Alano
Español or Spanish Bulldog
this Spanish breed of dog that derives its name from the Alans
extinct Molosser the Alaunt. Received recognition from the Spanish
Ministry of Agriculture and the RSCE in 2004.
Description
The Alano Español has a slightly over strecthed and powerful
appearance that fits him especially for running long distances
at high speeds, herding cattle and holding large animals. This
dog has a well proportioned body structure, the rib cage is
arched, but not cylindrical, the chest stretches to the elbow
level. It also has strong and solid shoulders and withers. The
back legs are slightly less massive than the front legs which
are straight if you view them from the front or the side. The
paws are big compared to the size and weight of the dog. The
muscles in the hindquarters are toned and the back legs show
very well defined anglulation with strong feet at the base.
The tail is thickest at the base and gets thinner, eventually
to a point and is carried in an arc below the backline. The
stomach retracts inward in order to give him a more athletic
appearance than other heavier breeds. The neck is strong, powerful
and wide, showing two double chins that should never hang to
low. The Alano has extremely powerful jaws. The teeth are wide,
and spaced out from each other with a very strong and firm reverse-scissors
bite. When running at full speed, they are fast and flexible,
fully stretching all limbs in graceful bounds. They can clear
almost any obstacle without looking tired at all. Coat colors
include, Brindle, Fawns and 'Reds', Black and Brindle and Sable
Wolf.
History
The Spanish Alano which we know today is part of a legacy left
by the Alan tribe which entered the Iberian Peninsula with the
Vandal hordes during the early part of the 5th Century. The
Alani were of Scythian and perhaps Amazonian extraction and
were one of the predominant Sarmatian peoples which inhabited
the plains along the River Don to the North East of the Sea
of Azov in modern-day Russia. Formidable horsemen and skilled
bowmen, these warring nomads were also famous for their dogs.
The Alani were regarded a scourge of the Roman Empire and of
neighbouring Caucasian Kingdoms during the 1st and 2nd Centuries
AD. Their numbers and efficiency meant many of their forays
went unchallenged, more so since they were known to sack and
lay to waste great kingdoms in the face of resistance. Their
localised supremacy, though underpinned by a strong confederation
of Sarmatian tribes, was challenged in the latter part of the
4th Century by the prevailing Huns and so the Alani were ultimately
displaced around the turn of the 5th Century.
The westbound contingent formed an alliance with those Germanic
peoples forging further west through an invasion of Gaul, crossing
the Rhine around 407 AD. Though some of the Alani were to settle
in Southern ‘France’ and indeed, invade ‘England’,
the majority went on with the Vandals to Spain and eventually
North Africa where they settled a Kingdom centred upon Carthage
from as early as 409 AD. The formal dissolution of the Alani
as an independent tribe in the West came after a battle with
Visigoths in which their King, Attaces, died in 418 AD. The
Alan Crown was then unified with the Vandal Crown under, Gunderic
who died in 428 AD, his brother Geiseric succeeded him until
his own death in 477 AD as King of the Vandals and Alans.
The Spanish Alano is a derivative of those dogs maintained
by the Alani throughout that period. 'Alanos' subsequently found
great favour both as revered hunters and guardians. Their courage,
prowess, agility, strength and enviable stamina were broadly
celebrated. A detailed description of the 'Alano' exists within
Edmond de Langley's 15th Century text, "Mayster of Game"
(essentially a translation of a Gaston Phoebus' work), as well
as in Chaucer's "The Knight's Tale". A black-masked
'leonado' Alano is featured holding a wild boar by the ear in
a painting by A. Hondius of 1585.
There are also many accounts of the roles of such dogs during
the Spanish Conquests of the Americas, giving limelight to great
canine protagonists such as Becerrillo and Leoncillo. On a cultural
level, up until 1883 when their 'turn' was outlawed, Alanos
were used in the ‘Corridas’ of The Bull Ring. The
popularity of the dogs waned somewhat at the turn of the 20th
Century when fashion and favour befell 'foreign' breeds and
as pastoral methods and livestock management changed. The breed
was considered to be extinct soon after the last formal exhibition
of a pair of Alanos at Madrid's 'Parque del Buen Retiro' in
1963.
Recuperation
A band of veterinary medicine students and die-hard Alano enthusiasts
intent on a recuperation of this marvellous and mythical breed,
set to work in the late 1970s and early 80's. After scouring
Western and Northern Spain conducting house-to-house enquiries
with old photographs, their labours were rewarded with a situation
much better than originally anticipated. Few examples could
be traced in Estremadura or in Castille, but the situation in
the North of the country was much better; a thriving population
of dogs were located in Las Encartaciones, Cantabria. Those
dogs were still carrying out those tasks which they had been
exercising for almost two millennia, hunting wild boar and in
the management of the Monchina, a semi-wild breed of Iberian
Red cattle.