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Scientists Identify Earliest Known Human-Made Hybrid Found in 4500-Year-Old Tomb

Meet the kunga, the first known instance of a human-engineered hybrid – bred from a donkey and a Syrian wild ass. From mules to ligers, and even zonkeys, the list of human-made hybrid animals is extensive. And, apparently, it started to be written a very long time ago. Indeed, the first know human-bred hybrid dates back […]

Meet the kunga, the first known instance of a human-engineered hybrid – bred from a donkey and a Syrian wild ass.

4500 year old tomb
A burial site in Umm el-Marra, Syria, where the skeletons of 44 kungas were uncovered. Image credit: Glenn Schwartz/John Hopkins University

From mules to ligers, and even zonkeys, the list of human-made hybrid animals is extensive. And, apparently, it started to be written a very long time ago.

Indeed, the first know human-bred hybrid dates back to ancient Mesopotamia about 4,500 years ago, that is, long before horses arrived in the region. That was the time when the kunga, another spirited member of the equine family, took a starring role in pulling war chariots into battle.


Historians had long suspected that these animals were the result of some kind of crossbreeding. They were depicted in contemporary art, their sales were recorded in cuneiform writing (the writing used in several languages of the ancient Middle East), an their bodies were sometimes laid to rest in rich burial sites, such as Umm el-Marra, Syria, where the skeletons of 44 kungas were uncovered. But actual proof of their identity was lacking.

4500 year old tomb
A panel showing two individuals hunting wild asses that dates to between 645-635 BCE (British Museum, London). Image credit: Eva-Maria Geigl / IJM / CNRS-Université de Paris

After more than a decade of research, a team of archaeologists have now concluded that studies of ancient DNA showed the kunga was a cross between a female donkey (Equus Africanus asinus) and a male Syrian wild ass (Equus hemionus hemippus). The findings were published in the journal Science Advances.


Eva-Maria Geigl, a specialist in ancient genomes at the University of Paris and co-author of the study, explained that the breeding of kungas was something far beyond the traditional processes of the domestication of animals – a kind of “early bioengineering” that developed into a whole ancient biotech industry.

Kungas were a kind of status symbol mostly used to pull vehicles of the elite and tow chariots in war and military ceremonies. Accordingly, they had a very high price, costing up to six times as much as a donkey. Their costliness was in large part due to the fact that each stallion used for breeding had to be captured and kept in captivity, even though they were highly aggressive, as modern records have indicated. According to Geigl, the director of the Austrian zoo where the last captive Syrian wild asses died, described them as “furious.”


4500 year old tomb
Syrian wild ass galloping in Vienna Zoo in 1915. The species went extinct soon after.

Kungas held their high status for at least 500 years, until around 4,000 years ago horses took their place in battle and ceremony, giving way to the creation of other hybrids, Geigl explained. Before the current research, the oldest known hybrid was a mule discovered in Turkey dating to about 3,000 years ago – reported on by the members of the same team in 2020.

To figure out the kunga’s true identity, the researchers analyzed a specimen’s genome, or genetic instruction book, and compared it with those of horses, donkeys and Asiatic wild asses, including the Syrian wild ass, otherwise known as the hemippe (Equus hemionus hemippus), which went extinct in 1929.


“The combination of the ancient genomes, the burial treatment, and the archaeological records suggest these hybrid animals correspond to the valuable kungas,” Geigl told Gizmodo in an email. “The analysis of these ancient genomes both solved a long-standing controversy and identified the earliest human-made equid hybrids, highlighting their critical role in the ‘art of war’ centuries before the first domestic horses arrived in the area.”

4500 year old tomb
This mosaic scene on a Sumerian artifact, a wooden box dubbed the Standard of Ur that depicts war scenes, includes images of hybrid kungas pulling chariots over dead bodies. Image credit: Carolyn Whitson

Geigl believes that Mesopotamians may have started crossing donkeys with Syrian wild asses after accidentally spotting them mating and producing offspring with desirable qualities that made them suitable for warfare. Donkeys have an easy-going temperament, but coaxing them into dangerous situations is not an easy feat. The Asiatic wild ass, on the other hand, is fast but too aggressive to be tamed. But a hybrid might have had the characteristics people were looking for.


“But breeding them wouldn’t have been easy because special strategies would have been needed to capture the Syrian wild asses – which were very fast – and bring them to the female donkeys so they could produce the hybrids,” Geigle said.

Kunga breeding seems to have ceased when horses began to spread to the region from present-day Russia around 4000 years ago. According to co-author E. Andrew Bennett at the University of Paris, who likens kungas to “bioengineered war machines,” horses could fill the same roles, with the advantage of being able to reproduce on their own.

“Kungas were probably a lot of work to breed and just weren’t as good as horses,” Bennett concluded, adding that although the riddle of how this hybrid was made is finally solved a century after the last hemippe perished, “it’s impossible to make these animals again.”


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