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The
following is Copyright © 2000-2001 S. E. Szeremy
and Puli Club of America. All rights reserved.
No portion of this material may be reprinted
without written consent of the author or the
Puli Club of America.
To understand
a breed, it helps to know where it came from and
about the circumstances and people who shaped
it.
For many
years, accepted wisdom - according to various
books on the breed - had it that the Puli may
have dated back some 5500 years to the
Sumerians, later migrating with the Avars
(thought to be proto-Magyarok) as they crossed
through the higher altitudes of India and Asia;
But there is also a growing school of thought
that the Puli was a dog associated with a people
called the Cuman, a turkic speaking people who
originated in Western China near Tibet. Fleeing
the Mongols, the Cuman began migrating from Asia
in 900 A.D. and brought with them a little dog
that was possibly a relative to the Puli today.
Those who judge non-sporting breeds might have
already noticed a remarkable resemblence between
the Puli and the Tibetan terrier. It is possible
that they share a similar root stock with the
little herding dog that migrated with the
Cumans.
Though the
Puli's overall structure is similar to the
Tibetan terrier, the Puli's corded coat
developed as a result of environment. Looks and
performance could not be divided: Having
migrated through areas of intense weather, the
dog now worked on the open plains of the
Hungarian Puszta, and developed a corded coat
which not only protected against the brutal
winter frost, but also against summer heat. This
corded coat, while an efficient insulator, best
served the Puli by not restricting his very
elastic movement - critical to the Puli's
success as a sheepdog.
The Cuman
settled in Hungary in the mid 13th century. They
were granted refuge by the Hungarian king, but
when the Cuman King was killed by Hungarian
soldiers who were afraid that the Cumans were
Mongol spies, the Cumans fled south. This
southern journey by the Cumans gives rise to
speculation about the origin of a dog now found
in this area: the corded Bergamasco, which in
appearance is somewhere between a Puli and a
Komondor. The Cumans were later recalled by the
Hungarian monarchy in 1246 and settled in
central Hungary where they intermarried with the
Magyars.
Hungarians
are survivors - they've had to be in light of
the frequency with which Hungary was invaded.
Each invasion brought destruction and wreaked
havoc with both man and animal. The Turkish
invasion during the 1500's saw Hungarian breeds
of cattle, sheep and sheepdogs stolen and herded
south toward Turkey. Later, during the
occupation by the Austrians, everything
Hungarian in origin was forbidden. These
up-and-down periods resulted in treasures being
lost along with documentation that might have
helped later generations more thoroughly
research the heritage of the Hungarian people
and that of the Puli.
The 1800's,
were good to the Puli. The Hungarian shepherd
paid attention to proportions, size and color of
a good herding Puli, having learned from the
horsemen of the puszta what structural aspects
of conformation resulted in dogs of endurance
and speed.
The late
1800's gave us the first more or less technical
description of the Puli that was referred to in
a book written in 1924 by Dr. Raitsits. This
19th century passage referred to the Puli's size
and it read: "The Puli used around sheep is
always lower than the highest point of the
shepherd's boots."
The Shepherds
protected their dogs the best way they knew how:
They showed discretion in protecting a bitch in
season, they took time to arrange for the best
matings and sometimes spent days riding to
distant parts of the country to breed a Puli
bitch to the best male. And why not? In those
days, the price of a GOOD Puli was just about
equal to the earnings of a shepherd for a full
year.
The Puli was
expected to learn to herd sheep by watching
older, experienced Pulis working - and while the
Hungarian shepherd was proud of his reliable,
hard working helper, he thought nothing of
getting rid of the dog if he failed to live up
to the job at hand. It was this almost ruthless
culling that has enabled the breed to retain, to
this day, the quick intelligence, speed, and
turn-on-a-dime agility for which the Puli is
noted - those qualities which make the Puli
"more than just a dog" to the Hungarian
shepherd.
The early
1900's began a period of organized breeding in
Hungary. Natural sciences began to give a lead
in breeding Hungarian sheep dogs, but it was Dr.
Emil Raitsits, a professor at the Hungarian
University of Veterinary Medicine, who began a
program to reconstitute the Puli, fearing it
would become extinct from fast modernization of
agriculture.
He enlisted
the help of Adolf Lendl, the director of the
Budapest Zoo, and together, they allocated small
funds to remodel a part of the zoo for an
experimental breeding program and exhibit. The
program expanded, acquired a kennel name
(Allatkert) and furnished the foundation stock
for many Hungarian kennels.
In an effort
to popularize the breed, the standard was
somewhat looser than today: sixty years ago, the
Hungarian stud book recorded standards for the
following classes: the Police Puli (19" plus),
the Working or medium Puli (19.7 - 15.7"), the
small Puli (15.7 - 11.8") and the dwarf,
miniature or Toy Puli (11" and under). A point
system rewarded the medium and small Pulis with
maximum available points for size impression,
since it was these sizes which reflected the
ancient requirements of Hungarian shepherds. In
time it became apparent that the breed was not
going to become popular enough anytime soon to
warrant such a large number of varieties.
By this
point, the Puli had become popularized to where
it became a point of pride for a Hungarian to
own a Puli, Komondor, or any other Hungarian
breed, and interest in the breed had expanded to
the United States.
As part of an
experiment, the U.S. Department of Agriculture
imported four purebred Pulis in 1935 in
Beltsville, Maryland when trying to help
American agriculturists concerned with the
problem of herding dogs that sometimes killed
the very animals they had been entrusted to
protect. The Pulis were bred among themselves
and crossed with the GSD, the Chow Chow and
perhaps with two turkish sheepdogs which were
quartered there at the time. Where "dogs" such
as other herding breeds, scored in the range of
12 to 14 on the tests given by researchers
there, Pulik scored, on the average, between 75
and 85. Tests were inconclusive and never
published, and when WWII broke out, the Pulis
were auctioned off to professional breeders and
it is thought that it is from these four dogs
and their progeny that the beginning of recorded
history of the Puli in the United States begins.
In Hungary,
WWII proved devastating to the breed. Food was
scarce, medicine and insecticides unavailable
and kennels had to give up priceless breeding
stock. Many Puli owners had to place their dogs
with non-doggie friends and Pulis left behind
were killed by bombs or shot by Germans or
Russians seeking to silence the protective and
barking Pulik. Thousands of Pulik were lost and
had the breed not reached heights of popularity
prior to the war, the breed could very easily
have been wiped out during this period of
conflict.
By 1955, the
Puli breed population had grown and in 1959, the
Hungarian Puli club decided to create a Puli
standard that would not have to be adjusted with
constant changes in popularity. The toy and
police sized Pulik were eliminated and remaining
sizes were included within one category. By the
1960s, the breed reached pre-war numbers.
The last 40
years have seen the AKC acceptance of Hungarian
pedigrees, new recognized bloodlines, two
updated standards, and importation of the breed
from other countries where refugees and
ẻmigrẻs settled years ago. In the last ten
years, the breed has become very global indeed,
and close ties have been formed between Puli
breeders in Great Britain, Australia, Germany,
Belgium and, of course, Hungary. Importation of
breeding stock and the availability of frozen
semen has expanded the gene pool in all
countries for the betterment of the breed.
History: Another Point of View
The Puli is
the ancient sheepdog of Hungary, introduced by
the migration of the Magyars from Central Asia
over 1000 years ago. Records show Pulik working
the plains of the Puszta as early as the 9th
century. Some believe the Puli existed as a
working sheepdog for thousands of years prior to
this, perhaps as early as 4500 B.C.
Nomadic
shepherds of the Hungarian plains valued their
herding dogs, paying as much as a year's salary
for a Puli. They were ruthless in maintaining
working qualities and would eliminate any dogs
that didn't show these qualities immediately. To
survive, the Puli had to be physically sound and
mentally capable, agile and willing to work. The
Puli's coat protected the dog while living
outdoors without amenities. He was typically
sheared in the spring with the sheep, allowing
the coat ample time to regrow before winter. The
Puli was used both as a drover as the shepherd
moved the flock over many many miles up into the
plains, and as a herder for large herds of sheep
(often several hundred). The shepherd would work
in tandem with the Komondor, the guardian of the
flock, particularly at night. The Puli was also
used as a general farm dog, herding cattle and
protecting the farm.
The
introduction of French and German sheepherding
dogs into Hungary after the 1600s resulted in
interbreeding, particularly with the Briard, and
the production of two other Hungarian herding
breeds, the Pumi and the Mudi. By the late
1800s, the terms Pumi and Puli were used almost
interchangeably, although the breeds did
maintain several distinct characteristics. The
early 1900s saw an effort by breeders to restore
and reconstitute the Puli. World War II saw the
devastation of the breed in Hungary, with Nazi
troopers killing many of the farm dogs during
the war.
The first
Pulik were imported to the US in the mid-1930's,
as part of a USDA project to evaluate
sheepherding dogs. The Puli excelled in tests of
intelligence. Today most Pulik have adapted well
to home or apartment living. They retain the
intelligence, ability, and willingness to work
that endeared them to the shepherds of long ago,
and they retain a strong herding instinct and
desire to work. These herding and protective
instincts are a dominant factor in its
temperament. The Puli is extremely intelligent,
a deeply loyal dog, wary of strangers, and often
a clown for his masters, bubbling with an energy
he can scarcely control at times.
Above material Copyright © 2000-2001 S. E.
Szeremy and Puli Club of America. All rights
reserved. No portion of this material may be
reprinted without written consent of the author
or the Puli Club of America. |