The horses, along with the quadriga with which they were depicted, were long displayed at the
Hippodrome of Constantinople; they may be the "four gilt horses that stand above the Hippodrome" that "came from the island of
Chios under
Theodosius II" mentioned in the 8th- or early 9th-century
Parastaseis syntomoi chronikai. As part of the sack of the capital of the
Byzantine Empire in the
Fourth Crusade, they were looted by
Venetian forces in 1204. That same year, the collars on the four horses were added to obscure where the animals' heads had been severed to allow them to be transported from Constantinople to Venice. Shortly after the Fourth Crusade,
Doge Enrico Dandolo sent the horses to
Venice, where they were installed on the terrace of the façade of
St Mark's Basilica in 1254.
Petrarch admired them there. In 1797,
Napoleon had the horses
forcibly removed from the basilica and carried off to
Paris, where they were used in the design of the
Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel together with a
quadriga. '' by
Vincenzo Chilone, depicting the return of the horses from France in 1815. In 1815, following the final defeat of Napoleon, the horses were returned to Venice by
Captain Dumaresq. He had fought at the
Battle of Waterloo and was with the Coalition forces in Paris where he was selected, by the
Emperor of Austria, to take the horses down from the Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel and return them to St Mark's in Venice. For the skillful manner in which he performed this work, the Emperor gave him a gold snuff box with his initials in diamonds on the lid. of the Horses of Saint Mark The horses remained in place over St Mark's until the early 1980s, when damage from air pollution led them to be removed and put on display inside the basilica. They were replaced on the loggia with replicas. == Image gallery ==