its natural wonders, and its enduring traditions.

It invites readers, travelers, and photographers alike to explore a land where heritage and wild beauty converge beneath endless Anatolian skies.

→ A bit of history

Since Antiquity, the horse has been far more than a useful animal: it has been a true partner in human history, at the crossroads of civilization, philosophy, and inner life. Its domestication reshaped the world, shrinking distances, enabling trade, and fueling the rise of great empires.

But this book goes beyond history. It explores the deep and fascinating relationship between humans and horses. In ancient Greece, the horse already becomes a tool for self-reflection: Xenophon sees horsemanship as a path to self-mastery, while Plato turns it into a powerful metaphor for the inner conflicts of the human soul. Across empires—especially in Anatolia and among Turkic cultures—the horse embodies power, prestige, and cultural identity.

What makes this subject truly captivating is the richness of its dimensions:

  • Historical: the horse as a driving force behind civilizations and empires
  • Philosophical: a mirror of human nature and inner tension
  • Cultural: a central figure in traditions, particularly in Anatolia
  • Symbolic and emotional: not just a tool, but a living being we evolve alongside

 

The narrative becomes even more compelling as it reaches the modern era. As mechanization pushed the horse out of fields and battlefields, it found a new role—as a companion and therapeutic partner, helping humans rebuild confidence, balance, and self-awareness through subtle, nonverbal communication.

Finally, the image of the Yılkı horses, living in semi-freedom, offers a powerful and poetic conclusion. They embody a universal tension between wildness and domestication, mastery and respect—a tension that ultimately reflects our own humanity.

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Nur Tucker

Nur Tucker is an award-winning underwater and equine British-Turkish photographer based in the UK. After over 20 years as an investment banker in London, she left finance to pursue her passion for photography. Her work focuses on nature, especially oceans and horses.

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