Arabian Horses for Sale near San Mateo, CA

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Arabian - Horse for Sale in Brentwood, CA 94513
Khassablankha
📣Khassablankha (Khartoon Khlassic {Khemosabi++++// X Kimono) 2014 Purebred..
Brentwood, California
Bay
Arabian
Mare
10
Brentwood, CA
CA
Sold
Arabian - Horse for Sale in San Jose, CA 95120
Releve Fantome
Fantom is your been there done that sorta guy. I have jumped him, gone to s..
San Jose, California
Bay
Arabian
Gelding
13
San Jose, CA
CA
$13,000
Arabian - Horse for Sale in San Ramon, CA 94583
Amigo
Nice Arab Gelding good starter horse...
San Ramon, California
Bay
Arabian
Gelding
20
San Ramon, CA
CA
$700
Arabian Mare
Villa is a bay (mostly black) with 3 white socks with black dots. She is 9..
San Jose, California
Bay
Arabian
Mare
-
San Jose, CA
CA
$2,500
Arabian Mare
Callie Mia is a beautiful daughter of the crabbet champion Ohadi Indian Fir..
Cupertino, California
Chestnut
Arabian
Mare
-
Cupertino, CA
CA
$3,500
Arabian Mare
Beautiful, grey mare for sale. high energy level. would make great endurenc..
Livermore, California
Gray
Arabian
Mare
-
Livermore, CA
CA
$1,200
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About San Mateo, CA

Documented by Spanish colonists as part of the Rancho de las Pulgas (literally "Ranch of the Fleas") and the Rancho San Mateo, the earliest history is held in the archives of Mission Dolores. In 1789 the Spanish missionaries had named a Native American village along Laurel Creek as Los Laureles or the Laurels (Mission Dolores, 1789). At the time of Mexican Independence, there were 30 native Californians at San Mateo, most likely from the Salson tribelet. Captain Fredrick W. Beechey in 1827 traveling with the hills on their right, known in that part as the Sierra del Sur, began to approach the road, which passing over a small eminence, opened out upon "a wide country of meadow land, with clusters of fine oak free from underwood… It strongly resembled a nobleman's park: herds of cattle and horses were grazing upon the rich pasture, and numerous fallow‑deer, startled at the approach of strangers, bounded off to seek protection among the hills… This spot is named San Matheo, and belongs to the mission of San Francisco." An 1835 sketch map of the Rancho refers to the creek as Arroyo de Los Laureles.