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The
Dachshund was bred as a hunting dog and is known to have existed as
early as
the 15th century, when illustrations reflected badgers being hunted with
dogs with elongated bodies, short legs and hound-type ears. The
dogs of medieval Europe were noted to have the tracking ability of
hounds and the proportions and temperament of terriers, much needed to
pursue their main quarry of badgers.
The name Dachshund (dachs, badger; hund, dog) at once reveals and
conceals the origin of the breed. In medieval European books on hunting,
dogs similar only in possessing the tracking ability of hounds and the
proportions and temperament of terriers, because they were used to
follow badger to earth, were called badger-dogs or dachs-hund. A
parallel is suggested by the current use of the name rabbit dog in
various parts of this country for dogs of various breeding, used to hunt
rabbits.
In Europe during both World Wars, it was recognized as
the national dog of the Teutonic Empire and, because of its German
ancestry, was mistreated and even stoned in the streets. Today, the
Dachshund enjoys great popularity and is known for its loyalty as a
family pet.
Illustrations dating from the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth
centuries show badgers hunted by dogs with elongated bodies, short legs,
and hound-type ears some with the bent front leg of a basset, some with
the head of terriers, and some with indications of smooth and long
coats. It is well to consider that these illustrations were made before
the days of photography that artist capable of depicting dogs with
anatomical fidelity have always been rare, and that woodcuts do not lend
themselves to fine reproductions of coat distinctions. At best, the
pictures and descriptive words can be interpreted with certainty only as
defining the functions of the dogs used on badger.
The preponderance of available evidence indicates that smooth and
longhaired coats were separated by selective breeding, long prior to
recorded registrations; whereas within such recorded history, the
wirehaired coats was produced for protection against briar and thorn by
crossing in harsh, wiry terriers coats and then breeding out
incompatible characteristics of conformation. Early in the seventeenth
century the name Dachshund became the designation of a breed type with
smooth and longhaired-coated varities, and since 1890 wirehairs have
been registered as the third variety.
The badger was a formidable twenty-five to forty-five-pounds adversary.
Strength and stamina as well as keenness and courage above and below
ground were required of badger dogs. Weight of thirty to thirty-five
pounds was not uncommon. Such Dachshunds in packs also were serviceable
against wild boar. With this start the breed was adapted to hunt other
game. A smaller sixteen to twenty-two pound Dachshund proved effective
against foxes and trail-wounded deer. Still smaller twelve pound
Dachshunds were used for stoat and hare. In the first quarter of the
twentieth century, for bolting cottontail rabbits, miniatures with adult
weights under five pounds and chest girths under twelve inches, but with
plenty of hunting spirit, were produced.
Before the German Dachshund or Deutscher Teckelklub was founded in 1888,
racial characteristics, or a standard for the breed had been set in
1879; and German registration of Dachshunds was included (not always
with complete generation data or systematic coat notations) in a general
all-breed stud book, the Deutscher Hunde-Stammbuch, whose first volume,
in 1840, recorded fifty-four Dachshunds and the names of several
subsequently prominent breeders, and whose publication continued until
officially terminated in 1935.
During the
development of the breed, two different sizes were emerging based on the
type of game being pursued: dogs weighing 30-35 pounds were being used
not only on badgers but wild boar, while smaller 16-22 pound dogs proved
effective against foxes and hare. The Dachshund Club of America
has promoted the breed since 1895.
Importation of
Dachshunds into this country antedates the earliest American
dog shows or studbooks, and eleven were included in AKC Stud
Book, Volume 11 in 1885. American dogs have found little employment in
organized hunting, as we lack in the badger and wild boar and do not
hunt deer with dogs, nor foxes with pick and shovel. The true character
and conformation of the breed have been encouraged by frequent
importation of German hunting strains; and to encourage hunting capacity
and exemplary conformation and temperament, field trials under AKC rules
were instituted in 1935. |