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History
The Spinone can lay claim to being one of the oldest of all gun dog breeds and
is one of two gun dog breeds native to Italy (the other being its cousin the
Bracco Italiano). Although the Spinone has been well established for over one
thousand years in its native Italy, it has been until very recently that the
breed has taken root outside of that country. There are only about three books
in print on the breed, all in Italian, therefore there is very little available
about this breed in countries other than Italy. So what exactly is a Spinone?
The Spinone is classified as a continental or versatile gun dog, putting it in
the same class as the German shorthair, German wirehair, Brittany, Weimaraner,
Vizsla, wirehaired pointing griffon and others. It is an all-purpose hunter
capable of hunting feather or fur. If the renown English pointer is a Porsche,
the Spinone is a Jeep. How far back in history does the Spinone go? References
to the Spinone's hunting style have been found from as long ago as the second
century A.D. Descriptions of a bristle haired Italian pointing dog have also
been found as far back as 500 B.C. The Italian breed standard states that
Xenophon, Faliscus, Nemesianus, Seneca, and Arrianus- all ancient
historians-mentioned the Spinone more than two thousand years ago. In addition
to the ancient historians mentioning the breed, the Spinone has been observed in
Italian art dating to the 15th century. Mantegna, Vecellio and Tiepolo all
depicted the Spinone in their works.
Depending on who you talk to and when, you might find the Spinone to have
originated in Italy, France, Spain, Russia, Greece or even Celtic Ireland. Some
will claim the Spinone descended from the Spanish Pointer, an extinct breed
today. Others claim it was the ancient Russian Setter which gave rise to the
modern Spinone. Cathy Flamholtz, in her book A Celebration of Rare Breeds,
Volume II, cites an intriguing theory from British writer Daved Hancock.
Hancock, writing about the ancestry of the Scottish Deerhound for Dog World,
observes, "The Celts were famous for their coarse haired running dogs, both
trackers and gazehounds. Celtic expansion along the main river routes in central
Europe led to settlements being established in 200 B.C. from northern Spain in
the west to the British Isles in the north to the Adriatic in the south. It is
significant that coarse haired hunting dogs are found wherever they settled: the
griffon hound breeds of France, the rough haired Styrian hounds of Austria, the
Wolfhound of Ireland, the Spinone of Italy, the Wirehaired Pointing Griffons of
Hungary, Germany and Czechoslovakia and many of the terrier breeds, perhaps
influencing the rough-haired Segugio of Italy and the Bosnian hound too."
Another theory, one popular with Spinone enthusiasts, is that Greek traders (and
others from the Adriatic coast) brought coarsehaired setters to Italy during the
height of the Roman empire. These setters became the ancestors to the modern
Spinone. Whatever the case may be regarding the origin of the Spinone, we do
know that the truth is almost always entwined with legend in many breed
histories, especially in breeds as old as the Spinone.
The modern Spinone is placed with the general group of continental griffons
(rough-coated European hunting dogs) and is believed to have assumed it's modern
form in the Piedmont region of Italy, with large numbers of white and orange
dogs found in the Alba region. The name Spinone wasn't used uniformly until the
early nineteenth century. In some areas the breed was known as the Spinoso which
eventually became Spinone. The name comes from an Italian thorn bush, the pino,
which was thick and seemingly impenetrable and a favorite hiding place for small
game. Only thick-skinned, coarse-haired dogs could locate game in this brush.
The Spinone was the breed most capable of doing so, thus the name. During the
Second World War Italian partisans used the breed to track German patrols by
scenting the soldiers' boot polish. Because the Germans preferred a certain type
of boot polish, the dogs could differentiate between German and Italian troops.
Their superb sense of smell, together with their ability to move relatively
quietly through thick cover while tracking, proved to be invaluable to the
Italian partisans. The dogs typically would work mountain sides and wooded areas
looking for soldiers who had dug in.
Today the Italians claim the Spinone is the ancestor of the Wirehaired Pointing
Griffon, the German Wirehair and the Pudelpointer; the French claim the Spinone
is descended from crosses of various French pointing breeds. Perhaps all sides
of the story are true. The Spinone, which is clearly the oldest of the modern
hunting griffons, might indeed be the progenitor of the others, however without
the others the Spinone might not have survived to see the second half of the
twentieth century. World War II devastated much of Europe, Italy included. By
this time the Spinone had begun to decline a little bit in Italy as hunters
began to experiment with the setters, pointers and spaniels of Britain. The
combination of fewer litters being produced and the devastation wrought by World
War II almost caused the extinction of the Spinone. In 1949 a Dr. Ceresoli
toured Italy to get an idea of what remained. What he found was many breeders
resorting to crossing the Spinone with other continental wire-haired breeds such
as the Boulet, Wirehaired Pointing Griffon and German Wirehair. Today the
Spinone is used primarily as a hunting dog in Italy and while no one really
knows the truth of it's origin it is true that the Spinone and other European
Griffons and wirehaired dogs have much in common with regards to hunting style
and physical structure. |

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