THE ANCIENT GREEK COMPANION DOGS ARE STILL
AT HOME TODAY...
Maria Winsor-Ginala
I first became involved with these small native dogs during the 80's, when we
adopted a female Alopecis as a family pet. She was already 5 years old,
white with a red patch over one eye and so intelligent, that when a friend of
mine, a professional dog-trainer, was looking for a canine movie-star, he
decided to try her for the part and she learned all the necessary tricks in just
20 days! Already she had never been obedience trained before, the little
dog was retrieving objects from water, digging & speaking on command and in
general she behaved like a true professional actor...
In Greece we all have childhood memories of these small dogs everywhere, in
towns , villages and the big cities. They have always been around, from
time immemorial, serving us as house pets, farm dogs, watch dogs, ratters,
useful workers in many tasks, but people were not aware of their identity as a
breed or their ancestry.
Greece began to re-discover the country's ancient canine breeds relatively late,
in the 50s and 60s.Importance had primarily been placed on the large sheepdogs
and the hunting dogs; so these small, not important-looking companions were left
aside for decades.
A small group of patriotic cynophiles formed in the '80s and started researching
the "Small Greek House Dogs", as we called them in general. They
are indeed house dogs: city house, farm house, out house, they adopt the
lifestyle and requirements of the master or patrol the village streets being
useful to all, belonging to no one in particular but eager to serve , guard,
protect livestock, escort children to school, herd (even if the flock is just a
few chickens or geese!), kill mice and rats or find game for the stewpot!
Blessed little dogs, they are excellent with children & other pets, easily
trained and obedient, highly intelligent and adaptable. They attach
themselves to cattle, sheep or goat herds, run alongside the horse or donkey,
sleep in the henhouse to watch out for foxes - and nobody ever trained them for
the job! Agile, swift, hardy and athletic, they require very little
grooming, can survive on scraps from the table and stay healthy with little
expense. If cared for, they live to a great old age.
In size they vary slightly, but their type has been documented since ancient
time. The first depiction I have seen is an engraving on a clay vase from
Thessaly (circa 3000 BC, Athens Museum). They have been reported by
various authors, including Aristotelis ,and in the classic era we have several
artifacts showing the Greeks with their small canine friends: one marble statue
in particular is very beautiful and accurate in detail, showing a young boy with
his dog (Museum of Artemis Temple, Vravron, Attica). The dog is identical
to the Alopecis of today.
These dogs are found in large numbers all over Greece, from Epirus and Macedonia
, Thrace and Attica to Peloponnesus and the islands. The variance in size is not
great: from 20cm (to the withers) for females, to 40 cm at the most for males
and from 4 kg. to 10-12 kg. for heavy-boned specimens. These differences
largely follow type, because the Small House Dogs of Greece fall into two main
categories ,by coat and ear-carriage. The short-haired ones tend to be
smaller, more slender and with erect ears. The long-haired variety is
somewhat bigger and their ears are often drop or semi-folded. (There are
also wire-haired individuals, but rare). We call the short-haired variety
"Alopecis" and the long-haired "Melitaia
Kynidia" (meaning: small dogs from Miletos).
We believe that the latter is what we have left today ,in it's original form, of
the genetic material which formed the basis for the development of the modern
Maltese, Bichon and similar types of the Meditterranean. (See also
references to "Cyprus Poodles" or Cyprus "spaniels").
The Maltese originated not on the island of this name, but in Asia Minor, the
ancient Greek area of Ionia and it's capital city Miletos, which colonised
various areas of the Meditteranean (including Malta itself) during the time of
Graecia Magna. From the Ionian cities these little companion dogs were
transferred to Athens and during it's Golden Age they became luxury pet-dogs and
lap-dogs of the aristocracy, escorting the ladies to the Agora with precious
collars on their necks, even with nails polished to match the color of the
mistress' dress!
Many ancient Greek breeds were scattered all over Europe, especially the hunting
ones. The Romans spread them everywhere. Since Iberia was well known to
the Greek sea-travellers and merchants, who were settling in colonies and
transporting goods to and from every port in the Mediterranean from southern
France to North Africa , calling the rocks of Gibraltar "Pillars of
Hercules", it is perhaps valid to suggest that the origins of the small
Podengo and the Alopekis maybe common.
The ancient hunting dogs of Greece are well-known and it is interesting to note
that the Cretan Hound (a hare-hunting dog that exists on the island of Crete
since neo-litchi times) ,by far the most exquisite, rare and original of the
Greek breeds, a true living monument, is a primitive hound much like the large
or medium Podengo. The Cretan hound (somewhat in the middle between a
greyhound-type sight hound and a basenji-pariah type) shares the same prick or
semi-erect ears of the Alopekis and the ring / curved tail. It is
possible that they all stem from the same old genetic background, like branches
of the same trunk...