breadcrumb
Alaunt
|
Comments
Alaunt raylane
24 Jul : 12:58 Reply to this | |
| Registered: 28 Sep : 23:00 | Actually, I think the Alaunt looked more like the White Kazbegi Shepherd Dog or the White English Bulldog, both still used to guard cattle, though variations do exist. The main point is the Alaunt originated as a Shepherd Dog of cattle. Since the Alans are alive and well, perhaps we can look at the dogs of the Ossetians @ -link- [ Sargeant ] \"Despite this, scholars with no knowledge of dogs still attribute the origin of the mastiff group to a small isolated group of mountain people in Epirus, rightly famous for a different type of dog.\" David Hancock MBE |
Alaunt raylane
25 Jan : 14:06 Reply to this | |
| Registered: 28 Sep : 23:00 | Molossus or Alaunt? " Let us now turn to the facts. Ancient Molossis, from which these dogs certainly take their name, is a part of Epirus and located on the northern west coast of Greece. Today Epirus is part of southern Albania." Fighting Dog Breeeds, Dr Dieter Fleig So, ancient Molossis is part of Epirus which today is part of southern Albania. "A group called the Alans arrived in eastern Europe five or six centuries BC to settle what is now Albania, and others arrived in waves around 400AD." The Atlas of Dog Breeds of the World, Bonnie Wilcox, DMV, and Chris Walkowicz So, the Molossi obtained their stock from the Alans? . "The author Marius Terentius Varro, who died in the year 27B.C., reports of two kinds of dogs that were bred in this country. The first were hunting dogs and the second large herding dogs, who effectively protect sheep and goats. From his description of thse herding dogs we quote: The lower jaw is undershot. From it grows two teeth, one on the left, the other on the right, which are only slightly exposed...These dogs have large heads and drooping ears, a strong nape and neck...The tail is thick, the bark sonorous, the jaws large; the color usually is white, so that it can be distinguished from predators at night." Fighting Dog Breeeds, Dr Dieter Fleig But, this is in contrast to popular belief of Molosser type which also includes mountain dogs. "Other finds document that the Molossus was black in color, like the Tibetan Dog." Fighting Dog Breeeds, Dr Dieter Fleig The Alaunt was bred by the nomadic herdsmen/warrior tribe of the Caucasus, so we know the Alaunt was a herding dog that also fought in battles. The nomadic life of war dispersed the Alans throughout Euro-Asia, as it did their ancestors long before Molossi existed. "The Medes, Albanians, Gelonians, and Hyrcanians, as the various breeds of Assyrian mastiffs were called in after times, came from the north of Persia and the wide districts which extended between the Caucasus and the shores of the Caspian Sea, and there appears to have been something about this wild region which enabled its hounds to retain their supremacy for long ages afterwards." 'De Canibus, Dog and Hound in Antiquity', by RHA Merlen, 1971 While a group of Alans (known today as Ossatians) still reside in their homeland, now reduced to Georgia of the Caucasus, a great number of other Alans were dispersed mainly throughout Europe. "By the Middle Ages the racier, undershot 'mastiffs' were known throughout Europe as Alaunts or Alains." The Atlas of Dog Breeds of the World, Bonnie Wilcox, DMV, and Chris Walkowicz So, the breed type known as Molossers could not even exist without the breed type known as Alaunts, but the opposite is not true, for the Alaunt has its own origins - seperate from the Molossers, and were known throughout Europe by the Middle Ages. "The alaunt nice resembled, because of their lighter structure, with large greyhounds; the alaunt veautre with dogs of big size, always of greyhound type, but with large heads, large lips and large ears; the alaunt of butchery resembled true molosses, intended for the combat and used generally by those who had cattle....The explanation, given in the French-English dictionary of Cotgrave of 1632, of the expression allan of butchery, confirms our deduction: resembles our matin, and it is used by the butchers to overcome thrown into panic oxen and bring back them to their places." Molosses.net (Translated from French) It is easy to understand the term Bulldog as it describes the Alaunt of Butchery as the guardian and controller of cattle by those in the countryside of USA, of which were quite common in early times of colonization of North America. And, that form follows funtion. "We find testimonys of its presence in France, at the XVIIe century, in certain fables of the fountain, where one quotes a dog used by shepherds to defend the cattle of the wolves." Molosses.net (Translated from French) Now, this describes the old breed known as White English Bulldog, though no doubt developed from various imports starting with Spain into North America in the Middle Ages. "Spain, in the Middle Ages, produced the best alauntes. The 'war-dogs' of the conquistadors were alauntes; chroniclers reffered to them as mastins, alanos and lebrels (the latter a strong-headed greyhound). THE MASTIFFS The Big Game Hunters, by Colonel David Hancock MBE Since France and Spain border each other, could not the French Alaunts and Spanish Alanos have a long history of interbreeding? "Kustler, in its studies on this race, affirms that it is genetically very close to the Mastiff of Burgos: this because of the frequent crossings between dogs used with goals of defence by smugglers who crossed the every day the Pyreenes. It seems important to me to underline, on this subject, that the county of Foix, to the same period when Gaston Phebus wrote his treaty, was annexed with the duchy of Navarre, which extended well beyond the Pyreenes; in the current Spanish territory, and which confined with old castille, whose Burgoes was the capitale....This type of dog thus existed in Spain in 1625, and we know that the town of Burgos was known for the cattle breeding and the combat of the bulls in the arenas. English Certains personnages, whose George R. Krehl, the editor of keeper stock, impassioned expert of molosses, estimated that the fatherland of the English Bulldog was Spain and not England." Molosses.net (Translated from French) And, we know French Loisianna overlapped and bordered Spanish La Florida in North America. The White English Bulldog that developed in colonial USA, resembles the original authentic Bulldogs of Britain, being of original Alaunt type, but is not the early English breed nor original Alaunt, per se. "Such dogs were the alauntes, known on both sides of the Pyreenes and comming in three main forms: the huge hounds rather like today's Great Dane, the hunting mastiffs used in the hunt 'at the kill' rather on the physical lines of today's Bullmastiff and the smaller 'alauntes of the butcheries' rather like the original authentic Bulldogs of Britain." THE MASTIFFS The Big Game Hunters, by Colonel David Hancock MBE Now, that would explain the White English Bulldog of USA, as developed from an amalgamation of various imports starting with Spain, rather than the original belief that they were brought in their pure form from England, though the English would have brought some English Alaunts to the military colonies in the south whose purpose was to drive out the Spanish, who Spain themselves imported a number of English Alaunts long before the English arrived. "We also know that this breed went out to Bordeaux between 1151 and 1411 and to Spain, Majorca and Cuba between 1556 and 1649." The Story of the Real Bulldog, Robert Jenkins and Ken Mollett This amalgamation of Spanish, French, and English stock of Alaunts has a long history. At the core, the Alaunt was the herdsman/warrior dog of the Caucasus, and surley the herding dog of Molossis who effectively protected sheep and goats as described by Varro: The lower jaw is undershot...These dogs have large heads and drooping ears, a strong nape and neck...The tail is thick, the bark sonarous, the jaws large; the color usually is white... Though, the Alaunt type is better known for keeping cattle (a root word for all livestock). The Alaunt is considered extint as a breed, but its type lives on in a great number of breeds - some more than others. We can, howerver, state the genetic template of all Mastiff breeds originated from the north of Persia and the wide districts which extended between the Caucasus and the shores of the Caspian Sea, and not from Molossis. However, in this area of origins was a district known as Iberia as was the Iberian Peninsula with a people known by historians as the Beaker Folk, that spread articals of Bronze throughout Europe by land and sea around 2000BC, long before the Assyrians, Phenocian Traders, Molossians, Celts, and Alans ever existed. So, Spain (of the Iberian Peninsula) has a rather long connection with the wide districts which extended between the Caucasus and the shores of the Caspian Sea - specifically Caucasian Iberia. "There are many theories regarding the origin of the name 'Alaunt' or 'Alan.' Some suggest that it comes from the Celtic for stag, thus making the original dog a deerhound. Others suggest that it derives from the warrior tribe of the Caucasus, the Alani. Others still suggest that the name is of Spanish origin and that the Alaunt was decended from the Spanish Mastiff, the 'Alano." The Story of the Real Bulldog, Robert Jenkins and Ken Mollett So, which came first the Alaunt or Alano? That's like asking "Which came first, the chicken or the egg?" The Alaunt/Alano or Mastiff genetic template lives on in a number of breeds and can be selectively bred for, but - form follows funtion. The classic Alaunt/Mastiff should effectively protect sheep and goats, as well as all livestock, as the herdsman/warrior dogs have done down through the ages. As, in the conquest of the New World, the Conquistidors brought Mastiffs to herd and guard the livestock to feed the soilders on the move. "The Navajo also used decendants of the large Spanish mastiff as guardian of their flocks....The Churro sheep of the Southwest, descended from the ancient Iberian Churra breed brought by the Spanish to the New World in the sixteenth century, were herded to California through the 1850s to feed the gold rush settlers." A Dog's History of America, Mark Derr And, while Iberian sheep raising was introduced by Spain in the American Southwest, cattle and swine raising was introduced by Spain to the American South of which both areas were once known as La Florida. The mastiff dogs used to guard and herd cattle eventually developed into what became known as White English Bulldogs, which actually follow Spanish tradition, handed down from Iberia (that of Caucasian Iberia and the Iberian Peninsula), as the Old White English Bulldogs are placid herding dogs that keep the herds from stampeeds, as they guard the herds as would any placid flock guardian or LGD that is white to keep the herd calm. "During the European Renaissance, the Great Butcher Dog was common. This more placid mastiff helped drive cattle to market, guarding the livestock as well as the owners, and often carrying the sales money home around his neck! Few highwaymen challenged such a beast." The Atlas of Dog Breeds of the World, Bonnie Wilcox, DMV, and Chris Walkowicz The Rottweiler was once basically a Butchers Dog, however, most fanciers of this breed has lost sight of the correct working temperment. "Breeders warn the Rottweiler is tough with other dogs and will argue the point of dominance with people - even their own people. Trainning, firm discipline and maintence of the alpha position are the breeders prescription." The Atlas of Dog Breeds of the World, Bonnie Wilcox, DMV, and Chris Walkowicz The Alaunt Butchers type should be placid, and easily controled. The so-called "working" American Bulldog has followed in the footsteps of the Rottie as it once guarded cattle and never needed formal trainning. The farmer's or rancher's prescription for dominance issues is culling. In fact, the Old White English, like the rustic Sage Koochi, e pack or team will cull out those with aggression and dominance issues. "A few of the big, fierce Spanish dogs that guarded flocks in the Southwest came into the country with merinos, as did various crosses with them, but the big dogs never gained much of a foothold, despite the occasional appearance in agricultural journals of articals extrolling their superior virtues. The tradition in America was primarily English and northern European, and that meant active herding dogs." A Dog's History of America, Mark Derr We can therefore assume the lack of mainstream popularity of the Old White English, as is proven by the popularity of the modern American Bulldog. The placid breed known as White English Bulldog used by farmers to guard farms (including livestock) and bring in the herds from the fields is nearly depleted. However, the very lack of popularity will keep the numbers of traditional funtional type to a small and decisive gene pool. This gene pool is dominated by the old family line of Carr as registered by the BBC. In 2004, at the NKC show, Alan Scott, Rayburn Stover, Art Parker, John Conners, and many others participated in the first show for White English Bulldogs as a seperate breed where Hedden's Buddy Roe down from the Carr line took first place. Thus, the preservation of the old type was established as a breed, seperate from the new. [ Sargeant ] \"Despite this, scholars with no knowledge of dogs still attribute the origin of the mastiff group to a small isolated group of mountain people in Epirus, rightly famous for a different type of dog.\" David Hancock MBE |










8.3 - 6 votes -
The legendary 
When the Huns conquered the Alani tribes, the nation was separated in the 370's into the Eastern and Western Alans. The Eastern Alani tribes merged with the Albanians, Ossetians, Serbs and other nations, introducing their dogs into the bloodlines of many Balkan breeds, such as the progenitors of the Illyrian Mountain Dog, Metchkar, Qen Ghedje, Molossos tis Epirou, Sylvan, Sarplaninec and other indigenous Molossers of the region. Some believe that the white-coloured Alaunts were the direct ancestors of Greek and Albanian breeds, which in turn influenced all other white dogs in the Balkans, but the colouring could've very well been an influence of some Indian boarhounds as well. The Western Alans joined the Vandals on their raids through Europe and by the 410's, their fierce dogs were influencing many breeds in Italy, France, Spain, Portugal, England and other countries, spreading the use of the 
Alaunt