Original purpose of each breed....

    • Gold Top Dog

    Original purpose of each breed....

    Does anyone know of a website that has the original purpose of each breed of dog?  I am not looking for the breed standard, but a concise explanation of why each individual breed was developed.
     
    I have seen individual breed sites that explain it, but I was hoping to find the info for each breed all in one place. 
     
    Thanks for the help....
    • Gold Top Dog
    [linkhttp://www.dogbreedinfo.com]www.dogbreedinfo.com[/link] will give you a short description.  It has other info too, but every breed I have looked up on there has a section for "origin" which will give basic info on original purposes.  Breeds are listed alphabetically.
     
    HTH
     
    Kate
    • Gold Top Dog
    Sometimes you really have to take breed origins with a grain of salt.  I'm finding, in my research, that many breed histories we repeat so confidently today are very little more than "just so" stories, the purpose of which is to justify a certain asthetic favored in the conformation ring for the breed.  We are today facing this pressure in the Border collie breed, which is new to the conformation ring in two important countries: just ten years in the US and less than 25 in the country of its origin, the UK. 

    The simple answer to the question, "How did my breed develop?" is, in the majority of cases, that someone liked a particular look and bred for that.  The "type" of most of today's breeds were set during a time when one of the defining lines between the working  class and the upper classes, was the ownership of purebred, preferably pedigreed animals - whether horses, dogs, cats, or livestock if you were a farmer.  The Victorian age was the dawn of scientific genetics and they brought the new knowlege to bear on "purifying" lines of animals that in the past had been only defined purely by function. Terriers, shepherd's dogs, carting dogs, mastiffs now joined the ranks of the rich man's hunting dogs and house pets in having the requirements of elegance, attractive appearance, and a studbook, put on them.  Many very useful strains of beasts died out because they were considered too plebian - some were deliberately exterminated, as a couple of sheepdog strains and at least one terrier line that I am aware of at present.  "Function follows form," became the new rallying cry and many many breeds were reverse engineered to fit asthetic tastes into what remained of their function.

    Anyway, unless the breed's past is well documented with primary sources (the work of Von Dobermann comes to mind), this is the bump in the road you face in looking at breed history many times.  I'll never forget looking at several US breed club websites for a particular breed that will go nameless, and seeing the statement repeated several times, "The origins of this breed are shrouded in the mists of time . . ."  Poppycock - the breed's origins were very well documented - but the obfuscation had likely occured when the breed fanciers wanted to seperate the breed as much as possible from its original working class function.

    Well, someone pull me up a stepstool so I can climb down off this high horse . . .who let the history grad in here, anyway?
    • Gold Top Dog
    Thanks for the dissertation.  I appreciate your opinion and thought.
    • Gold Top Dog
    Here's a thread which attempts to answer the same question: [linkhttp://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=117594]http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=117594[/link]
     
    Someone there broke it down simply.  Unsure of how accurate it is.
    Afghan Hound … hunting leopards
    Airedale Terrier… hunting vermin
    Akbash… guarding livestock
    Akita… hunting large game
    Alaskan Malamute…pulling sled
    American Eskimo Dog…unknown (performing tricks?)
    American Pit Bull Terrier… fighting
    Anatolian Shepherd… guarding livestock
    Australian Cattle Dog… herding cattle
    Australian Kelpie… herding cattle
    Australian Shepherd…herding livestock
    Australian Terrier… hunting vermin
    Basset Hound… hunting rabbit
    Beagle… hunting small prey
    Belgian Shepherd… herding livestock; carrying messages; law
    enforcement
    Bernese Mountain Dog… all-round working farm dog
    Bichon Frise… royal lap dog
    Bloodhound… tracking during hunts
    Border Collie… herding sheep
    Border Terrier… killing foxes; guarding farms
    Boston Terrier… controlling vermin
    Bouvier Des Flanders… all-purpose farm dog
    Boxer… baiting bears and bulls
    Brittany… hunting companion
    Bull Terrier… pit fighting
    Cardigan Welsh Corgi… general working dog
    Catahoula Leopard Hound… hunting, guarding
    Caucasian Ovtcharka… guarding sheep
    Cavalier King Charles Spaniel… companion dog
    Central Asian Ovtcharka… herding livestock
    Chesapeake Bay Retriever… hunting waterfowl
    Cocker Spaniel… hunting
    Dachshund… hunting small game
    Dalmatian… guarding horses and carriages
    Doberman Pinscher… guarding people
    English Springer Spaniel… hunting; all-purpose
    English Toy Spaniel… lap dog
    German Shepherd Dog… police dog
    German Shorthaired Pointer…. hunting
    Golden Retriever… retrieving waterfowl
    Great Dane… hunting stag and wild board
    Great Pyrenees… guarding livestock
    Greyhound… hunting; racing
    Jack Russell Terrier… hunting small game
    Japanese Chin… lap dog
    Japanese Spitz… companion dog
    Karelian Bear Dog… hunting big game
    Keeshound… watch dog; controlling vermin
    Komondor… guarding large herds
    Kuvasz… herding livestock
    Labrador Retriever… retrieving fish and game
    Lhaso Apso… guarding monasteries and palaces
    Maltese… lap dog
    Maremma… guarding sheep
    Mastiff… fighting and defending
    Miniature Schnauzer… catching rats
    Miniature Pinscher… catching rats and being a barking watchdog
    Newfoundland… retrieving from water
    Norwegian Elk Hound… hunting big game
    Old English Sheepdog… herding sheep and cattle
    Patterdale terrier… killing vermin
    Pembroke Welsh Corgi… herding cattle
    Pomeranian… lap dog
    Poodle… retrieving waterfowl
    Portuguese Water Dog… assisting fishermen
    Pug… lap dog
    Rat Terrier… hunting rats
    Rhodesian Ridge Back… hunting lions
    Rottweiler… herding cattle; pulling carts; protecting
    Russian Wolfhound… coursing wolves
    Saint Bernard… guarding and herding
    Samoyed… pulling sleds; herding reindeer
    Schipperke… guarding boats; catching vermin
    Schnauzer… all-purpose farm dog
    Scottish Terrier… hunting small animals
    Shar Pei… all-purpose farm dog
    Shetland Sheepdog… herding sheep
    Shih Tzu… residing in temples and palaces
    Siberian Husky… pulling sleds; herding reindeer
    Smooth Fox Terrier… hunting foxes
    South Russian Ovtcharka… guarding sheep
    Vizsla… sporting dog
    Weimaraner… hunting large game
    Westie… hunting fox
    Wheaten Terrier… catching vermin; hunting; guarding
    Whippet… racing
    Wirehaired Fox Terrier… hunting fox
    Yorkshire Terrier… catching rats and other small animals

    • Gold Top Dog
    Ummm, no.  The original use for the german shepherd was to herd and protect the flock of sheep.  Later they were trained for police, military and sar work.
    • Gold Top Dog
    Mic this site is pretty good, after you hit on the breed go to more info on breed
     
    [linkhttp://www.dogchannel.com/dog/breeds/]http://www.dogchannel.com/dog/breeds/[/link]
    • Bronze
    You can pretty much just google the dog breed and a good website about the dog should give you a history of it. I know personally from my trainer's manual that my Westie is a Scottish Hunting Dog. And I know from experience, too.
    *has a flashback of when Sammy brought her a dead robin and chased her around the backyard with it*
    [:D]

    • Gold Top Dog
    ORIGINAL: glenmar

    Ummm, no.  The original use for the german shepherd was to herd and protect the flock of sheep.  Later they were trained for police, military and sar work.

     
    LOL!  I said I wasn't sure if it was correct!  I thought some of them sounded odd- like the whippet..would have thought that hunting would have been its original purpose.
    • Bronze
    (first I am not wolfsoul lol but I am on her computer and I dont have an acount here)
     
    actually going by a book I read on Whippets they were indeed bred for raceing, they were bred down from greyhounds to be a small, cheap "racehorse" for the poor man.
    • Gold Top Dog
    I went to the dogbreedinfo website and looked up basenji.  Here is the original purpose of the basenji:
     
     In Africa, it is used as a guide in the forests,
     
    Why native peoples need a guide in their own forests, I have no idea, but can't you just visualize basenjis wearing pith helmets saying "Now on the right you can see a Nile crocidile, and on the left . . ."?
     
    Of course this website also says basenjis will not fight among themselves.  [&:]
    • Gold Top Dog
    I wouldn't trust dogbreedinfo's accuracy either.  They are way off base on the Collie too.

    If anyone is interested in the origin of the Smooth coated version of the Collie, here is my take on it.

    Unlike what most of the Collie books in print today tell us, the word 'Collie' is actually from the Gaelic word for 'useful', and so the Celtic tribes called their useful farm or stock dogs 'Collies'. Over time, the name was changed with the English language influence.

    There is strong evidence that the early ancestors of the Collie were brought over during the Roman invasions. The earliest known title for what is now our Smooth Collie was the 'Shepherd's Cur'. Records can be traced back to the Laws of the Forest of 1598. The herding dog that was to become the Smooth Collie of today comes from the butcher's dogs, who would accompany the butcher to town, and would serve as a herder, protector and companion. These dogs were able to perform a multitude of tasks from herding to hunting. The Scots wanted one dog that could perform the task of many, as opposed to many dogs that could only perform a single task.


    During this time carriage dogs became popular, and while at first Dalmatians were the dog of choice, by the early 19th century, the Smooth Collie was the fashionable ladies' carriage dog.
    The Royal Archives show evidence that Queen Victoria had several Smooths in her royal kennels, included her beloved "Sharp", born in 1864. He was her constant companion for 15 years and upon his death, a memorial statue was erected over his grave.

    The British Standard for the Smooth Collie, originally written in 1898, strongly resembles the standards of the AKC, UKC and FCI. The only differences being the size of the American Collie and the embellishment upon certain characteristics.

     [size="1"]
    Historical information taken from 'The Smooth Collie - a Family Dog' by Iris Combe, noted Collie researcher and historian.
    [/size]
    • Gold Top Dog
    I don't know how reliable it it, but have you checked the AKC website?  On the page for each breed, in the left hand navigation bar, is a link for "History" of each breed.http://www.akc.org/breeds/breeds_a.cfm. Their Collie history is acceptable to me.  Of course, this doesn't help with non-AKC breeds, but it's a start!