European origin mountain in the
Bernese Alps, Switzerland Among the older and most widely distributed of all breeds of cattle in the world, and recorded since the
Middle Ages, the Simmental breed has contributed to the creation of several other famous European breeds, including the
Montbéliarde (France), the
Pezzata Rossa d'Oropa (Italy), and the
Fleckvieh (Germany and Austria). It originates from the
Simmental, the valley of the
Simme river.
Africa Namibia (1893) and South Africa (1905) were the first countries outside Europe where the breed was successfully established. Here the breed is known as Simmentaler and is mainly used for beef cattle production under suckler cow systems. The Simmentaler breeders' society is, as far as registered animals are concerned, by far the largest of the 17 European and British breeds. The main reasons for its popularity are (i) it can be used with great success in crossbreeding for breeding of both cows with much milk and heavy weaners/oxen, (ii) its superb weight growth rate in
feedlots - pure or crossed, and (iii) a strict visual inspection is compulsory for registration in the Herdbook.
Soviet Union The first Simmentals arrived in Russia by 1850, coming from German and Swiss varieties. The
Soviet Union (1922–1991)'s agricultural policies favored the Simmental (, ) and it came to have the largest Simmental population of any country at their height. Russian Simmental accounted for around one-quarter of all cattle in the USSR. Estimates range from a population of 12 to 17 million Simmental cattle in 1980. Various crossbreeds were made, including: • Steppe Simmental (Russian cattle × Simmental bulls) • Ukrainian Simmental (
Grey steppe cattle × Simmental bulls) • Volga Simmental (
Central Russian Kalmyk and
Kazakh cattle × Simmental bulls) • Ural Simmental (
Siberian and
Kazakh cattle × Simmental) • Siberian Simmental (
Siberian and
Buryat cattle × Simmental) • Far Eastern Simmental (
Transbaikal and
Yakutian cattle × Simmental) According to FAO data, the number of Simmentals plummeted with the
fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. Their estimates list around 13 million in 1990; 3 million in 2003; and a mere 86,000 in 2023.
Agriculture in Russia underwent massive changes in general with the end of Soviet agriculture policies. The amount of cattle kept in Russia declined overall, and there was a shift toward favoring specialized breeds (e.g. Holsteins for milk, Angus for beef) rather than the flexible and multi-purpose Simmental which could do both as well as
work. ==Different names==