Al-Bukhari narrated in his Sahih the hadith of Abu Qatada – may God be pleased with him – hunting a zebra, that he rode his horse called Al-Jaradah.
It was narrated on the authority of Sahl – may God be pleased with him – that he said: “The Prophet, may God’s prayers and peace be upon him, had in our wall a horse called Al-Luhaif.”
Al-Bukhari narrated on the authority of Anas bin Malik, may God be pleased with him, that he said: There was a panic in Madinah, so the Prophet, may God bless him and grant him peace, borrowed a horse for us called “Mandoob.” He said: “We did not see any panic, even if we found it at sea.”
Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya said in “Zad al-Ma’ad” about naming the horses of the Messenger – may God’s prayers and peace be upon him -: From horses: sabbath. It was said: He was the first mare he owned, and his name was with the Bedouin who bought it from him with ten ounces of molars, and he was a hoarse grouse who shot the right oath as a dead man. It was said Adham. Al-Martajz, and he was gray-haired, and he was the one who witnessed Khuzaymah bin Thabit. And the skin, and the lashes, and the stork, and the rosary, and the roses. These are seven agreed upon, compiled by Imam Abu Abdullah Muhammad bin Ishaq bin Jama’ah Al-Shafi’i in a house, and he said:
And the horses poured out the rosary of a skunk ****, the slandered lizard, and secrets were given to her
Ibn al-Qayyim continued: He told me that about him, his son, Imam Izz al-Din Abd al-Aziz Abu Amr, may God honor him with his obedience. And it was said: He had fifteen other horses, but he differed in them, and his saddlebags were made of fibres.