


Source: Wally Horman Belgium
Forefathers of the Schipperke lived in the 14th century as farmers’ dogs
existing in small-, medium- and normal sizes. They have retained the
character of their big brothers, the Belgian sheep dogs. In those times,
dogs were selected for particular purposes and their capabilities. Purebred
breeding programs, as we understand them today simply did not exist.
Schipperke registries began in 1883. Before then, purebred registries did
not exist. This was further complicated by the fact that Italians, Germans,
Austrians, French, Dutch and Spanish occupied this part of Europe through
the centuries.
There are some historical facts, however. A 1356-dated document and a
woodcarving kept in Leuven show a shepherd dog with a remarkable resemblance
of a Schipperke or a Leuvenaar. In the 14th century it was
forbidden for “common” people to have large dogs. That privilege was
reserved for the ruling French aristocrats. The “golden spurs battle”
of 1302, where the French army was beaten by the Flemish weavers and
butchers guilds, might help explain why. To respond to the French
regulations and still protect the flocks, farmers started to breed smaller
dogs, especially in regions were the French army could operate. The
Schipperke and Leuvenaar resulted. The Leuvenaar was the same dog as a
Schipperke, only taller. The Schipperke got his name in the Flemish
villages in Brabant. Schipperke means little shepherd in Flemish.
The Leuvenaar got his name from the town Leuven, about 25 miles from
Brussels.
The Waning of the French Influence...the 15th Century
During the
15th century, the
Spanish occupied Flanders and all the French regulations were abolished so
there was no legal reason to keep the smaller Schipperke. In
more crowded areas, Schipperkes became the house-alarm system, rat and mice
catcher, and driver for geese and goat flocks.
Later in the 15th century the monk Wenceslas chronicled the small
tailless black Flemish Schipperke as the impersonation of the Devil – an
image that playfully persists to this day.
In 1609, the chronicle of the Saint Crispijn guild tells of shoemakers
parading with their black docked tail dogs on the big market of Brussels.
It was about this time that these guilds began to organize Sunday beauty
contests for dogs and their beautifully decorated copper collars. The
collar, as Mr. Hormans writes, “with the most elaborate lock, designed not
to damage the Schipperkes’ elegant mane, got first prize.”
19th Century – Schipperkes As We Know Them Today Begin to Emerge
The Belgian cynologist Charles Huge, an authority on shepherd dogs around
the end of the 19th century, wrote articles about black, wolf-like shepherd
dogs of different heights that were widespread in the province of Brabant.
(The Brabant is the old Belgian Province that covered much of Belgium and
Holland and had a, as its capital, the city of Brussels.) The biggest were
sheepdogs and the smallest were mouse and rat catchers or poultry guards.
Mr. Huge described them as ancestors to today’s Groenendaels and
Schipperkes. (Groenendael is about 16 miles from Leuven.)
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