VOLPINO
ITALIANO USA
"Little Fox"
What is the
Volpino Italiano?
This dog is a type of Spitz in its morphology and character, maximum height
30 cm (11 to 12 inches), unicolor white or red. Its coat has long, straight,
glassy, raised hair which wraps around the dog like a muff. It broke away
from the common stock of the other European Spitz dogs and has spread
throughout Italy since ancient times. It was taken into lordly houses,
The Volpino was loved by palace lords as well as farms and plebeian quarters,
especially in Tuscany and Lazio. For unexplainable reasons, the numbers
of this population declined continuously until it came near extinction.
In 1965 the last five subjects were registered in the Breed Book. Then
it disappeared until 1984 when the ENCI launched a recovery project for
Italian breeds. Then, precisely those dogs that had survived on rural
farms, being used to rouse the more powerful watchdogs, were the new progenitors
of the modern day selective lines.
Today the situation
is continuously improving, even though the red variety seems be very rare.
It has a reactive temperament, morbidly attached to the family, wary of
strangers, it has a strong watchdog instinct. Robust and lively, this
dog is long-lived.
The exact origin of the Volpino Italiano is not known, although this breed
resembles the Italian Pomeranian which it is impossible for this breed
to have descended from the Pomeranian because it is a much older breed.
This breed in Italy was the choice pet of the women of Italy. The Volpino
Italiano was adorned with bracelets and collars, made of ivory as a symbol
of the owner’s love.
The Volpino Italiano was the most popular breed for Italian royalty centuries.
Specimens from this group have been found preserved in European peat bogs
which anthropologists trace to 4000 BC. The remains—with curly tails,
foxy heads and small erect ears—have been found, dating back over
5,000 years. Despite the Volpino Italiano’s popularity in the past,
today the breed is not known outside of Italy and even there it remains
in small numbers. Engravings of similar dogs were found in Greece, and
these have been determined to date about 400 BC.
BRIEF HISTORICAL SUMMARY - He is one of the descendants
of the European Spitz which already existed in the central region of our
continent since the bronze age and of which skeleton fossils have been
discovered around the foundation piles of the lake dwellings. So the Volpino
goes back to the same ancestors as the German Spitz of which he is not
a descendant, but a relative. He has been bred in Italy since immemorial
times and has been idolized in the palaces of the noblemen as well as
in the hovels of the common people, where he was especially appreciated
because of his instinct of guarding and vigilance. He was the dog of Michelangelo,
and, in the 18th century, the tireless companion of the carters of Tuscany
and Latium, always ready to announce noisily any strange persons met on
the roads. The Italian word for wolf is lupo, and the Keeshond is called
both Lupino and Volpino in Italian, so Volpino may be an old term for
wolfdog or wolf spitz, (small fox).
GENERAL APPEARANCE - Small size Spitz, very compact,
harmonious, with a long stand-off coat.
IMPORTANT PROPORTIONS - Built into a square, length of head reaches
nearly the 4/10th of that of the body.
BEHAVIOUR AND TEMPERAMENT - Very attached to his environment
and his family,
of a very distinct temperament, lively, happy and playful.
HEAD - Pyramid shape, length reaching almost 1/4 the
height at the withers.
SKULL REGION - Longer than the muzzle (6,5:5), its biogenetic
width is more than half the length of the head (7,3:11,5); is slightly
ovoid (egg-shaped) as much in longitudinal as transversal direction; medio-frontal
furrow very slightly marked; occipital protuberance slightly marked. The
superior axes of the skull and muzzle are slightly convergent. The bony
protuberance of the forehead, well developed, come down almost perpendicular
onto the onset of the muzzle.
Stop - Rather accentuated.
FACIAL REGION - Nose - Wet, cool, with well opened nostrils.
Set in the same line as the top line of the foreface and does not protrude
beyond the front line of the lips. Its color is always black, as well
in subjects with white coats as in those with red coats. Muzzle - Of inferior
length to that of the skull with lateral surfaces convergent, is pointed.
The foreface is straight. The lower edge of the muzzle is determined by
the lower jaw. Lips - From the front, the upper lips, by their lower edge,
draw a straight line. The mucous of the labial commissar is not visible,
so the lips are very short. The edges of the lips are black. Jaws - Apparently
not very strong, normally developed and meeting perfectly level on front.
The branches of the lower jaw are straight. Teeth - White, regular in
alignment, complete and perfectly developed. Scissor bite, pincer bite
tolerated. Eyes - Well opened and of normal size, denoting vigilance and
vivaciousness. Roundish eye aperture, set in plans forming a very open
angle towards the rear; eyelids fitting perfectly the shape of the eyeball.
Color of the iris is dark ochre, the rims of the lids are black. Ears
- Short, triangular shape, pricked, with a rigid cartilage and the inner
surface of the lobe showing forward. High set, close together. The length
of the ears reaches almost half the length of the head.
NECK - Its length is almost equal to that of the head.
Always carried upright. Skin closely fitting.
BODY - Square built, its length measured from the point
of the shoulder to that of the buttock is equal to the height at the withers.
Top line - Dorsal line straight. Over the loins slightly convex. Withers
- Slightly raised from dorsal line. Chest - Descending to level of elbows;
ribs well sprung. Sternal region is long. Rump - Extends the line of the
loin. Obliqueness from the hip to base of the tail is of 10ƒ below
the horizontal. Underline - From sternum to belly rising only slightly.
The hollow of the flanks is slightly accentuated. Tail - Set in the prolongation
of the rump, carried permanently curled over the back. Its length is a
little less than the height at the withers.
QUARTERS
*FOREQUARTERS - Considered on the whole parallel to each other
and, in relation to the median plane of the body, perfectly straight.
Shoulders - Their length is equal to 1/4 of the height
at the withers and their obliqueness below the horizontal is of 60ƒ.
Upper arm - Longer than the shoulder and its obliqueness below the horizontal
is of 60ƒ. Is approximately parallel to the median plane of the body.
Forearm - Continuing the vertical line, finely boned. Its length, from
ground to elbow, is slightly more than half the height at the withers.
Elbows - Parallel to the median plane of the body. Carpus and metacarpus
- Seen from the front, they continue the vertical line of the forearm.
Seen in profile, the pasterns are sloping. Forefoot - Oval shaped with
closely-knit toes. The pads and the nails are black.
*HINDQUARTERS - Seen on the whole and from behind, they
must follow a perfectly vertical line from the point of the buttock to
the ground. They are parallel to each other. Thigh - Its length
is equal to 1/3 of the height at withers. Perfectly parallel to the median
plane of the body. Leg - Its length is a little less than that of the
thigh. Of a light bone structure and its obliqueness below the horizontal
is of 55ƒ to 60ƒ. Hock join - Distance between the point of
the hock and the ground is slightly more than 1/4 of the height at the
withers. Metatarsal - Vertical and perfectly straight seen as much in
profile as from behind. Hind foot - Oval like the forefoot with all the
same characteristics as this latter.
GAIT AND MOVEMENT - Must not be jumpy either at the trot
or gallop. At all gaits, the strides are free.
SKIN - Well applied and taut, without looseness in any
region.
COAT - Nature of the hair - Hair bushy, very long and
exceptionally standing-off. Of harsh texture with straight stiff hairs;
must never be falling; must be upstanding even when there is not a lot
of coat. The body gives the impression of being wrapped up in a muffle,
particularly on the neck where the coat forms an abundant collar. The
skull is covered with semi-long hairs which hide the base of the ears.
Hairs are short on the muzzle. On the ears, the hair is very fine and
smooth. The tail is covered with very long hair. On the edges of the hindquarters,
the coat forms fringes. Color of coat - a) all-white b) all-red c) champagne,
color accepted but not desirable. Pale orange shades on the ears are tolerated,
but in any case constitute an imperfection.
SIZE AND WEIGHT - Size at the withers - 11 to 12"
for males, 9 to 10" for females.
Females 9 to 10 lbs. Males 10 to 12 lbs.
FAULTS - Any departure from the foregoing points constitutes
a fault which when judging must be penalized according to its seriousness
and extension.
*ELIMINATING FAULTS - Color of nose other than black;
wall eye; convex top line of the muzzle; tail tucked in between hind legs;
size over, by 3 cm, the limits indicated by the standard, floppy ears.
COLORS
- White, Fawn or Honey, Black, Red, Champagne
OTHER NAMES
- Cane de Quirinale
*DISQUALIFYING FAULTS - Overshot mouth; divergence of
cranial-facial axes; total
de-pigmentation of nose or eyelid rims; ears completely drooping; lack
of tail whether congenital
or acquired; all colors other than white, not desirable red on champagne;
red markings on white background, white or black markings on red background.
NOTE - males should have two apparently normal testicles
fully descended into the scrotum.
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