Dog of the Mountains
These dogs take their name from the mountain range in southwestern
Europe where they long have been used as guardians of the flocks.
In the United States they are called Great Pyrenees. In the United
Kingdom and Europe, they are known as the Pyrenean Mountain Dog.
In their native France, they are Le Chien de Montagne des Pyrenees
or Le Chien des Pyrenees. Whatever the name, it is the beautiful
white dog with a "certain elegance" which for centuries has been
the working associate of peasant shepherds high on the mountain
slopes. While it is generally accepted that no living breed of dog
can be traced back to its wild form, and that what is known about
dogs of any sort prior to a century or two ago is so little, it
is interesting to speculate about origin. A member of the Mastiff
family (used here to describe a group of large dogs rather than
a single breed), and once known as the Pyrenean Mastiff, the dog
is believed to have migrated into Europe from Asia Minor in two
distinct waves. By sea it accompanied the Phoenician traders from
Cadiz to Spain, then up into the Spanish Pyrenees. By land the dog
moved westward with the Aryan hordes, leaving its kin in all the
prominent mountain valleys of Europe. These later developed individual
characteristics in the seclusion of their own environment and came
to be known as the Maremma, Kuvasz, Komondor, Polish Tatra, Anatolian,
Akbash, and Mastin de los Pirineos.
Far into Antiquity
As a race, the Pyrenean dog dates back far into antiquity, to the
centuries before Christ, where its fossil remains are found in deposits
of the Bronze Age, 1800-1000 B.C. Once in Europe, the Pyrenean Mountain
Dog developed under climatic conditions similar to those of his
native habitat, and remained isolated in the high mountain areas
until Medieval times. Then we find him sculptured in bas-relief
over the North Gate of Carcassone, bearing the Royal Arms of France,
approximately 500 years before his adoption as the Court Dog of
the Seventeenth Century. In 1407, French writings tell of the usefulness
of these "Great Dogs of the Mountains" as guardians of the Chateau
of Lourdes, where they were considered regular assistant guards
to the men on their daily rounds and where provision was made for
them in the sentry boxes. In 1675, they were adopted as the Royal
Dog of France by the Dauphin, Louis XIV, and subsequently became
much sought after by nobility. Having a precocious sense of smell
and exceptionally keen eyesight, each dog was counted equal to two
men, be it as guard of the chateau, as invaluable companion of shepherds,
or as useful pack and message carrying animal across the mountains.
Much of their life was spent on the sleep slopes with their peasant
masters guarding the valuable flocks entrusted to their care.
Across the Ocean
In 1662, dogs were carried to Newfoundland by Basque fishermen as
companions and guardians of the new settlement. It was here they
were mated with the black curlycoated retriever, a favorite of the
English settlers. This cross resulted in the formation of the Landseer
(black and white) Newfoundland. In 1824, General Lafayette introduced
the first pair to America by bringing over two males to his friend,
J.S. Skinner, author of "The Dog and the Sportsman."
In 1850, Britain's Queen Victoria owned a Pyrenean Mountain Dog,
and in 1885-86, the first Pyrenean Mountain Dogs were registered
with the Kennel Club in London and shown at the Crystal Palace.
In 1870, Pyrenean blood was used with that of other large breeds
to help bring back the St. Bernard after that noble dog's numbers
had been so greatly depleted by avalanches and distemper at the
hospice in Switzerland. In 1907 the Pastoure Club at Lourdes, Hautes
Pyrenees, France, was organized to perpetuate interest in the breed.
The first standard for the breed was published at that time.
In Belgium and northern France, Pyrenean Mountain Dogs were used
until comparatively recent times for pulling small carts and delivering
milk. In World War I the dogs were used in liaison work in several
parts of the world. During the 1920s, the breed's numbers (and quality)
had been depleted in its native France, and a few dedicated breeders,
headed by Monsieur Senac Lagrange, worked to restore the breed to
its former glory and joined together to form the Reunion des Amateurs
de Chiens Pyreneans which still exists today. It was this club that
was responsible for the breed standard being published in 1927.
This standard has served as a basis for all current standards for
the breed. In America, a few dogs were brought here in the century
following General Lafayette's gift, but these dogs were pet and
work dogs, and relatively few Americans knew of their presence--or
of the breed.
First Kennel in the United States
In 1931, Mr. and Mrs. Francis V. Crane imported several specimens
to seriously launch the breed with the founding of the Basquaerie
Kennels at Needham, Massachusetts. This kennel became the largest
Pyrenean kennel ever to be established, and its breeding line and
stud dogs supplied the network of smaller breeders throughout the
United States and other countries. Their efforts provided the breed
with an atmosphere in which it could thrive and prosper. Without
Mr. and Mrs. Crane and their interest in the breed, it is doubtful
whether the great bloodlines could have survived. The American Kennel
Club accorded the Great Pyrenees official recognition in February,
1933, and beginning April, 1933, separate classification began for
the breed at licensed shows. Today, basically, the Great Pyrenees
is a companion and family dog. Most of our dogs never see a show
ring, but are trusted and beloved members in homes or function as
livestock guardian dogs on farms and ranches.
Excerpted from a publication of the
Great Pyrenees Club of America.