Bandog. What Is It?

First, a poem:

“How We Took The Great Galleon” by Cicely Fox Smith

Ah, long and long we waited and fretted to be free,
We lay and chaffed in vain, my boys, like bandogs on the chain,
Till there came a mighty galleon, high tow’ring o’er the sea,
And at her masthead flaunted the golden flag of Spain.

Inasmuch as we feel quite civilized for having read a poem that didn’t start with,”There once was a girl from Nantucket,” there is a word in this stanza that is our focus, and we’re betting you already know that the word is “bandogs.”

That word (also seen as “Bandogge”) comes up a lot in the study of many breeds that fall under the umbrella of molloser and bully breeds, but before we tell you what a bandog is, it helps to know where it came from, when, and why.

Long before Smith wrote her poem in the early 20th century, Sir Walter Scott used the word in The Abbot written in the 19th century. Before him, writers too many to mention by name had also referred to the “bandog,” including Dr. Caius, author of the first book published in England devoted entirely to dogs.
Even Caius, however, wasn’t the first. “Bandog”  originated sometime between 1250-1300 in Middle England and was used to describe a dog that was tied up during the daytime and released at night to guard against intruders.  By the time Caius wrote in Of Englishe Dogges that a bandog was a “vast, stubborn, eager dog of heavy body,” it was already understood that a bandog was large and usually vicious. Context helped us learn that a bandog was most often a Mastiff.

But why was the dog called a “banddog?”A little research reveals that the reason a bandog was called a bandog was because it was attached to a leam.
Now that that’s settled, we can all go home.

Kidding. These days, few people know what a “leam” is, but when you learn that a leam was a band of leather used to lead a dog around (in other words, a leash!), Shakespeare’s lines from Act I, Scene IV of King Henry VI make more sense:

“The time when Screech-owls cry,
and Bandogges howle,
And spirits walke, and Ghosts breake up their graces.”

Just as societies needed to differentiate between two people who shared the same first name (leading to surnames), a dog’s function, or in this case, how it was handled, became its name. A big mean dog lead by a band of leather after being uncoupled from a chain became a “band dog” because of that band, or leash. The name “Bandog” was not a breed, then, it was a description of a duty or purpose.  If there is any doubt about such a dog’s ferocity, one need only read the statement written by William Harrison when he described England in 1586:  “Bandogge which is a huge dog, stubborn, uglier, eager, burthenouse of bodie, terrible and fearful to behold and often more fierce and fell than any Archadian or Corsican cur.”

Early on, bandogs were typically eastern shepherds and mastiffs crossed with Bullenbeissers, hounds, and local bloodlines thrown in, and while appearance was the last thing anyone cared about, over time, specific types were established regionally. By the time the Norman King, Knud the Great, was in power (995 -1035), the Mastiff was cited under forest law, and Dr. Caius “sealed the deal,” as it were, by presenting the Bandogge and Mastiff as one in his book, Of English Dogges: “...among others characteristics, the “Mastiff or Bandogge is serviceable against the fox and the badger, to drive wild and tame swine out of meadows, and pastures, to bite and take the bull by the ears, when occasion so required.” 

We don’t hear the word, “bandog” used much in modern usage, though sometimes it’s used in the very immoral, very illegal, and very cruel fighting world. Neither is it altogether extinct. There is the Australian Bandog, the Bandogge Mastiff, and the American Bandogge Mastiff, all of which we’re still investigating. In the 60’s, Dr. John B. Swinford, a veterinarian from Long Island, sought to create a “super mastiff” having all the functionality and protectiveness of a Molossus ancestry, while keeping obedience and fidelity as essential characteristics. Mostly, he wanted to create the Swinford Bandog, a recreation of the original working mastiff of the Middle Ages. Readers interested in learning more about Swinford can do no better than to refer to Denise Flaim’s excellent article here.
Some might be wondering where the word “alaunt,” fits in since historically, some sources imply that alaunts and mastiffs are the same thing, including our old friend, Dr. Caius,. In the 14th century, Gaston Phoebus made a distinction between the two words, but this is topic for another time. We’ll end here with the compromise that while initially, bandogs were so named for the type of work they did, there are enough sources that specify the Mastiff as one of those dogs.
Image: Turn of the Century Cast Bronze Mastiff Statue attributed to Pierre-Jules Mene 

One thought on “Bandog. What Is It?”

  1. “Ban dog” was the common term for drovers, i.e. breeds which served to move meat cattle (steers) along with the armies of Europe. Usually mastiff in type, Rottweilers being the most notable and commonly referred to as the butcher’s dog driving the stock to market and the purse of money attached to its collar as protection measure (National Geographic Book of Dogs). However, historical breeds such as the Smooth Collie and Giant Schnauzer also served this purpose, being large enough and DARK in colouration (Coalies) to initiate the prey flight instinct yet calm enough not to stampede the steers. This is the context in which I have most often encountered this term in 6+ decades of reading the fascinating histories of purebred dogs.

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