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| Statua
di molosso proveniente da Palazzo Chigi, ora al Ministero
degli Esteri a Roma. |
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Condensing
over 4000 years of the history of this Italian breed into a
few lines is certainly no simple task. From the Mesopotamian
terracotta representations at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
in New York to the modern Neapolitan mastiff, the breed has
certainly evolved, though some of its distinguishing characteristics
which give it a unique standing in the ever-growing numbers
of officially recognized hreeds in the world, remain more or
less unaltered. If, from one point of view, there exists an
occasional quest for the rediscovery of native breeds of the
more or less recent past in the countries of the world, there
is the opposite problem in the case of the Neapolitan mastiff;
that of maintaining it while also improving it, as the "Neapolitan
Mastinari" so jealously conserved it through the centuries.
We owe a sincere debt of thanks to them for having conserved
this truly historic
monument
of Italian cinophilia,
for which
all the world envies us a little. There is a vast bibliography,
both Italian
and foreign,
on the Neapolitan mastiff, which is vary- ing ways traces its
history
from the |
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origins to the
present day with plentiful pictorial and writ- ten support.
Of all the works available today, surely the most respected
is Prof. Felice Cesari- no’s ”Il Molosso, Viaggio Intorno al
Mastino Napolitano”, published by Fausto
Fiorentino
in 1995. Even without journeying back to the ancient past, there
is certain proof that the Sumeri- ans bred large and powerful
dogs which were used both in battle |
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and
in hunting large animal, specially lions. Their main characteristics
were: a large and powerful head with strong and rather short
muzzle; strong and muscular limbs supported by a well-developed
bone structure; a solid and strong trunk; and an imposing height.
Such a powerful dog must surely have been a descendent of the
great and in hunting large animal, specially lions. Their main
characteristics were: a large and powerful head with strong
and rather short muzzle; strong and muscular limbs supported
by a well-developed bone structure; a solid and strong trunk;
and an imposing height. Such a powerful dog must surely have
been a descendent of the great Tibetan mastiff, which is considered
by the greatest authorities as the ancestor of all the mollossoid
breeds. Thus the Sumerians, so mysterious and yet so cultured
and advanced must have, in the course of their migrations, brought
this breed to Mesopotamia. In the land between the Tigris and
the Euphrates, this breed found such fortune as to have been
represented in several major |

| Terracotta
Cane di Mesopotamia, II mill- ennio a.C. (Metropolitan
Museum of Art) |
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archaeological
finds. These finds are now kept in many of the world’s greatest
museum. We know that in Mesopotamia there were already great
settlements (Fridu, Susa, Ur, and Uruk, just to mention the
most famous) 2000 years before Christ, and that in these settlements
large dogs were reared and used mainly to protect property and
livestock from the attacks of lions which were common in that
region at the time. The deeds of this dog often gave it a place
in popular legend. Therefore, the interest shown by the artists
of the day is obvious. Indeed, it is from this time that we
see the first historical |
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| Arte assira:
Terracota di Nimrud, IX sec. a.C. (Londra, British Museum)
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artistic
representations of this dog. The terrecottas from the Metropolitan
Museum of Art in New York and another at the Chigago Museum
of Art, give likenesses of a dog very similar to our Neapolitan
Mastiff. The first shows a sitting dog with an extremely large
head, full of folds of Hesh, with an improbably powerful muzzle
and amputated ears. In the second we see a female with the same
characteristics of power and substance of the head, feeding
four puppies. The similarity between these historical images
and the modern mastiff is impressive. We stress the ”modern”
mastiff as opposed those presented at the 1946 Exhibition of
Naples, which so im- pressed Piero Scanziani. To better appreciate
the dimensions and power of these dogs, we need only examine
the later 9’” century B.C. Assyrian terracotta which is |
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kept in the
British Museum and which shows a dog being held by the collar
by its master. This artifact is of exceptional artistic and
historical interest. For this reason it is cited in the most
important scientific texts and allows us to make even more precise
and detailed speculations about these great molossians of antiquity.
First of all, the height at the withers reaches the master’s
belt and therefore surely cannot be less than 80 cm. The head
is great volume with many wrinkles with ears intacy, flat and
rather high on the head. The dewlap is highly develope beginning
near the corner of the mouth and finishing halfway down the
neck. The trunk is of huge power and mass, longer than the height
at the withers and supported by a very strong and thick bone
structure. These historical testimonies immediately recall the
modern Mastiff, so close is their resemblance to today’s breed.
But to return to |
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the
breed’s history: Because of wars and migrations, these dogs
spread westward in three directions; to the north toward Anatolia,
Greece, Macedonia, and Albania; to the south toward Egypt and
Libya; and toward the eastern coasts of the Mediterranean basin
in what was then the land of the Phoenecians. This was to prove
an important step in the ex- pansion of the hreed throughout
Europe and particularily in Italy. Such powerful dogs were often
offered as gifts between the rulers of the time. Alexander the
Great was proud of his molossians, a gift from a king. The Roman
consul, Paulus Emilius, whose legions were victorious |

| Un 'incisione
di Bartolomeo Pinelli, pittore, disegnatore, incisore
romano del secolo scorso. |
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on molossian
soil, brought back several of these great dogs as spoils of
war to show to the people in Rome. Julius Caesar himelf, at
around the middle of the rist century B.C. during his British
campaign, saw his legions faced by dogs of great stature and
courage very similar to those described above. He referred to
them as ”Pugnaces Brittaniae”. Impressed by so much power and
courege, Caesaw took several specimens back to Rome with him
and at the same time appointed a procurater in Britain who was
charge with raising and trasporting these dogs to Rome. The
presence of this race in Britain strengthens and confirms the
hypothesis that eve before the Romans, the Phoenecians (undisputed
kings of trade in those days) spread this type of dog in the
Mediterranean basin, together with other breeds which were the
forerunners of our Cirneco of Etna and of all the Iberian Podenghi.
We can therefore state with certainty that even before Pautus
Emilius and Julius Caesar, some of these great mollosians had
already arrived in our territory, introduced by the Phoenecians.
Both Varron and Virgil dealt with this subject to a certain
extent, but the person who studie the Mastiff most closely and
in the greatest detail, was Columella, who more or less defined
what could be called a breed standard in the first century A.D.
In his ”De Re Rustica”, Columella defines it as an excellent
guardian of house and property, anticipating its current use
by almost 2000 years. Although the Mastiff was used in Roman
times as a weapon of war, and in combat against wild animals
in the circus, it was later to be |
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| Piero
Scanziani guidica la razza da lui ricon- struita.
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found
in the courts of the Renaissance in central and northern Italy
as a hunter of large game (deer and wild boar). It remained
a guard dog, continuing the function which had made if famous
among the Sumerians and the Mesopotamians so long before. Precisely
because of this natural adeptness as a guard dog, the Roman
patrician class used the Mastiff to safeguard their villas,
which were numerous in the region of Campania at one time. After
the fall of the Roman Empire the dogs remained, finding an agreable
habitat on the slopes of Vesuvius, and forming a close link
both with the land and the people who lived on it. It was on
this very land, on the slopes of Vesuvius, that Piero Scanziani
encountered the Neapolitan Mastiff. He fell in love with it,
so much as to be rightly remembered as the man to whom we owe
the modern existence of this magnificent breed which today is
sought after by dog lovers all over the world. |
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Arch. Alessandra
Giuseppe
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