Queen Elizabeth II's daughter, a former eventing champion, said farming the creatures for their flesh in Britain could improve their welfare.
"Our attitudes to the horsemeat trade and the value of horsemeat may have to change," Anne said in a speech to the World Horse Welfare charity in London yesterday.
"If that's true then, that they (producers) value their horses, they look after them well, because they're in the horsemeat trade... Should we be considering a real market for horsemeat?
Horsemeat consumption is generally taboo in Britain and Anne's comments come just months after a major European scandal involving horsemeat mislabelled as beef.
British newspapers ran headlines about her comments including "Let Them Eat Horse" -- a reference to the executed French queen Marie Antoinette's reported comment "let them eat cake" when asked about the poor.
Anne, who is 11th in line to the British throne, cited France as an example of a country where horsemeat is popular.
"We've got to face that. We've got to understand whether that value has also a part to play in how we reduce welfare cases.
