Juliette Cunliffe

Pomeranian


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and wolves are members of the genus Canis. Wolves are known scientifically as Canis lupus while dogs are known as Canis domesticus. Dogs and wolves are known to interbreed. The term canine derives from the Latin-derived word Canis. The term dog has no scientific basis but has been used for thousands of years. The origin of the word dog has never been authoritatively ascertained.

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      The colors of the Pomeranian are wide-ranging and it seems that, in the past, several of the European countries specialized in different colors. The white Pomeranian was a native of France, while the red is believed to have come from Italy. Although black and white Pomeranians were to be found in the 19th century, these were seemingly rarely good specimens of the breed, creams and reds being the more popular colors then. In the 1880s, it was said that the breed in Britain was practically confined to white Pomeranians, their weight in the region of 9 kg (20 lb). However, from the author Dalziel, we learn that there was a strain of rich fawns kept in the neighborhood of Birmingham about 1860.

       MEET THE SPITZEN

      The Pomeranian derives from the family of dogs we know today as the German Spitzen, of which five breeds are recognized by Europe’s Fédération Cynologique Internationale (FCI). The largest of these is the German Wolfspitz, standing 18 in and possessing the characteristic spitz coat in a wolf gray coloration. The Deutscher Grossspitz, sometimes called the Giant or Great Spitz, stands at least 16 in and can be colored in any solid color. The Deutscher Mittelspitz (Standard), standing about 14 in; Kleinspitz (Small or Miniature), standing about 11 in; and Zwergspitz (Toy), standing about 8 in, complete the family. The Kleinspitz has retained the appellation Victorian Pomeranian, and the Zwergspitz is identical to the Pomeranian in size.

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      In 1911, the first orange

      Pomeranian in Britain was Offley Henry Drew who, mated to Eng. Ch. Mars, set the foundation for the orange color that was to become so popular. Not until the 1930s did a wide range of uniform colors become available in Britain, with orange becoming an especially fashionable color during the 20th century. Whites are now only seen occasionally, but blacks seem to have had something of a revival in the last twenty years.

      Ancestors of today’s Pomeranian were considerably larger than this diminutive breed that now weighs only 4–5.5 lb. Some of these early dogs weighed as much as 40–50 lb, but size has been carefully bred down during the last 200 years or so. Queen Victoria’s dogs weighed on average around 2.7 lb.

      Queen Charlotte, who was the German wife of King George III, brought a pair of Pomeranians to Britain in 1767. Their names were Phoebe (also spelt Phebe) and Mercury. They lived in Kew in

      West London, as did the artist Sir Thomas Gainsborough, thus many paintings of these royal dogs are to be found.

      In 1870, the English Kennel Club officially recognized the Pomeranian as the “Spitzdog.” The breed was brought to the attention of Britain’s public when Queen Victoria became interested in the Pomeranian. Despite being Queen Charlotte’s granddaughter, she appears to have first discovered the breed in Italy when she traveled there in 1888. She obtained several such dogs in Florence, including Marco, with whom she achieved notable success at Crufts and elsewhere. Incidentally, Marco weighed 12 lb. A great lover of many different kinds of dogs, Queen Victoria owned a kennel of Pomeranians, bred under the prefix Windsor. Charles Henry Lane was invited to inspect Her Majesty’s kennels and, as one might expect, he spoke highly of their circumstances, every care and consideration being shown for the dogs’ happiness. He described the dogs primarily as what he termed “offcolors,” although some were exceedingly pretty. Although some were larger, most were what he called “small-medium.”

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       THE POMERANIAN IN ART

      The British Museum houses an ancient Greek bronze jar from the second century B.C. On it is engraved a group of winged horses and at their feet is a small dog of Pomeranian type. On a famous street in Athens was a representation of a small spitz dog leaping up to the daughter of the family as she was taking her leave. The date of this is 56 B.C.

      The famous artist Sir Thomas Gainsborough is one of several who often portrayed Pomeranians in his paintings. In London’s Wallace Collection, there is a particularly famous painting of the actress Mrs. Robinson, who has a large white Pomeranian sitting by her side.

      Some of these were exhibited at shows and there is rather an amusing of story of the time when Her Majesty wished to exhibit three Pomeranians of a color not usually shown in England. A special class was provided for her exhibits and two of them were lucky enough to be awarded joint first prize! So much did Queen Victoria love the breed that while she was dying, her Pomeranian, Turi, was always on her bed. Aided in part by Queen Victoria’s prominence, Britain’s interest in the breed grew.

      From Vero Shaw’s famous volume The Book of the Dog, this drawing was entitled “A Black Pomeranian.”

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      Mr. Gladstone was another prominent person who was much taken by the breed and is said to have owned a black Pomeranian. As the 20th century turned, there was a saying, “There’s money in Poms,” for they were selling for up to £250. Ounce for pound, Pomeranians were probably the most expensive breed of dog one could purchase. This said, supply soon overtook demand and the breed dropped rapidly in value. Pomeranians were bred from at a rapid rate, such as would certainly not be permitted by the English Kennel Club today.

      A newspaper report gave an example of one bitch that whelped for the third time in May of 1903, when she was still under two years old. In her three litters, she had produced 24 puppies, all within the space of 54 weeks. Poor lady—it doesn’t bear thinking about!

      A great deal of inbreeding was going on at that time, and some signs of degeneration were evident, such as a tendency toward apple heads in smaller sized specimens. These smaller Poms possessed heads quite out of keeping with the fox-headed requirement of the breed.

      A 1904 account states, “There is no species of ladies’ pet-dog that has achieved such universal popularity in so short a time as the Pomeranian.” Early in the century, several prominent people in dogs expressed their views on the breed. For Miss Hamilton, who regularly took top honors in the breed, her ideal Pomeranian was “a bright little creature, sparkling all over with life and fun, devoted to his master or mistress, and sharing all their joys and sorrows as much as lies in a doggy’s power.” Miss Hamilton said she had come across many that had been almost human in their keenness of perception and expressed the utmost sympathy during times when their owners were distressed. She thought them as clever at tricks as Poodles but, though excitable by nature, they never allowed their anger to get the better of their discretion.

       SHARING A CLASS IN THE UK

      At Maidstone Show in 1882, Pomeranians and Maltese shared a class together. Then, at York and also at Henley-on-Thames the following year, Pomeranians and Poodles were exhibited alongside each other, a rather absurd arrangement! But to cap it all, at Hull in 1864, Pugs, King Charles or Blenheims and Pomeranians shared their class.

      The Pomeranian Club drew up the first English breed standard in 1891, the year in which the club was founded. However, the larger specimens of the breed rather quickly