The Bordeaux–Toulouse is a 200 kilometer long high-
The first French dog show took place in 1863, and while Dogues de Bordeaux were entered, but it wasn’t until 1896 that the first breed standard was published by Pierre Meguin, a French veterinarian, in a joint effort with a Mr. Brooke, Dr. Wiart, and a group of French breed authorities. The standard appeared in Meguin’s magazine, “‘E’eveur” (the Breeder) and was based on the best best breed traits of exhibited dogs the men had seen in the preceding 20 years. A year later, the standard appeared in Henry de Bylants, “The Breeds of Dogs,” a year later.
As an aside, the man who wrote the second standard in 1910, Professor J. Kunstler, never considered the Toulouse type to be a Dogue at all, but rather a Bouledogue (Bulldog). He published his standard under the title, “Etude Critique du Dogue de Bordeaux,” a document regarded as such a thorough study of the breed that it served as a basis for the third and fourth version of the Dogue de Bordeaux standard.
That third version was written by a breed expert, Dr. Raymond Triquet, and a veterinarian, Dr. Maurice Luquet, in 1971, and the fourth standard created in 1993 was simply an updated version that was reworded by Dr. Triquet and Philippe Serouil, President of the French Dogue de Bordeaux Club, and only so that the standard would be accepted by the F.C.I.
The United Kennel Club recognized the Dogue de Bordeaux in 2003, and Triquet’s breed standard was the basis for the AKC standard written in 2005, Interestingly, AKC and UKC standards differ slightly in terms of size. The AKC standard calls for males to stand between 23½ and 27 inches tall at the shoulder, and bitches to stand between 23 and 26 inches, but the UKC standard calls for the breed to top out at a slightly shorter height, males between 23½ and 26½ inches tall at the shoulder, and females between 22½ and 25½ inches.
Image: Dogue de Bordeaux by Amit Eshel of Siberian Art
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