Please enter a search term.
The late
Aga Khan III
Early purchases
Mumtaz Mahal
First owner's title
Champion stakes success
First Epsom Derby
Triple Crown
Mahmoud
Blenheim
Mahmoud
Tulyar
Prince Aly Khan
Petite Etoile
The Aga Khan
New partnership
Zeddaan
Blushing Groom
Dupré bloodstock
Boussac bloodstock
Shergar
Akiyda
Darshaan's jockey club
Shahrastani
Natroun
Kahyasi
Shemaka
His Highness the Aga Khan
Jubilee year: Daylami emerges
Daryaba
Sinndar
Dalakhani
Azamour
Lagardère purchase
Darjina
Zarkava
The Arc week-end
Sea The Stars
Sarafina
Valyra
Redoute's Choice
Classic first crop
A classic start for Siyouni
New partnerships
Derby glory
150th Group 1
Zarak
The Curragh
Tarnawa
Vadeni success celebrates centenary
His Highness the Aga Khan IV - 1936 to 2025
In 1954, Aga Khan III decided French racing made more commercial sense and moved his entire stable to Chantilly. Following the death of his father in 1957, Prince Aly Khan bought out the other family bloodstock interests.
Prince Aly Khan
Prior to his tragic death in a motor accident in Paris in the spring of 1960, Prince Aly Khan enjoyed a marvelous year of success at home and abroad. As the British Bloodstock Breeders Review noted, referring to the prince as the first owner in the history of the British Turf to win more than £100,000 in a season and, with a new French record "It is no wonder that 1959 was called ’The Aly Khan’s Year.’"
Of all the horses that contributed to his record winnings in England and France, he was most proud of the grey filly Petite Etoile. Her 1,000 Guineas and Oaks double in 1959 helped put together the family’s record year in the Classics being supported by Taboun (2,000 Guineas), Ginetta (Poule d’Essai des Pouliches) and Fiorentina (Irish 1,000 Guineas).
If that was not enough, Saint-Crespin came out on top in the closest finish ever recorded in the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe. Having scrutinised the photograph at length the judge ruled a dead-heat between Saint-Crespin and Midnight Sun with Le Loup Garou a short-head away 3rd, Mi Carina a short neck away 4th andPrimera a neck away 5th. That was not the end of the matter - the two dead-heating jockeys George Moore and Jacques Fabre lodged objections to one another. The film patrol camera which had been installed at the start of that season provided the crucial evidence that Saint-Crespin had been bumped twice by Midnight Sun and the Stewards awarded him the race.
It was this extraordinary combination of circumstances that prompted the novelist Ian Fleming to make this entry in his personal notebook: "Gamblers just before they die are often given a great golden streak of luck. They get gay and young and rich and then, when they have been sufficiently flattered by the fates, they are struck down."
Petite Etoile is the Champion racehorse of 1959 winning the 1,000 Gns, Oaks, Sussex Stakes, Yorkshire Oaks and Champion Stakes
Find out more