Ferrari's Prancing Horse Had Nothing to Do with Enzo
More Than a Brand Name
Ferrari's brand mark, the Cavallino Rampante, or the Prancing Horse in English, is one of the most recognized brand symbols on the planet, next to the Apple logo, the Nike Swoosh or McDonald's golden arches. The horse appears on Formula 1 cars screaming through Monaco, and painted on the sides of exotic grand tourers valet parked outside high-end restaurants and hotels in major cities. They're also on baseball caps, keychains, watch faces and on the walls of bedrooms belonging to adoring young car enthusiasts the world over.
In the language of brand strategy and marketing, it's a symbol so powerful that it requires no context. You see the horse, you immediately know what it means. But what most people assume is that the Prancing Horse is the creation of Mr. Enzo Ferrari himself. That it emerged from the same imagination that produced the cars, the Scuderia and the mythology of Maranello. However, Enzo Ferrari did not design the prancing horse.
The story behind the prancing horse involves a mother who lost her son in a war, who in turn, gave the horse to Enzo with the sense of belief that the symbol her boy had carried into battle might bring better fortune to someone who carried it forward.
The Ace from Lugo
The symbol that would become the ever-symbol of Ferrari traces back to a guy named Francesco Baracca. Born in 1888 in a small city in the Emilia-Romagna region of northern Italy called Lugo, Baracca came from the same region that would later be known for being the ancestral home of Italy's motoring heart; marques like Ferrari, Lamborghini, Ducati, and Maserati. He came from a noble family, trained as a cavalry officer, and transferred to the Italian Air Force, the Corpo Aeronautico Militare, when it became clear that the future of warfare was going to be fought in the sky.
Francesco became a good pilot, a really good one in fact. During the First World War, one of the first major conflicts where aerial combat took place, Baracca became Italy's greatest flying ace. He was credited with 34 aerial victories; a number that made him a national hero. His precision and aggression earned him Italy's highest military honor, the Medaglia d'oro al Valor Militare, and the admiration of an entire country.
Pilots during the first World War adopted the practice of applying nose art on their planes to personalize and identify themselves to other pilots in the air. Baracca painted a black prancing horse, a symbol that had a personal history of its own. In a letter to his mother from April 1918, Baracca wrote that he had adopted the horse in tribute to the Regiment Piemonte Cavalleria, the cavalry regiment he had served in before transferring to aviation, which had used a similar prancing horse as its emblem since 1692. The horse Baracca painted was black, rather than the silver of the cavalry regiment, to make it stand out against the pale fuselage of his plane. Over the course of the war, it became inseparable from his identity and a personal coat of arms carried into battle at altitudes and speeds no cavalryman had ever reached.
On June 19, 1918, two months before the war ended, Francesco Baracca was killed in action near Montello. He was 30 years old. The circumstances of his death remain disputed whether shot down by enemy fire, struck by ground fire, or killed by his own weapon in a mechanical failure. Italy's greatest ace was gone, and the black prancing horse that had flown with him became a symbol of loss as much as of valor.
A Mother's Blessing
In 1923, Enzo Ferrari was a young racing driver who was already making his way in Italian motorsport. He was first a driver for Alfa Romeo and later became a team organizer, though he became more obsessed with the cars itself, and racing strategy than the fame that winning racing drivers enjoyed.
According to Ferrari, Enzo was introduced to Francesco Baracca's parents: Count Enrico Baracca and Countess Paolina, following a race at the Savio circuit in Ravenna on June 17, 1923. The Countess, who had kept the memory of her son alive with the particular tenacity of a parent who has outlived her child, told Ferrari something that would change the visual identity of one of the world's greatest companies: she suggested he put her son's prancing horse on his cars. Not as a marketing exercise, or a licensing arrangement, but rather as a symbol of good luck.
"One day the Countess said to me, ‘Ferrari, why don't you put my son's prancing horse on your cars? It'll bring you good luck.,'" he wrote. "The Horse was and will always be black; I added the canary yellow background, the colour of the city of Modena."
The Symbol of Luck
Ferrari did not immediately place the horse on a car of his own making, but he first made use during a race that really counted. During the 24 Hours of Spa in Belgium on July 9, 1932, the Prancing Horse made its first official public appearance on the cars of Scuderia Ferrari, the racing team Ferrari founded in 1929 to campaign Alfa Romeo vehicles. As Ferrari wrote, he added a few changes to reflect some of his personal heritage. He framed the horse in a shield, added the letters SF for Scuderia Ferrari, the Italian tricolor at the top, and the black horse at its center. The yellow background that is now inseparable from the image came later. It is the color of Modena, the city near which Ferrari was born.
When Ferrari finally built a car under his own name; the Ferrari 125 S, which made its racing debut in 1947, the horse came with it. It bore a rectangular version of the badge, and subsequent iterations would alternate between the shield-shaped Scudetto used on racing cars and the rectangular badge used on road cars. The two remain distinct today. The Scudetto, with its shield shape and SF monogram, is the emblem of the racing team. The rectangular badge, with the Ferrari name and the horse behind a yellow background, is the mark of the manufacturer.
A Symbol Larger Than the Man Who Used It
Enzo Ferrari died in 1988, after creating a sixty-plus year legacy in the shadow of a symbol that was never quite his. He and his cars had adopted it to built one of the world's most powerful brands. But the horse preceded him in the story, and it has outlasted him in the culture.
The Baracca family's connection to Ferrari was maintained respectfully over the decades. The original emblem from Francesco Baracca's aircraft is preserved at the Museo Baracca in Lugo, still carrying the physical evidence of a life lived and lost before the prancing horse found its second career. Countess Paolina's blessing, made in grief and offered in hope, had a second life as the symbol of one of the world's most successful motorsports teams and one of the most iconic automotive manufacturers.
At its heart, the Horse isn't just a logo; it's a story. More specifically, someone else's story long before it became Ferrari's.
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This story was originally published June 2, 2026 at 2:30 PM.