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- A flying ace is a military pilot who shoots down five or more enemy aircraft during aerial combat.
- Italy’s top flying ace during World War I was Francesco Baracca.
- He died a national hero (many roads in Italy are named after him) in 1918 at the age of 30, after having shot down 34 enemy aircraft.
- And Francesco Baracca had a prancing horse (almost exactly like the horse in the Ferrari logo) painted on the side of his planes.
- There are various theories on why he had that horse on his planes:
- Some suggest it was because he had once been an excellent cavalryman (soldier on horseback).
- Others say he had horses on his planes because he had grown up with many horses in his family (there are a couple of other theories as well).
- Enzo Ferrari, who founded Ferrari in 1939, was a racing driver with the car manufacturer Alfa Romeo in 1923 when he won a car race in Ravenna, Italy.
- Because of this victory, he got the opportunity to meet the parents of Francesco Baracca.
- And it was at this meeting that Paulina Baracca, Francesco’s mother, asked Enzo Ferrari to use her son’s horse on his cars, suggesting that it would grant him good luck.
- It was eleven years later (in 1932), however, that Alfa Romeo allowed Enzo Ferrari to use the horse on his racing car (he won that race, as well).
- He added a yellow background because it was the symbolic colour of his birthplace, Modena.
- Today, Ferrari’s prancing horse usually has the letters S F around its legs; SF stands for Scuderia Ferrari.
- Scuderia is Italian for a ‘place reserved for racing horses’ and is commonly used by Italian motor racing teams.
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Image courtesy of Jannis Lucas through Unsplash