Chinese Crested: A Comprehensive Guide to Owning and Caring for Your Dog
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Juliette Cunliffe
Juliette Cunliffe has owned sight hounds for 30 years. She judges competitions around the world and is a Kennel Club Accredited Trainer of Judges. Shw is the author of many successful dog books and lives in Shropshire, England.
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Chinese Crested - Juliette Cunliffe
Speculation, fiction and novelty abound in the history of the Chinese Crested and the other hairless breeds.
ORIGIN OF THE BREED
If there were a definite answer to where the Chinese Crested actually originated, undoubtedly many authors would be very happy. However, the Chinese Crested’s history is a matter that has been the subject of speculation and debate, with almost more fiction than fact in its background.
The breed is certainly a distinctive one, but there are other hairless breeds, and the histories of various similar breeds may have been confused. The Chinese Crested, as we know it today, appeared in China’s written history as long ago as the 13th century. Indeed, it is probable that the breed existed in that country long before then. Chinese seafarers and traders visited many places on their travels, and hairless dogs later appeared in many of their ports of call. Hairless dogs were certainly also mentioned in the chronicles of Christopher Columbus and the later Conquistadors.
It is possible that such dogs were kept on ships in order to control vermin, though, unhappily, they might also have been a source of food. Hairless dogs were undoubtedly found in both Asia and Africa during the 18th and 19th centuries. However, a similar dog was also found in Mexico and in Central and South America in the 16th century. This dog was known as the Xoloitzcuintli; it is still known by that name or, alternatively, as the Mexican Hairless, and is registered as a different breed from the Chinese Crested. While there are obvious similarities between the two breeds, there are indeed differences. Even within the breed, Xoloitzcuintli vary tremendously in size.
An important question arises, though, about whether the Chinese obtained their dogs from the Central and South American regions, or whether seafarers took along their own Chinese dogs to those lands, using them there for trade and barter. Perhaps one day the facts will be discovered but, to date, there is no conclusive evidence one way or the other.
A modern Xoloitzcuintli, also known as the Mexican Hairless.
THE CHINESE CRESTED IN ART
There are several examples of the Chinese Crested’s appearance in works of art. Going back to the 15th century, a painting by Gerrard Davies titled Christ Nailed to the Cross includes a hairless dog very similar to the Chinese Crested breed we know today.
Another painting of note is one painted by Jacques Laurent Agasse (1767–1849). This depicts a male Crested, clearly of the deer type. As with some of the engravings found in 19th-century canine works, the dog shown in the painting would not find himself out of place in today’s show ring.
Illustration of a Chinese Crested in the early 19th century. The Crested was cited as one of the most unusual in appearance
among the hairless breeds found in various parts of the world at that time.
PURE-BRED PURPOSE
Surely domestic dogs are the most versatile animal in the kingdom. From the tiny 1-pound lap dog to the 200- pound guard dog, dogs have adapted to every need and whim of their human masters. Humans have selectively bred dogs to alter physical attributes like size, color, leg length, mass and skull diameter in order to suit our own needs and fancies. Dogs serve humans not only as companions and guardians but also as hunters, exterminators, shepherds, rescuers, messengers, warriors, babysitters and more!
THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
The first Chinese Cresteds in Britain, brought to that country in the 1860s, were placed in zoological collections, and no serious attempt was made to breed from them; instead, they were treated as fascinating novelties. In the book Dogs of the British Isles, published in 1867, we read that the variety of Chinese dog furnished with a crest and tufted tail was by no means common. The dog’s skin was described as spotted, and it was estimated that there were between 12 and 18 hairs on the surface of the body, thus making the tufts on the two extremities even more remarkable. It is interesting that 19th-century illustrations show the Chinese Crested with no tufts of longer hair on the feet. Indeed, most pictures of such dogs in the 1800s showed no hair in this area.
An engraving of a Chinese Crested Dog in the 19th century.
The bitch portrayed in Dogs of the British Isles was two years old in 1866 and was the only surviving puppy from a litter of six. When the book was written, she had never been bred from, due to the difficulty in finding a suitable male of the same strain.
Because of its very affectionate disposition, it was believed that, if the breed could be developed, it would please many as something of a novelty pet.
Several early canine writers maintained that the Chinese Crested Dog was the same dog as the African Sand Dog and the hairless dogs of both Mexico and Japan. However, they did comment that the Chinese Crested had to have a crest on the top of the head and on the tail, something not common to all such breeds. The African Sand Dog also had a crest but, at least in those exhibited, it was shorter and much harsher than those of the Chinese Crested.
HAIRLESS BREEDS
There are many other hairless breeds of dog besides the Chinese Crested. Over the span of time these have included the Abyssinian or African Sand Dog, African Elephant Dog, Buenos Aires Hairless, Guatemalan Hairless, Inca Orchid, Nubian Dog, Peruvian Hairless, Small African Greyhound, Turkish Hairless, Xoloitzcuintli or Mexican Hairless and Zulu Sand Dog.
Engraving titled Hairless Dog
from A Book of Beasts and Birds, published in 1893.
THE EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY
As the 20th century turned, we find the Chinese Crested described as an outlandish
breed of rather a rare sort.
Charles Henry Lane, a prominent show judge of the day, wrote that, although he had judged Foreign Dog classes at all of the leading shows, there had been very few specimens of this scarce breed exhibited under him.
The best Chinese Crested that Lane had ever seen was called Chinese Emperor, owned by Mr. W. K. Taunton. He commented that the tuft of stiffish hair, either on the forehead or above it, was usually nearly white or a whitey brown
in color, as was the tuft on the top end of the tail. In shape and style of body, the breed resembled a coarse, strong Italian Greyhound, but the Chinese Crested nearly always gave one the impression of its being adversely affected by the cold! In Lane’s view, this was not a breed suitable for the climate of Britain, unless in what he termed favourable circumstances,
and he had never heard of their being used for anything other than companions and pets.
In 1903 W. D. Drury, writing in the book British Dogs, referred to Chinese Cresteds as terriers. He commented on the great variance in size within the breed, from 10 pounds up to as much as 25 pounds, saying that in recent years he had found them of varying quality. He even advised prospective purchasers to make certain that they were buying a genuine hairless dog, not a terrier without hair. In his opinion, any appearance of tan on the legs and feet suggested a cross of Black-and-Tan Terrier blood.
CANIS LUPUS
Grandma, what big teeth you have!
The gray wolf, a familiar figure in fairy tales and legends, has had its reputation tarnished and its population pummeled over the centuries. Yet it is the descendants of this much-feared creature to which we open our homes and hearts. Our beloved dog, Canis domesticus, derives directly from the gray wolf, a highly social canine that lives in elaborately structured packs. In the wild, the gray wolf can range from 60 to 175 pounds, standing between 25 and 40 inches in height.
The Chinese Crested’s skin was expected to be bluish in color, resembling the color of an elephant’s hide. Although the skin was frequently mottled, this apparently was not considered correct at that time.
H. C. Brooke’s Mexican Hairless, Paderewski Junior, circa 1907. This dog was famous during his time for his intelligence and hunting ability.
Perhaps the temptation of the 19th- and early 20th-century canine writers to link the hairless breeds with terriers had something to do with the dogs’ gameness. In 1904, Herbert Compton treats readers of his book The Twentieth Century Dog to what he calls a not altogether happy-looking little animal
by the name of Paderewski Junior, a Mexican Hairless. He and his father, Hairy King (who was, incidentally, captioned Chinese Crested Dog
in the 1903 British Dogs), were splendid ratters, and Junior was considered exceptionally intelligent and game. He would hunt rabbits in company with a pack of Beagles, and could face gorse as well as, if not better than, the hounds.
THE BREED NAME
The Chinese Crested Dog has had several different names bestowed on it over the years; among these are Chinese Hairless, Chinese Ship Dog and Chinese Royal Hairless. It is even said that the breed was called the Chinese Edible Dog, though, in this author’s experience, this name usually refers to the Chow Chow.
In Egypt the Chinese Crested has been called Pyramid, or Giza, Hairless, while in South Africa the breed has been known as South African Hairless. Very similar, but slightly larger, dogs in Turkey have been called Turkish Hairless.
By 1907 the Chinese Crested, along with other hairless breeds, still created some attention in canine publications; these dogs were, after all, something of a curiosity. The size of hairless dogs in Britain varied between as little as around 4 to 5 lbs to as much as 25 lbs. There were two types. One was built along the lines of the Manchester Terrier, sometimes attaining the racy fineness of a Whippet, while the other was short-legged and cloddy. The latter was said to be decidedly unpleasant in appearance; its bareness giving the impression of disease, added to which it was prone to ungainly obesity.
It was, however, recognized that some specimens were very active and remarkably intelligent.
An engraving from 1791 of the Naked Turkish Dog.’
Like the breed’s ancestors, today’s Chinese Crested is a remarkable sight.
The Zulu Sand Dog, circa 1907.
REGISTERING
FOR CHINESE CRESTEDS
Dating back to the 15th century, five Chinese Cresteds were included in an inventory of wedding gifts.
TEETH IN HAIRLESS BREEDS
Even during the breed’s early recognition in Britain, it was noted that the dentition of the Chinese Cresteds was abnormal and imperfect. Darwin had said that, in most animals, the teeth and horns had some relation to growth or absence of hair. Bald mammals seldom had large horns or tusks, while long-coated ones, such as Highland cattle, wild boars and even the hairy mammoth, were remarkable for their horns or tusks.
SKIN AND LACK OF COAT GROWTH
Many of the early authors who wrote about the hairless breeds considered that their countries’ dry climates might have had some effect at least in producing dogs without hair. The dogs’ skin was usually extremely delicate and, unless smeared with grease, blistered in the summer if exposed to the sun.
By the early 1930s, one notable canine encyclopedia said that hairless dogs could only be looked upon as freaks
due to the absence of certain bodies in their blood. It was also noted that some of the dogs had top-knots, and an interesting comparison was drawn with the human race—also relatively hairless, even though the hair on the head could grow to a considerable length.
The bluish skin color, resembling that of an elephant’s hide, was mentioned in early 19th-century descriptions of the Chinese Crested.
HAIRLESS DOGS CROSSED WITH OTHER BREEDS
A century or more ago, perhaps for the sake of curiosity or perhaps because of the difficulty in finding compatible members of their own kind, several crosses were made between hairless dogs and other breeds.
A Fox Terrier bitch was once mated to Hairy King, apparently because her owner needed to use the bitch as a foster mother for Bull Terrier puppies. Of the puppies produced by the mating, several puppies looked like fair specimens of Fox Terrier, but two of them were especially weird-looking creatures. They had Fox Terrier heads but were hairless. Their skin was mottled along the body to the hips where, on each side, was a tuft of hair about the size of a half dollar piece. The tail was bare from its root to the middle, but the end was like that of a Fox Terrier, and, while the legs were bare to the knee joint, the feet also resembled those of a terrier.
Ch. Gingery’s Truffles ‘N’ Cream CD, owned by Arleen Butterklee, was the Top Crested in 1987. At seven years of age, Truffles was the oldest Crested to receive an AKC Championship. She won a Best in Show prior to AKC recognition and is the dam of Ch. Gingery’s Cheesecake.
WHAT CAUSES THAT?
Over the centuries there has been much debate about the cause of hairlessness in dogs. Some thought it was caused by a deficiency in the dogs’ diets, while others believed that climatic conditions in the countries where the dogs were found affected them. Hairless dogs sent to London’s Zoological Gardens were carefully examined, but no significant discovery was made.
A WORD ABOUT THE MEXICAN DOGS
The Mexican Hairless was usually of a uniform color and, though some described it as being of greyhound type,
it was only about 18 pounds in weight. The breed was said to have been used externally on humans to ease the symptoms of rheumatism and, unfortunately, also internally to allay the pangs of hunger! So clearly both the Chinese and the Aztecs included the canine species in their diets.