There’s something so solid, so reassuring, about a labrador that it is hard to appreciate that there was a time when they didn’t exist. You can almost imagine Julius Caesar, black lab at heel, walking to the Forum. He didn’t, of course. Designed in Victorian England and patented in 1904, the labrador is a relatively new creation, only as old as the breech-loading shotgun that the first labradors were bred to work with.
Most of our familiar gundog breeds were developed and refined in the 19th century, while the very idea of a breed was a later development. Ciara Farrell, the Kennel Club’s library and collections manager, explained the concept of pedigree succintly: “Pedigree, in the strict modern sense, developed from the mid-19th century onwards. It involves adherence to having a detailed breed standard and documented proven ancestry. The definition is much looser before the mid-19th century, so I find it useful to say ‘breed type’ rather than ‘breed’ – still, these breed types were distinct from each other and controlled selective breeding took place.”
Distinct types of gundog and prototype gundogs have existed for centuries. They became increasingly distinct from the late-18th century onwards with the rising popularity of sporting shooting as a leisure activity. Pointing dogs had long been used around the Mediterranean for hunting quail and partridges, so these pointing breeds became the original gundogs. The first pointers imported to England from Spain in the 16th century looked very much like the pointers we know today, though heavier and more ponderous. They were crossed with greyhounds to give more speed and foxhounds to improve their scenting ability (a risky business, as foxhounds follow a ground scent while pointers and setters are air scenting). Ruthless selective breeding led to not only effective working dogs but a specific type or appearance being established.
Bu hikaye The Field dergisinin January 2020 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye The Field dergisinin January 2020 sayısından alınmıştır.
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