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Home  >  Encyclopedia  >  Breeds  >  Standards  >  BRITTANY SPANIEL (Epagneul breton) / FCI-Standard No95 / 28.04.1995
23/09/2000
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BRITTANY SPANIEL (Epagneul breton) / FCI-Standard No95 / 28.04.1995

BRITTANY SPANIEL (Epagneul breton) / FCI-Standard No95 / 28.04.1995


FCI-Standard No95 / 28.04.1995 / GB BRITTANY SPANIEL (Epagneul breton)


TRANSLATION
Mrs. Peggy Davis.

ORIGIN
France.

DATE OF PUBLICATION OF THE VALID ORIGINAL STANDARD
14.04.1995.

UTILIZATION
Gundog.

F.C.I. CLASSIFICATION
Group 7 Pointing dogs
Section 1.2. Continental Pointing Dogs-Spaniel type
With working trial.

BRIEF HISTORICAL SUMMARY
The Brittany Spaniel originates from the centre of Brittany. However its ancestors are probably the Oysel Dogs known in the Middle Age and described by Gaston Fébus. It is no doubt one of the most ancient breeds of pointing dogs in France. The selection has made of him the firm pointing dog which we know today.
The first project of the standard was established on the 3rd September 1907 and adopted on the 7th June 1908, modified in March 1923, corrected again in 1933, then in 1956.
Standard still valid ever since.

GENERAL APPEARANCE
Small dog, elegant and strapping, very vigorous, having substance without heaviness, lively, with an intelligent expression, presenting the appearance of a small cob full of energy.

IMPORTANT PROPORTIONS
Length of body = height at the withers (dog should fit into a square). Chest descending fully to elbow level.
Ideal proportions of the head : skull : muzzle = 3 : 2 - i.e. about 12 cm : 8 cm.

BEHAVIOUR-CHARACTER
Balance - frankness - gentleness. Keen hunter. Sociable with his like - Ideal companion.

HEAD
CRANIAL REGION
Skull
rounded, seen either from the front as in profile. Seen from above, the lateral sides (walls) are also rounded. Cranial-facial axes (head planes) parallel or just very slightly divergent. Width of skull taken at level of zygomatic arches : about 11 to 12 cm.
Stop
Depression quite perceptible although gently sloping.

FACIAL REGION
Nose
Of the darkest colour of the coat, according to the dog being White-Orange, White and Liver or White and Black. Nostrils well open.
Muzzle
Straight, shorter than the long axis of the skull.
Lips
Fine, rather tight, edge to edge. On the side the upper lip overlaps very slightly the lower lip.
Teeth
Complete. Scissor bite.
Superciliary arches
Forming a gentle curve.
Eyes
Rather round shaped. Horizontally placed. Colour in harmony with the nose and the coat. Intelligent,
lively expression.
Ears
Set high, triangular shape, slightly rounded at the tip, well furnished with wavy hair, carried flat against the cheek. If one stretches it forward against the cheek, the cartilage must not go beyond the junction of foreface and stop.

NECK
Medium length, well set inter shoulders. Skin fine, supple and quite loose but not forming folds.

BODY
Topline
Straight and firm.
Back
Short and straight.
Loin
Short, broad and solid, length about 8 to 10 cm.
Rump
Very slightly sloping.
Hips
Lower than the withers, slightly prominent. The points of the hips are level with the back.
Chest
Broad, ribs well sprung, well developed towards the rear. Chest well let down to elbow level.
Belly and Underline
Normally raised, without excess, neither too tuked up nor drooping.
Tail
Straight or hanging. Length of 10 cm maximum. Often a little twisted and with a tuft of hair at the tip.
Certain subjects are born without a tail.

QUARTERS FOREQUARTERS
Upright, in the axis of the body.
Shoulder
Oblique and muscular.
Upper arm
Muscular and bony.
Elbow
Close to body - neither in or out.
Forearm
Strong, lean although well muscled, straight, vertical.
Pastern
Slightly oblique.
Feet
Lean and tight. A little hair between the toes.

HINDQUARTERS
Seen from behind, perfectly upright. In profile, the point of the buttock and of the hock are more or less on the same vertical.
Thigh
Broad and well let down.
Hockjoint
Not too angulated.
Hock
Well upright.
Feet
Tight toes, a little hair between the toes. No dewclaws.

MOVEMENT
Easy, lively, denoting the little cob full of energy. When hunting, the preferred gait is the gallop; quick strides, with relatively short extension.

COAT
HAIR
On the body, fine without excess, rather flat or very slightly wavy. Forelegs slightly fringed and wavy. Hindquarters well fringed up to mid-thigh.

COLOUR
White and Orange. White and Liver. White and Black.
Tricolour
White, Orange and Black. White, Orange and Liver or roan pattern with one or the other of those colours.

SIZE
Minimum
47 cm
Maximum
50 cm with a tolerance of 1 cm more or less.
Ideal for a male
48 to 50 cm
Ideal for a female
47 to 49 cm.

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.
Skull
Square, ogival (pointed arch), narrow, too round, stop too marked.
Nose
Tight.
Muzzle
Spnipy, square outline in front.
Lips
Thick, too loose, corner of lips too apparent.
Eyes
Light, protruding, obliquely placed.
Ears
Low set, drooping, big and frizzy, too long, twisted, white or with a white patch.
Neck
Too thin, too short.
Back
Long, saddle back, roach back.
Loin
Long, narrow and weak.
Rump
Too narrow, too sloping, to steep.
Chest
Narrow, not deep enough, flat rib, ogival-shaped forming a keel sternum, too short.
Flanks
Fleshy and drooping.
Too long, short hair, carried vertically, low set in relation to the topline.
Forequarters
Pasterns too slanting, loose elbows, toes turning in or out.
Feet
Big, long, too round, splayed.
Skin
Thick and too loose, forming folds.

IMPORTANT FAULTS
Skull
Superciliary arches too prominent.
Eyes
Too light, vicious expression or that of a bird of prey, squint convergent or divergent.
Muzzle
Very short. Cranial-facial axes too divergent.
Neck
Dewlap.
Hair
Frizzy or silky or too abundant. Short hair. Insufficient or too abundant fringes, too long.

ELIMINATING FAULTS
Lack of type (insufficient ethnic character, which means the animal on the whole does not resemble sufficiently anymore his like of the same breed.)
- Size beyond the limits of the standard.
- Convergence of the cranial-facial axes.
- White patch on one ear.
- Eye situated in a white patch.
- Eyes very light or of two different colours.
- Pink on eyelids.
- Excessive pink on the nose.
- Over- or undershot mouth.
- The PC1 (=1st premolar) considered as being unimportant, all dogs with more than 2 PC2 (2nd premolar) missing shall be eliminated as well as a dog with one missing tooth other than the pré-carnassial teeth (Pré-carnassials = PM1, PM2, PM3 of the upper jaw and PM1, PM2,PM3 and PM4 of the lower jaw.)
- Coat not conforming to the standard and in particular an uni-coloured coat.
- Timid character.
- Aggressiveness.

N.B.
Male animals should have two apparently normal testicles fully descended into the scrotum.



Consult the archives...
CORSO DOG (Cane Corso) / FCI-Standard No 343 / 10.12.1996
FAWN BRITTANY BASSET (BASSET FAUVE DE BRETAGNE) / FCI-Standard No 36 / 19.10.1995
IRISH SOFTCOATED WHEATEN TERRIER / FCI-Standard No 40 / 28.03.1994
BEAUCE SHEEPDOG (Berger de Beauce) / FCI-Standard No44 / 15.06.1994
KARELIAN BEAR DOG (Karjalankarhukoira) / FCI-Standard No48 / 15.06.1994

All the archives


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  ALSO READ...

CORSO DOG (Cane Corso) / FCI-Standard No 343 / 10.12.1996

FAWN BRITTANY BASSET (BASSET FAUVE DE BRETAGNE) / FCI-Standard No 36 / 19.10.1995

IRISH SOFTCOATED WHEATEN TERRIER / FCI-Standard No 40 / 28.03.1994

BEAUCE SHEEPDOG (Berger de Beauce) / FCI-Standard No44 / 15.06.1994

KARELIAN BEAR DOG (Karjalankarhukoira) / FCI-Standard No48 / 15.06.1994
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