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History
Some
material in this section is excerpted from Laurie Corbett: The Dingo:
in Australia and Asia, Copyright Laurie Corbett 1995.
An
ancient manuscript of the period of King Songthan of Ayuttaya (1611 to
1628) describes the Ridgeback as follows:
“The
dogs are big. They are more than two sawk tall (one sawk is a traditional
measurement which equals the length from an adult’s elbow to his finger
tips). They appear in a variety of colors. And each dog has a ridge on the
back.
They
are fierce. They are loyal to their masters. They are able to feed
themselves, digging the earth in search of small prey. They like to follow
their owner, to hunt in the wood. When they catch an animal they will
bring it to their master. They are loyal to the entire household. They
love their companionship. They go everywhere with their masters, even as
far as the big yang tree. They are powerful and fearless.... Their ears
are pointed erect and their tails stand like the swords of tribesmen...
“
However,
the earliest development of the breed is lost in the times before recorded
history. But the works of archeologists, anthropologists, paleontologists
and zoologists provide irrefutable evidence that the origins of the pariah
type dog extend back to the origins of the dog itself as it evolved from
wolf to dingo to our domestic dog.
Dingoes
began and evolved in
Asia
.
The earliest known dingo-like fossils are from Ban Chiang in north-east
Thailand
(dated
at 5,500 years BP) and from
north
Vietnam
(5,000
years BP). According to skull morphology, these fossils occupy a place
between Asian wolves (prime candidates were the pale footed (or Indian)
wolf Canis lupis pallipes and the Arabian wolf Canis lupis araba) and
modern dingoes in
Australia
and
Thailand
.
The
Thai site at Ban Chiang is one of the earliest known sites that indicates
that people changed their nomadic hunter-gatherer lifestyle to a sedentary
and agricultural subsistence. This sedentary life allowed communal
relationships between wild animals and people. The start of domestication
of wolves into dingoes and other dogs began, fossils show, between 6,000
and 10,000 years ago.
Dingo
evolution in western
Asia
diverged
sharply from dingo evolution in eastern
Asia
.
The earliest records of the domestication of wolves from
Israel
to domestic dogs (e.g.
Canis familaris poutiani, Canisfamiliaris, matrisoptimae) suggests that
these early primitive canines were subjected to intense artificial
selection by mankind from the very beginning. Cave paintings, etchings and
frescoes in tombs, pyramids and middens suggest that the major reasons for
selective breeding were to improve the characteristics of “dogs” for
hunting, herding, hauling , guarding, scavenging and fighting.
The
ultimate outcome of the many mechanisms of domestication is the immense
range of sizes, shapes, colors and temperaments found in modern breeds of
dogs. What is often forgotten is that this doggie plethora of about 600
true breeding types was derived from a single uniformly structured canine,
the dingo, via founder effects, selective breeding and genetic drift.
The
evolution of early canines in eastern
Asia
contrasts
starkly with the events in western
Asia
.
Although human societies in east Asia acquired the early canines for food,
hunting, alerting and perhaps other cultural reasons, it seems they were
never subjected to selective breeding or other artificial selection
pressures. Morphological comparisons between the skulls of the early
canines (dated 5,500 years BP) modern dingoes from
Thailand
and
Australia
and modern dingo-like
domestic dogs show a great similarity between the dingoes and early
canines but a clear cut difference between them and domestic dogs. The
dogs, although closely resembling dingoes in size and conformation, are
distinct. It is to this group of pariah dogs that the Thai Ridgeback
belongs.
The
evolution of the Thai Ridgeback from the pariah dog cannot be precisely
determined. The place of origin cannot be precisely located since the
breed habitat is not only
Thailand
but
also
Vietnam
,
Kamphuchea (
Cambodia
)
and
Indonesia
.
The breed is only found on the islands of
Vietnam
(including
Phu Quoc), Kamphuchea and
Indonesia
,
however, while it is found on both the islands and mainland of
Thailand
.
Phu Quoc, an island in the
Gulf
of
Siam
, was where the
western dog fanciers first encountered the breed and obtained the dog in
the 19th century when the island was colonized.
A
study was undertaken, according to Dr. S. Wannakrairoj to locate the place
where the breed first appeared. To determine the place of origin without
any h
istorical record the genetic analysis of the Ridgeback was performed using
reported survey data. The width of the ridge and the number of crowns on
the body which are controlled by the number of additive alleles were used
since the dog with the higher number of mutant alleles has the longer
history.
According
to genetic theory the dog with the broader ridge or more crowns results
from the accumulation of more (recessive) ridge genes. The Thai Ridgeback
in
Thailand
has
a ridge much wider than its back, sometimes down its flank, with a maximum
of 14 crowns. The closest competitor from
Vietnam
,
including
Phu
Quoc
Island
,
has a ridge only on its back, not down the flank and a maximum of 10
crowns. Thus the Thai dog must have evolved for the longest period. Hence,
the Ridgeback must be of
Thailand
origin.
This justifies the name Thai Ridgeback. The areas with the highest
population of the breed were the eastern areas of
Thailand
and
particularly the eastern fishing ports. Thus it was probably Thai
fisherman that took the dogs to the islands of
Thailand
’s neighbors.
Whether east Asian explorers took the dog to eastern
Africa
cannot
be known. However it is clear that the Phu Quoc dog is simply the same
breed as the Thai Ridgeback but named after the place it was first sighted
by Western dog fanciers rather than its place of origin. Its current size,
considerably smaller than the Thai Ridgeback is a commentary on its meager
environment on
Phu
Quoc
Island
.
The
present bloodlines were collected by Thai fanciers over the past few
decades. The breed was first recognized by the Dog Association of
Thailand, then the Japanese Kennel Club, and the Asian Kennel Union and
finally, as breed number 338 by the FCI in 1993. The
VDH recognised this breed in 1994.
Characteristics
and temperament
Traditionally,
the only other Ridgeback dog beside the well known Rhodesian Ridgeback has
been the Phu Quoc Dog.
Pho
Quoc
Island
,
now a part of
Vietnam
,
is the major isle in the
Gulf
of
Siam
,
about 200 km south of
Bangkok
.
The ancestry of the Phu Quoc dog is undoubtedly the Thai Ridgeback which
has existed in eastern
Siam
(near
the Cambodian border) for at least four hundred years . Ridgeback dogs in
cave paintings dating back 1000 years have been found in
Cambodia
and
Thailand
.
These
Thai Ridgebacks were used for hunting (they are keen sight hounds) deer,
tapirs and birds in dense jungle, as guardians for family homesteads and
as companions for carts, the traditional mode of transportation in these
areas. As a result of the isolation of the area, Thai Ridgebacks have
retained their unique type and traditional usage until recently. However,
today "civilization" has come even to these isolated areas.
Roads have been built and autos have replaced carts as the major mode of
transportation. Intense deforestation throughout Thailand has destroyed
most hunting habitat. Thai Ridgebacks today are primarily kept as
companions or guards for the family homestead and have been adopted by
many Thai dog fanciers.
Thai
Ridgebacks are medium-large sized short-haired dogs of high intelligence
and great jumping ability. Males measure 22 to 24 ½ inches at the withers
and weigh from 42 to 60 pounds: female measure 21 to 23 ½ inches and
weigh from 37 to 50 pounds. The short coat , ranging from brush to horse
coat comes in four colors, black, red (ranging from deep mahogany to light
chestnut), blue (or silver) and fawn. The ridge pattern on the back comes
in eight different patterns. Thai Ridgebacks bred by Thai fanciers are
often kennel raised. Further few Thai’s keep house pets as do Americans.
Accordingly, few Thai imports are well socialized. This is especially true
since pups must be at least four months old (and have their rabies shots)
to be imported into the United States. However, litters bred by American
breeders and hand raised in households according to our traditional
American socialization methods are very good people dogs, bonding closely
to their families. They are usually gentle with their families and with
people their families introduce them to, but are excellent watch dogs if
people they do not know appear or sounds they don’t understand occur
around the house.
This
material is Copyright 1996 of the Thai Ridgebback Club of the United
States Inc. and written and providet by: Merle Wood (Legal Council) for
Trcus and Merle Hidinger, sasha@azstarnet.com, (Secretary) of TRCUS.
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