
Louie, with a bone, pondering his outlook on life
Hi, my name is Louie and welcome to Louie’s Dog Blog. I’m an Italian Greyhound and want to share my thoughts with the world. I’m almost two years old so I’m bursting with stories. I hope this will help other Italian Greyhound owners as well as give them hints on how to make our lives better.
The following is from the Wikipedia entry for Italian Greyhounds:
History
The name of the breed is a reference to the breed’s popularity in Renaissance Italy. Mummified dogs very similar to the Italian Greyhound (or small Greyhounds) have been found in Egypt, and pictorials of small Greyhounds have been found in Pompeii, and they were probably the only accepted companion-dog there. As an amusing aside the expression ‘Cave Canem’ (Beware of the dog) was a warning to visitors, not that the dogs would attack but to beware of damaging, tripping over or stepping on the small dogs.
Although the small dogs are mainly companionship dogs they have in fact been used for hunting purposes, often in combination with hunting falcons, rat or mice.
The Italian Greyhound is the smallest of the family of gaze hounds (dogs that hunt by sight). The breed is an old one and is believed to have originated more than 4,000 years ago in the countries now known as Greece and Turkey. This belief is based on the depiction of miniature greyhounds in the early decorative arts of these countries and on the archaeological discovery of small greyhound skeletons. By the Middle Ages, the breed had become distributed throughout Southern Europe and was later a favorite of the Italians of the sixteenth century, among whom miniature dogs were in great demand. Sadly, though, ‘designer’ breeders tried, and failed, to make the breed even smaller by crossbreeding it with other breeds of dogs. This only lead to mutations with deformed skulls, bulging eyes and dental problems. The original Italian Greyhound had almost disappeared when groups of breeders got together and managed to return the breed to normal. From this period onward the history of the breed can be fairly well traced as it spread through Europe, arriving in England in the seventeenth century.

Portrait of the aging Catherine The Great with an Italian Greyhound.
During World War I, the breed became almost extinct in England. Luckily, the breed had become well established in the United States, and American breeders were able to help replenish the English numbers.





4 Comments
March 9, 2009 at 6:42 pm
Louie,
You’re really cute and I’m a fan of St Louie, too,(Cardinals, that is).
March 16, 2009 at 4:01 pm
hey nice to meet you louie!!!
April 26, 2009 at 8:25 am
Pleased to meet you Louie!
You sound like so much fun!
May 3, 2009 at 11:29 pm
Hey Louie! I was checking out your website and it is pretty cool! I am a standard Greyhound( your tall cousin) and also a friend of yours. Hope we can get together soon. There is a new human in my house and I could use a dog ear to bend.