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Dog type

Dog types are broad categories of domestic dogs based on form, function, or style of work, lineage, or appearance. Some may be locally adapted dog types (or landraces) that may have the visual characteristics of a modern purebred dog. In contrast, modern dog breeds strictly adhere to long-established breed standards,[note 1] that began with documented foundation breeding stock sharing a common set of inheritable characteristics,[1][2] developed by long-established, reputable kennel clubs that recognize the dog as a purebred.

Cart dogs, c. 1900; different in appearance but doing the same work
An extinct Turnspit dog, 1800
Sled dogs, 1833

A "dog type" can be referred to broadly, as in gun dog, or more specifically, as in spaniel. Dogs raised and trained for a specific working ability rather than appearance may not closely resemble other dogs doing the same work, or any of the dogs of the analogous breed group of purebred dogs.[3]

Names in English edit

The earliest books in the English language to mention numbers of dog types are from the "Cynegetica" (hunting literature), namely, The Art of Venery (1327) by Twiti (Twici), a treatise that describes hunting with the limer (a leashed bloodhound type); the pack of running hounds, which included barcelets and brachetz (both scent hounds); and the sighthound and greyhound.[4] More significant in recording the use and description of various dog types is The Master of Game (circa 1406) by Edward of York,[5][6] a treatise that describes dogs and their work, such as the alaunt, greyhound, pack scent hounds, spaniel, and mastiff, used by the privileged and wealthy for hunting purposes. The Master of Game is a combination of the earlier Art of Venery and the French hunting treatise Livre de Chasse by Gaston Phoebus (circa 1387).[7] The Book of Saint Albans, published in 1486,[8][9] a "school" book about hawking, hunting, fishing, and heraldry, attributed to Juliana Berners (Barnes), lists dogs of the time mainly by function: "First there is a greyhound, a bastard, a mongrel, a mastiff, a limer, a spaniel, "raches" (small-to-medium-sized scenthounds), "kennets" (small hunting dogs), terriers, "butcher's hounds", dung-heap dogs, "trundel tails" (lapdogs?) and prick-eared curs, and small ladies puppies that bear away the fleas and diverse small sorts."

Almost 100 years later, another book in English, De Canibus Britannicus, by the author/physician John Caius, translated (Fleming) from Latin in 1576,[10] attempted the first systematic approach to defining different types of dogs in various categories, demonstrating an apparent increase in types and population. "English dogs": the gentle (i.e., well-bred) kind, serving game—harriers, terriers, bloodhounds, gazehounds, greyhounds, limers, tumblers, and stealers; "the homely kind"; "the currish kind", toys; "Fowling dogs"—setters and spaniels; as well as the pastoral or shepherd types, mastiffs or bandogs, and various village dogs. Subtypes describing the function of dogs in each group were also included.[note 2]

Dog types and modern breeds edit

"It is important", reminded Anne Rogers Clark and Andrew Brace, "not to claim great age for breeds, though it is quite legitimate to claim considerable antiquity for types of dogs".[11] Attempts to classify dogs into different 'species' show that dog types could be quite distinctive, from the Canis melitaeus of lapdogs descended from ancient Roman pet dogs to the even more ancient Canis molossus, the Molossan types, to the Canis saultor, the dancing mongrel of beggars. These types were uniform enough to appear to have been selectively bred, but as Raymond Coppinger wrote, "Natural processes can produce, could produce, and do produce populations of unusual and uniform dogs, that is, dogs with a distinctive conformation."[12] Human manipulation was very indirect. In a very few cases emperors, monasteries, or wealthy hunters might maintain lines of special dogs, from which we have today's Pekingese, St. Bernards, and foxhounds.

At the beginning of the 19th century, there were only a few dogs identified as breeds, but when dog fighting was outlawed in England in 1835, a new sport of dog showing began. Along with this sport came rules, written records, and closed stud books. Dog fanciers began refining breeds from the various types of dogs in use.[13] Some of the old types no longer needed for work (such as the wolfhound) were remade and kept from extinction as show dogs, and other old types were refined into many new breeds. Sometimes, multiple new breeds might be born in the same litter of puppies.[14] In 1873, only forty breeds and varieties were known;[15] today, there are many hundreds of breeds, some 400 of them recognized by the Fédération Cynologique Internationale (FCI) alone. Dog types today are recognized in the names of Group or Section categories of dog breed registries. Named types of dogs that are not dog breeds are still being used where function or use is more important than appearance, especially for herding or hunting, as with the herding dog types of New Zealand that are described by their exact function (Heading Dog, Huntaway, Stopping Dog, etc.—functional terms, not necessarily breed names).[16]

Other uses of the word '"type" in dogs edit

For biologists, a "type" fixes a name to a taxon. Dog fanciers use the term "breed type" in the sense of "qualities (as of bodily contour and carriage) that are felt to indicate excellence in members of a group".[17] "Breed type" is specific to each dog breed's written standard. A dog that closely resembles the appearance laid out in the standard is said to be "typey".[18] "Type" also is used to refer to "dogs of a well established line", an identifiable style of dog within the "breed type", usually from a specific kennel.

Trainability and boldness edit

In 2011, a study found that herding dogs were more trainable than hounds, toy dogs, and non-sporting dogs. Sporting dogs were more trainable than non-sporting dogs. Terriers were bolder than hounds and herding dogs. Breeds with ancient Asian or African origin were less trainable than breeds in the herding/sighthound cluster and the hunting breeds. Breeds in the mastiff/terrier cluster were bolder than the ancient breeds, the breeds in the herding/sighthound cluster, and the hunting breeds.[19]

Notes edit

Note 1: ^ Every modern dog breed has a written "standard" that describes in detail aspects of its appearance. Modern breed standards are the basis of the sport of dog showing, as each dog is compared against the ideal of the written standard, and awards are based on how closely the dog resembles the standard. Their origin comes from the earliest European cynegetica: on a "sound hunting dog" see Xenophon, and the "correct type" of good sighthound, the vertragus, see Arrian.

Note 2: ^ Many modern breeds of dogs still use the names of early types, although they may or may not resemble the original types.

References edit

  1. ^ Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged. The Merriam-Webster Editorial Staff. Springfield, MA U.S.A.: G&C Merriam Company. 1967. p. 274. A breed is a group of domestic animals related through common ancestors and visibly similar in most characteristics, having been differentiated from others by human influence; a distinctive group of domesticated animals differentiated from the wild type under the influence of man, the sum of the progeny of a known and designated foundation stock without admixture of other blood.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. ^ "Foundation Stock Service – American Kennel Club". American Kennel Club. 12 November 2017. Retrieved 16 September 2019.
  3. ^ McMasters, Jill. "The Functional Labrador". Retrieved 5 March 2008. also A forum that includes photos of the differences between conformation and working dogs of the same breed; and description of differences between show and field (working) Springer Spaniels 30 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Twiti, William (1977). Danielsson, B.; Cynegetica Anglica (eds.). The Art of Hunting 1. Stockholm Studies in English XXXVII. Translated by Danielsson, B.; Cynegetica Anglica. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell Int.
  5. ^ The Master of Game, by Edward, second Duke of York: ed. Baillie-Grohman, William.1st Ed. London: 1904 Ballantine, Hanson & Co Folio, 302pp. 52 pl
  6. ^ Edward, of Norwich; Baillie-Grohman, William A. (William Adolph); Baillie-Grohman, F. (Florence); Roosevelt, Theodore; Gaston III Phebus, Count of Foix (1 January 1909). The master of game : the oldest English book on hunting. London : Chatto & Windus.
  7. ^ "BNF – Le livre de chasse de Gaston Phebus". classes.bnf.fr. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
  8. ^ Berners, Juliana (1975) [Facsimile of 1486 original]. English hawking and hunting in the Boke of St. Albans : a facsimile edition of sigs. a2-f8 of the Boke of St. Albans (1486) / by Rachel Hands. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-811715-9.
  9. ^ Berners, Juliana; Blades, William (1 January 1901). The boke of Saint Albans. London : Elliot Stock.
  10. ^ Caius, John; Gonville and Caius College; Royal College of Physicians of London; Roberts, E. S. (Ernest Stewart); Venn, John; Fleming, Abraham (1 January 1912). The works of John Caius, M.D., second founder of Gonville and Caius College and master of the college, 1559–1573. Cambridge, The University press.
  11. ^ Clark, Anne Rogers; Brace, Andrew H. (1995). The International Encyclopedia of Dogs. New York: Howell Book House. p. 8. ISBN 0-87605-624-9. In the strictest sense, dog breeds date back only to the last couple of decades of the nineteenth century, or to more recent decades in this (the twentieth) century but distinct types of dogs have existed centuries earlier.
  12. ^ Coppinger, Raymond; Coppinger, Lorna (2001). Dog: A Startling New Understanding of Canine Origin, Behavior & Evolution. New York: Scribner. p. 87. ISBN 0-684-85530-5.
  13. ^ Clark, Anne Rogers; Brace, Andrew H. (1995). The International Encyclopedia of Dogs. New York: Howell Book House. p. 8. ISBN 0-87605-624-9. In the strictest sense, dog breeds date back only to the last couple of decades of the nineteenth century, or to more recent decades in this (the twentieth) century but distinct types of dogs have existed centuries earlier.
  14. ^ The Scottish Terrier, the Cairn Terrier and the West Highland White Terrier have the same pedigree. Marvin, John T. (1982). "2. Background and Heritage of the Terrier Family". The New Complete Scottish Terrier (second ed.). New York, N.Y.: Howell Book House Inc. p. 27. ISBN 0-87605-306-1.
  15. ^ The New Complete Scottish Terrier, pg. 17
  16. ^ 'DOGS, WORKING', from An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand, edited by A. H. McLintock, originally published in 1966. Te Ara – The Encyclopedia of New Zealand, updated 18 September 2007 URL: http://www.teara.govt.nz/1966/D/DogsWorking/en
  17. ^ The Merriam-Webster Editorial Staff, ed. (1967). Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged. Springfield, MA U.S.A.: G&C Merriam Company. p. 2476. qualities (as of bodily contour and carriage) that are felt to indicate excellence in members of a group <won the show with a beagle of superior ~>
  18. ^ Jane Stern & Michael Stern (1997). "Glossary". Dog Eat Dog: A Very Human Book About Dogs and Dog Shows. New York, N.Y.: Sctibner. p. 186. ISBN 0-684-82253-9. typey: showing the breed characteristics to maximum effect
  19. ^ Turcsán, Borbála; Kubinyi, Enikő; Miklósi, Ádám (2011). "Trainability and boldness traits differ between dog breed clusters based on conventional breed categories and genetic relatedness". Applied Animal Behaviour Science. 132 (1–2): 61–70. doi:10.1016/j.applanim.2011.03.006.

External links edit

  • Canis lupus on ITIS

type, broad, categories, domestic, dogs, based, form, function, style, work, lineage, appearance, some, locally, adapted, types, landraces, that, have, visual, characteristics, modern, purebred, contrast, modern, breeds, strictly, adhere, long, established, br. Dog types are broad categories of domestic dogs based on form function or style of work lineage or appearance Some may be locally adapted dog types or landraces that may have the visual characteristics of a modern purebred dog In contrast modern dog breeds strictly adhere to long established breed standards note 1 that began with documented foundation breeding stock sharing a common set of inheritable characteristics 1 2 developed by long established reputable kennel clubs that recognize the dog as a purebred Cart dogs c 1900 different in appearance but doing the same workAn extinct Turnspit dog 1800Sled dogs 1833A dog type can be referred to broadly as in gun dog or more specifically as in spaniel Dogs raised and trained for a specific working ability rather than appearance may not closely resemble other dogs doing the same work or any of the dogs of the analogous breed group of purebred dogs 3 Contents 1 Names in English 2 Dog types and modern breeds 3 Other uses of the word type in dogs 4 Trainability and boldness 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksNames in English editThe earliest books in the English language to mention numbers of dog types are from the Cynegetica hunting literature namely The Art of Venery 1327 by Twiti Twici a treatise that describes hunting with the limer a leashed bloodhound type the pack of running hounds which included barcelets and brachetz both scent hounds and the sighthound and greyhound 4 More significant in recording the use and description of various dog types is The Master of Game circa 1406 by Edward of York 5 6 a treatise that describes dogs and their work such as the alaunt greyhound pack scent hounds spaniel and mastiff used by the privileged and wealthy for hunting purposes The Master of Game is a combination of the earlier Art of Venery and the French hunting treatise Livre de Chasse by Gaston Phoebus circa 1387 7 The Book of Saint Albans published in 1486 8 9 a school book about hawking hunting fishing and heraldry attributed to Juliana Berners Barnes lists dogs of the time mainly by function First there is a greyhound a bastard a mongrel a mastiff a limer a spaniel raches small to medium sized scenthounds kennets small hunting dogs terriers butcher s hounds dung heap dogs trundel tails lapdogs and prick eared curs and small ladies puppies that bear away the fleas and diverse small sorts Almost 100 years later another book in English De Canibus Britannicus by the author physician John Caius translated Fleming from Latin in 1576 10 attempted the first systematic approach to defining different types of dogs in various categories demonstrating an apparent increase in types and population English dogs the gentle i e well bred kind serving game harriers terriers bloodhounds gazehounds greyhounds limers tumblers and stealers the homely kind the currish kind toys Fowling dogs setters and spaniels as well as the pastoral or shepherd types mastiffs or bandogs and various village dogs Subtypes describing the function of dogs in each group were also included note 2 Dog types and modern breeds edit It is important reminded Anne Rogers Clark and Andrew Brace not to claim great age for breeds though it is quite legitimate to claim considerable antiquity for types of dogs 11 Attempts to classify dogs into different species show that dog types could be quite distinctive from the Canis melitaeus of lapdogs descended from ancient Roman pet dogs to the even more ancient Canis molossus the Molossan types to the Canis saultor the dancing mongrel of beggars These types were uniform enough to appear to have been selectively bred but as Raymond Coppinger wrote Natural processes can produce could produce and do produce populations of unusual and uniform dogs that is dogs with a distinctive conformation 12 Human manipulation was very indirect In a very few cases emperors monasteries or wealthy hunters might maintain lines of special dogs from which we have today s Pekingese St Bernards and foxhounds At the beginning of the 19th century there were only a few dogs identified as breeds but when dog fighting was outlawed in England in 1835 a new sport of dog showing began Along with this sport came rules written records and closed stud books Dog fanciers began refining breeds from the various types of dogs in use 13 Some of the old types no longer needed for work such as the wolfhound were remade and kept from extinction as show dogs and other old types were refined into many new breeds Sometimes multiple new breeds might be born in the same litter of puppies 14 In 1873 only forty breeds and varieties were known 15 today there are many hundreds of breeds some 400 of them recognized by the Federation Cynologique Internationale FCI alone Dog types today are recognized in the names of Group or Section categories of dog breed registries Named types of dogs that are not dog breeds are still being used where function or use is more important than appearance especially for herding or hunting as with the herding dog types of New Zealand that are described by their exact function Heading Dog Huntaway Stopping Dog etc functional terms not necessarily breed names 16 Other uses of the word type in dogs editFor biologists a type fixes a name to a taxon Dog fanciers use the term breed type in the sense of qualities as of bodily contour and carriage that are felt to indicate excellence in members of a group 17 Breed type is specific to each dog breed s written standard A dog that closely resembles the appearance laid out in the standard is said to be typey 18 Type also is used to refer to dogs of a well established line an identifiable style of dog within the breed type usually from a specific kennel Trainability and boldness editIn 2011 a study found that herding dogs were more trainable than hounds toy dogs and non sporting dogs Sporting dogs were more trainable than non sporting dogs Terriers were bolder than hounds and herding dogs Breeds with ancient Asian or African origin were less trainable than breeds in the herding sighthound cluster and the hunting breeds Breeds in the mastiff terrier cluster were bolder than the ancient breeds the breeds in the herding sighthound cluster and the hunting breeds 19 Notes editNote 1 Every modern dog breed has a written standard that describes in detail aspects of its appearance Modern breed standards are the basis of the sport of dog showing as each dog is compared against the ideal of the written standard and awards are based on how closely the dog resembles the standard Their origin comes from the earliest European cynegetica on a sound hunting dog see Xenophon and the correct type of good sighthound the vertragus see Arrian Note 2 Many modern breeds of dogs still use the names of early types although they may or may not resemble the original types References edit Webster s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged The Merriam Webster Editorial Staff Springfield MA U S A G amp C Merriam Company 1967 p 274 A breed is a group of domestic animals related through common ancestors and visibly similar in most characteristics having been differentiated from others by human influence a distinctive group of domesticated animals differentiated from the wild type under the influence of man the sum of the progeny of a known and designated foundation stock without admixture of other blood a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Foundation Stock Service American Kennel Club American Kennel Club 12 November 2017 Retrieved 16 September 2019 McMasters Jill The Functional Labrador Retrieved 5 March 2008 also A forum that includes photos of the differences between conformation and working dogs of the same breed and description of differences between show and field working Springer Spaniels Archived 30 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine Twiti William 1977 Danielsson B Cynegetica Anglica eds The Art of Hunting 1 Stockholm Studies in English XXXVII Translated by Danielsson B Cynegetica Anglica Stockholm Almqvist amp Wiksell Int The Master of Game by Edward second Duke of York ed Baillie Grohman William 1st Ed London 1904 Ballantine Hanson amp Co Folio 302pp 52 pl Edward of Norwich Baillie Grohman William A William Adolph Baillie Grohman F Florence Roosevelt Theodore Gaston III Phebus Count of Foix 1 January 1909 The master of game the oldest English book on hunting London Chatto amp Windus BNF Le livre de chasse de Gaston Phebus classes bnf fr Retrieved 17 November 2016 Berners Juliana 1975 Facsimile of 1486 original English hawking and hunting in the Boke of St Albans a facsimile edition of sigs a2 f8 of the Boke of St Albans 1486 by Rachel Hands Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 811715 9 Berners Juliana Blades William 1 January 1901 The boke of Saint Albans London Elliot Stock Caius John Gonville and Caius College Royal College of Physicians of London Roberts E S Ernest Stewart Venn John Fleming Abraham 1 January 1912 The works of John Caius M D second founder of Gonville and Caius College and master of the college 1559 1573 Cambridge The University press Clark Anne Rogers Brace Andrew H 1995 The International Encyclopedia of Dogs New York Howell Book House p 8 ISBN 0 87605 624 9 In the strictest sense dog breeds date back only to the last couple of decades of the nineteenth century or to more recent decades in this the twentieth century but distinct types of dogs have existed centuries earlier Coppinger Raymond Coppinger Lorna 2001 Dog A Startling New Understanding of Canine Origin Behavior amp Evolution New York Scribner p 87 ISBN 0 684 85530 5 Clark Anne Rogers Brace Andrew H 1995 The International Encyclopedia of Dogs New York Howell Book House p 8 ISBN 0 87605 624 9 In the strictest sense dog breeds date back only to the last couple of decades of the nineteenth century or to more recent decades in this the twentieth century but distinct types of dogs have existed centuries earlier The Scottish Terrier the Cairn Terrier and the West Highland White Terrier have the same pedigree Marvin John T 1982 2 Background and Heritage of the Terrier Family The New Complete Scottish Terrier second ed New York N Y Howell Book House Inc p 27 ISBN 0 87605 306 1 The New Complete Scottish Terrier pg 17 DOGS WORKING from An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand edited by A H McLintock originally published in 1966 Te Ara The Encyclopedia of New Zealand updated 18 September 2007 URL http www teara govt nz 1966 D DogsWorking en The Merriam Webster Editorial Staff ed 1967 Webster s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged Springfield MA U S A G amp C Merriam Company p 2476 qualities as of bodily contour and carriage that are felt to indicate excellence in members of a group lt won the show with a beagle of superior gt Jane Stern amp Michael Stern 1997 Glossary Dog Eat Dog A Very Human Book About Dogs and Dog Shows New York N Y Sctibner p 186 ISBN 0 684 82253 9 typey showing the breed characteristics to maximum effect Turcsan Borbala Kubinyi Eniko Miklosi Adam 2011 Trainability and boldness traits differ between dog breed clusters based on conventional breed categories and genetic relatedness Applied Animal Behaviour Science 132 1 2 61 70 doi 10 1016 j applanim 2011 03 006 External links editCanis lupus on ITIS Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dog type amp oldid 1188593059, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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