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TRANSLATION
: Mrs
Pamela Jeans-Brown revised by R. Triquet.
ORIGIN
: Belgium.
DATE
OF PUBLICATION OF THE ORIGINAL VALID STANDARD
: 25.03.2003.
UTILIZATION
: Small
guardian and companion dog.
CLASSIFICATION
F.C.I.
:
Group 9 : Companions and Toy Dogs.
Section 3
: Small Belgian Dogs. Without
working trial.
BRIEF
HISTORICAL SUMMARY
:
The three breeds (Griffon Bruxellois, Griffon Belge and Petit Brabançon)
all descend from a small rough-coated dog called a “Smousje”, which
for centuries has been found in the Brussels area.
In the 19th century, bringing in blood-lines from the Ruby King Charles
Spaniel and the Pug produced the short black coat and fixed the current
breed type. These
little dogs are very alert and were bred to guard carriages and keep
stables free from rodents.
In 1883 the first Griffon Bruxellois were registered at L.O.S.H. (The
St.Hubert stud book). They
were Topsy (L.O.S.H. nr.163) and Foxine (L.O.S.H. nr.164).
By about 1900 they had become very popular, together with other
breeds, thanks to the royal interest shown in them by Queen
Marie-Henriette of Belgium.
Many specimens were exported abroad and helped the spread and
popularity of the breed.
GENERAL
APPEARANCE
: Small companion dog; intelligent, well-balanced, alert, proud, robust,
practically square; with good bone but at the same time elegant in its
movement and construction; attracting attention by its almost human
expression. The two Griffons are rough-coated and are distinguished to
each other by colour, whereas the Petit Brabançon is short-coated.
IMPORTANT
PORPORTIONS
: Length of body, from point of shoulder to point of buttock should be
as equal as possible to height at withers.
BEHAVIOUR
/ TEMPERAMENT
: Well-balanced little dog, alert, proud, very attached to its owner,
very watchful. Neither timid nor aggressive.
HEAD
:
This is the most characteristic part of the body and the most striking.
The head is quite large compared with the body and has an almost human
expression. In the Griffons the hair is rough, upstanding and
tousled; it is longer above the eyes, on the foreface, the cheeks and
chin, forming the head furnishings.
CRANIAL
REGION
: Broad and round. The forehead is well-rounded.
Stop
: Very pronounced.
FACIAL
REGION :
Nose
: Black. The nose is set at the same level as the eyes. Nose
leather is broad with wide-open nostrils. The tip of the nose is
tilted back so that in profile the chin, the nose and the forehead are
on the same plane.
Muzzle
: The foreface including the nose is very short : it must not exceed 1.5
cm. For the Petit Brabançon a correct foreface appears longer
because it has no furnishing. A poor expression is given by a
non-turned-up foreface, just as it is by a nose whose top line lies
below the line from the bottom of the eyes and these are both serious
faults.
Lips
: Black. The top and bottom lips are in close contact and
close-fitting. The upper lip does not form flews and does not
overlap the lower lip. If it is too loose it spoils the desired
expression.
Jaws/teeth
: The lower jaw is curved upwards, broad, non-pointed and jutting beyond
the upper jaw; the breed is undershot. The incisors on each jaw
are expected to be regularly set and in a straight line, with upper and
lower remaining really parallel. The mouth must be tightly closed,
showing neither teeth nor tongue. The width and prominence of the
chin are extremely important. Care must be taken to ensure that no
incisors are missing.
Eyes
: Well set apart, large and round, never bulging. Brown, as dark
as possible. The eye is to be edged with black and preferably no
white of eye is to be seen. Small, oval or light coloured eyes are
a fault.
Ears
: Small, set high with enough space between them. Uncropped ears carried
semi-erect and falling forwards. Ears which are too big are
undesirable, so are ears falling on the side of the head. Cropped
ears are pointed and erect. Cropped and uncropped ears are equally
acceptable.
NECK
:
Medium length; blends harmoniously into the shoulders.
BODY
:
The length of the body practically equals the height at the withers.
The overall impression is of small square powerful dog.
Withers
: Slightly raised.
Back
: Straight, short, strong.
Loins
: Short and muscled, very slightly arched.
Croup
: Broad and flat or only very slightly sloping.
Chest
: Broad, well let down to elbows. The breastbone is well defined,
which gives a slightly jutting chest in profile. Ribs well-sprung
but not barrel nor too flat.
Underline
: Belly slightly tucked up; flanks clearly defined.
TAIL
:
Set high and carried quite high. A docked tail is shortened y 2/3
of its length. A non-docked tail is carried upwards with the tip
towards the back without ever reaching it or being curled. A
naturally short or broken or curly tail is a severe fault.
LIMBS
FOREQUARTERS:
Overview
: Front legs parallel with good bone, set sufficiently wide apart.
Shoulders
: Normal shoulder angulation.
Elbows
: Close to body.
Wrists
: Strong.
Feet
: Small, round, neither turning
out nor in. Tight fitting toes; fused toes are undesirable. Thick
pads as dark as possible. Nails preferably black, as dark as
possible.
HINDQUARTERS
:
Overview
: Hind legs with good bone, really parallel, angulated to balance with
front legs.
Stifles
: Sufficient angulation.
Hocks
: Well let down, neither close nor open.
Feet
: See forequarters.
Dewclaws not sought after.
GAIT/MOVEMENT
:
Powerful, parallel movement of limbs with good rear drive.
High-stepping front movement and ambling are faults.
COAT
HAIR
:
Quality of coat :
The Griffon Bruxellois and the Griffon Belge are rough-coated with
undercoat. The hair is naturally harsh, slightly wavy, not curly,
it is trimmed. The hair must be long enough for its structure to
be appreciated. Hair which is too long destroys the outline and is
not sought after. A silky or woolly coat is a serious fault.
The Petit Brabançon is short-coated. The hair is harsh, flat and
gleaming, and at most 2 cm long.
Head furnishing
: With the Griffons the furnishing (beard and moustache) begin under the
nose-eye axis and goes from one ear to the other, covering the muzzle
and the cheeks with thick hair which is longer than on the rest of the
body. Above the eyes, the hair must be longer than on the rest of
the skull, forming eye-brows.
COLOUR
:
Griffon
Bruxellois
: Red, reddish; a little black is allowed on the head furnishing.
Griffon
Belge
: Black, black and tan. The tan markings must be pure and of a
sustained colour. They are situated on the front legs, from foot
to wrist, on the hind legs from foot to hock. They go up the
inside of the legs. They are also situated on the chest, on the
cheeks, on the chin, above the eyes, inside the ears, below the tail and
around the anus. The black can be mixed with red-brown, which is
allowed although pure black and black and tan are preferred.
Petit
Brabançon
: The same colours are accepted as for the Griffons. It has a dark
mask. Grey or frosting in the mask for older dogs should not be
penalised.
In
all three breeds, a few white hairs on the chest are tolerated but not
sought after.
WEIGHT
:
Varies from 3,5 to 6 kg.
FAULTS
:
Any departure from the foregoing points should be considered a fault and
the seriousness with which the fault should be regarded should be in
exact proportion to its degree.
ELIMINATING
FAULTS
:
-
Temperament
: Aggressive or overly shy.
-
Nose
lacking pigment or other than black.
-
Tongue
permanently visible, the mouth being closed.
-
Wry
lower jaw.
-
Upper
jaw protruding beyond lower jaw.
-
Any
other colours than those laid down in the standard, such as grey,
blue and tan, brown and tan, liver colour.
-
Any
white patch.
Any
dog clearly showing physical or behavioural abnormalities s
hall be disqualified.
N.B.
: Male animals should have two apparently normal testicles fully
descended into the scrotum.
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