Tuesday, April 10, 2012

The Italian Job

Art by Kevin Brockbank for the April 2012 issue of Dogs Today.

Look through the back of any dog magazine, and you will find dog dealers hawking "testosterone" dogs to young men.

The list of dogs includes the "Olde English Bulldogge" along with the Old English Bulldog, the Original English Bulldogge, Olde Bulldogge, the Campeiro Bulldog, Leavitt Bulldog, the Catahoula Bulldog, the Alapaha Blue Blood Bulldog, the Aussie Bulldog, the Victorian Bulldog, the Valley Bulldog, the Olde Boston Bulldogge, the Dorset Old Tyme Bulldog, the Ca de Bou, the Banter Bulldog, and the Johnson Bulldog, to say nothing of the Alana Espanol, Cane Corso, Bully Kutta, and the recreated "Alaunt."

These new-age molosser breeds are sandwiched between the English, Tibetan and Bull Mastiffs, the Rottweilers, the Dogue de Bordeaux, the Dogo Argentino, the Fila Brasileriro and, of course, the English Bulldog.

And then, of course, there is "The Italian Job" -- the Neopolitan Mastiff.

What does a Neopolitan Mastiff have in common with a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel?

Actually quite a lot.

For one, both dogs were created at a dog show, based on a sample size of one.

Both dogs were invented by show ring people anxious to create a breed that looked like the pictures they had seen on a wall. 

In the case of the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, Roswell Eldridge was trying to breed a dog that looked like those seen in the paintings of van Dyck.  

In the case of the Neopolitan Mastiff, Piero Scanziani was looking to breed a heavy "gladiator dog" like those he saw in the mosaics at Pompeii.

Scanziani, to set the record straight, was not Italian, but Swiss.  Born in 1908, he was one of those young wanna-be-tough-guys who are so often fascinated by molosser breeds.  Starting in 1930, at the age of 22, he began breeding Boxers, English Bulldogs, and Dogue de Bordeaux.

After Italy's ignoble defeat at the end of World War II,  Scanziani, now the editor of an Italian dog magazine called Cani, had an idea.  Why not create a heavy-bodied "Italian dog" that would harken back to the greater glory that was Rome and perhaps revive the nation's flagging sense of self?  

Scanziani cast about for a mastiff that was large enough and imposing enough to do the job, but he came up blank until October 12, 1946  when he attended the Castel dell'Ovo dog show in Naples, which was the first dog show to be held in Italy after WW II.

There Scanziani met a gentleman who owned a massive dog by the name of Guaglione, but the dog had already been sold to another man by the name of Carmine Puolo. 

Undeterred, Scanziani eventually bought Guaglione from Carmine Puolo in 1949, and that same day he also acquired from Puolo a bitch by the name of Pacchiana. 

Scanziani declared that he now had the foundation stock for his new breed -- two dogs of pedigree unknown which he had acquired on the same day!  

Within a few months, Scanziani had written up a standard for his new breed based on Guaglione's appearance, and in 1951 Guaglione was made the first Italian "Champion" of the breed. 

Wow, what a dog man!   He buys a dog, invents a history for it, writes a breed standard based on a sample size of one, and makes the dog a champion!

Welcome to "the Italian Job" -- the Neopolitan Mastiff. 

This is a breed created by dog show people for dog show purposes, and it has never strayed too far from that path.  This is a dog forged in the fire of fantasy.  It was never a dog designed for work because there was no work for it to do.  A gladiator dog?  It's to laugh.  The Roman coliseum was in ruins the day this dog was created, and it still remains a ruin! 

Today the Neopolitan Mastiff is shown in the ring as a "working" dog.  But working at what?  No one can say.  There are no Kennel Club-registered mastinos working as guard or police dogs at any military, police, or corporate security installation in the world.  This is a dog that is simply too heavy too move, and too plagued with health problems to invest time and energy into training.

Which is not to say that there are not working molossers in this world; there certainly are! 

American Pit Bulls are used for police work, guard work, and pig-catching work around the world, as are various cross-bred bandogs.

But a cross-bred bandog is not a Neo, is it?  By definition, a Neopolitan Mastiff is a registered dog bred to a standard that allows not a single drop of outcrossed blood.

Now, to be clear, there is nothing uniquely bad about Neos. 

Are they hideous freaks fit only for Harry Potter movies?   Sure, but so are a lot of Kennel Club dogs, from Chinese Cresteds to Pekingese and Italian Greyhounds.

Are almost 100% born cesarean?  Sure, but how is that different from a lot of Kennel Club molossers, from English Bulldogs to English Mastiffs?

Are too many burdened with cherry eye?  Of course, but if we start counting that as a defect we won't have Basset Hounds, Bloodhounds and Saint Bernards, will we?

Do too many of these dogs die painful deaths from gastric torsion and cancer?  Well sure, but how is that different from Irish Wolfhounds, Scottish Deerhounds, and Great Danes to name just a few breeds with similar problems?

No, I am not outraged by the Neo's health problems. 

I am outraged that this dog is in the "working" dog class when this dog has NEVER worked, cannot work, and does not work.

So what is my solution?

I propose a new class for Kennel Club dogs -- a class that Piero Scanziani himself would have saluted. 

You see Scanziani was a writer of religious science fiction.

Is not the Kennel Club a religion that operates independent of science and which professes things that its adherents are told to believe based on faith alone?

It is!

And are not a great number of Kennel Club breed histories little more than science fiction?

They are!

So let us create a Kennel Club class for Science Fiction dogs. It will be a big and diverse class.

It will have in it the terrier breeds that are terrified of a mouse and that are too big to go to ground on a fox.  

It will have in it the "herding" breeds never seen in the hands of commercial sheep men -- the Bearded Collies, the Lassie Collies, the Old English Sheep Dogs, and the like. 

It will have in it the running dogs that trip over their own hair, and the German Shepherds with hocks as collapsed as Hitler's bunker.

And, of course, it will have in it all those molosser breeds which, like the Neopolitan Mastiff and the English Bulldog, have devolved into cartoons and caricatures.

Fit for function?  Of course!  They are fit for the function of science fiction!

.

11 comments:

Donald McCaig said...

Dear Patrick,

There are rare working Bearded Collies most in the UK. Jack Knox imported one 20 years ago and it won a third place at the Blue Ridge SDT. Polly Matzinger has a fuzzy faced Bearded Collie x Border Collie Registered on Merit way back and probably about 20% Beardie now.

They don't look at all like the big fluffy show Beardies - they look like fuzzy faced Border Collies.

I am told that Bearded Collies are better at working big mobs of sheep - 1000 head or so.

This would be a small matter but one of the disadvantages of the near utter triumph of the Border Collie as sheepdog (and mostly) all-purpose stockdog (its only real rival is the Kelpie) has been the loss of useful genetics in stockdog breeds it has supplanted.

I'd hate to see the Bearded Collie go the way of the Hillsman and the Welsh Gray.

PBurns said...

I bit like with Border Terriers.

Whenever we talk about their failure as workers, someone will mention that Levi Oakes had a few he dug on 40 years ago and he sold them as workers 25 years ago or so, and maybe Lisa Jenkins has one or two from that line... and of course there are some dogs that do go-to-ground (the terrier equivalent of someone with 4-5 sheep in a two-acre field). And then someone will pull up a border and do actual work with it, but then it turns out it's not a pure registered border, but a border-fell cross. Which is not to say there are not a few border terriers that work (I know several examples on three continents), but when they are so rare you can actually name the animals, you know it's a rare thing -- about as rare as a cross-dressing Panda.

It may be that the the beardie is simply a cold weather dog and there are not enough sheep in cold weather enough of the year to justify their keep. But, of course, James Hoggs and the lot were never using beardies, so maybe the dog was always more myth that reality? I know that's true for the Border Terrier, which is also a cold weather dog, but which I find was never much used anywhere -- it was a dog invented around the time of the Kennel Club, and pulled in as quick as they could make it happen!

P

Donald McCaig said...

I know of 8 19th century British Sheepdog breeds (including the "Scotch Collie") and am certain there were many more. Travel was difficult, shepherds were poor and most never left the valley where they were born. Their sheepdogs were regional and unlike the terriers and excepting the Scotch Collie, beneath the notice of show breeders.

What doomed these breeds - and their unique genetic abilities - was the sheepdog trial which rewarded certain genetics and ignored others.
While sheepdog breeders weren't as caught up in purity eugenics as the show people, they bred for a biddable, athletic header who could work intensely at great distances from its shepherd. Dogs who weren't good at distances but were very useful in chutes and pens gradually died out.

In this country, the working Australian Shepherd is much harder to find than he was 30 years ago. Yes, some of that is attributable to Aussie folks willingness to show their dogs and the AKC stalk ("recognition") but if you need a stock dog it is so much easier to find a good Border Collie and the working Aussie is (unfortunately) marginalized.

Donald

Sin said...

"Are they hideous freaks fit only for Harry Potter movies? Sure, but so are a lot of Kennel Club dogs, from Chinese Cresteds to Pekingese and Italian Greyhounds."

I am a greyhound enthusiast, but know very little about IGs. Is there anywhere I can find a *real* history of the Italian Greyhound? I have looked around and most sites just say that its bloodlines go back around 2000 years, but leave it at that. I assume that they mean IGs were an offshoot of the greyhound proper, which is a very old breed, but surely the IG is a much more recent invention.

PBurns said...

There is no evidence that the "Italian Greyhound" is related to the Greyhound, which can easily weigh ten times as much (and three times more than a whippet). People who make such claims are the same ones who claim a Pit Bull has working terrier in its blood and that a Min Pin is simply a Small Doberman -- a confusion born by people who thinks names have something to do with true history and never mind size or the work!

An IG is a very light-boned lap dog created from lap dog stock and with a thin coat. It is not a true running dog any more than a Chihuahua is, but its general natural form is quite old and can be seen in the taxidermy mannikin of a fox >> http://www.terrierman.com/terriersizearticle.htm

IGs of some generalized (and divergent) form have been around a long time, but there is no real history beyond that, as no one wrote down the history of lap dogs before the Kennel Club showed up.

dalriach said...

The very few genuine working beardies I have seen in Scotland and the islands (I could count them on my fingers) could drive sheep but were not as good as the border collie type of working sheepdog at doing anything else. And they didnt look remotely like the show beardies, much less coat, very tattered yellowish dogs who lookm like they have been dragged through a hedge backwards

Stoutheartedhounds said...

I don't know much about IG's, but I think they do have some of the physiological characteristics unique to other sighthounds (e.g. large RBC count, larger heart/lungs, metabolism etc). If that's true then it's likely that some sighthound blood was used to create the breed, whether that blood came from a Greyhound is debatable.

I believe there are some pretty old paintings from the Renaissance period which depict Italian Greyhounds, so they have been around for a long time.

Nevertheless, they are not a functional running dog in terms of running on live game. They can make very nice amateur racing or lure coursing dogs if their instincts haven't been totally bred out of them, and they do make lovely companions.

Miss Margo said...

Thank you for this information about IGs...! I've been wondering about those dogs forever!

I love greyhounds and used to have a whippet. I see a LOT of IGs here in NYC and frankly, they just don't bare anything more than a superficial resemblance to those two other breeds. They seem really delicate and they hop around like their feet are on fire. They probably make sweet pets, but they don't seem athletic to me at all!

Nora said...

I don't totally understand why you would class Italian Greyhounds with Pekingese, etc. as "freaks." While I would agree that they are a toy breed, and always intended as a lapdog or companion dog, my IG has caught birds and other small animals, and is proving to be remarkably biddable and athletic (I'm training him for Agility, and he is quite a nice jumper). His learning style is very interesting, different from my Shelties--show him something a couple of times, and he doesn't seem to get it, but if you go back to it the next session, it's as if he's been thinking about it and TOTALLY understands what you want. Plus he makes a fantastic bed warmer.

PBurns said...

Any dog that has so light a skeleton that it can break a leg bone jumping off a couch is a dog pretty far from nature.

Nora said...

I see your point, but I will say that a) the IG club is really up-front about this as a possible problem, with the caveat that they say it tends to be more likely in certain lines (so talk to the breeder about it) and it is much more likely with puppies and b) if you have lived with an IG, when they jump off a couch it's not like your average dog jumping off a couch--a means to an end--it's more like a launch into space... they appear to almost be working to see how much height and distance they can get.