| Learn a bit about the Briard!
Early tapestries of the eighth century depict these
large shaggy dogs with the Emperor Charlemagne and in
the eighteenth century Napoleon was also reputed to have
Briards. Unfortunately, shepherds were not renowned for
their writing skills and little is available during this
time on the history of the Briard. In fact, it is from
the United States of America that some of the early
documentation comes. In 1789 the Frenchman, La Fayette,
introduced Briards to Thomas Jefferson who became one of
the first breeders in the USA. Jefferson was a man with
a keen appreciation for the usefulness of dogs and of
the Briard he wrote 'they are the finest house and farm
dogs I have ever seen'.
Back in France in 1897 the first official description or
"standard" governing the appearance of the Briard was
drawn up by Le Club Francaise du Chien de Berger. The
work of the herding dogs is so specialised that the work
demands specific qualities of the body and spirit and
especially attitude. These characteristics were defined
in this early French Standard and revisions in 1908,
1924, 1925 have led to the current standard in France.
The Briard has been the official dog of the French Army
and is somewhat rare today because so many were lost in
World War 1. He was used to carry supplies to the front
lines and served as a sentry dog. Due to his keen
hearing, reputed to be the most acute of any breed, he
was used by the medical corps to search for wounded
soldiers. The reports stress the amazing ability of the
Briard to lead the corpsmen to those men which still had
a spark of life in their bodies. It was said that any
man a Briard passed by was beyond assistance.
The Briard is not a breed created by modern zoology but
rather is the natural descendant of man's first helper,
the dog of pre-history. He has evolved through time by
natural selection for the qualities needed in his work.
Today this dog of the plains is more elegant than he
used to be, devoted breeders have kept him not too
shaggy or too big and have retained all of his original
characteristics, especially his alertness and his
tractable temperament. |