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{{short description|Portuguese breed of guardian dog}}
<!-- Begin Infobox Dogbreed. The text of the article should go AFTER this section. See: -->
{{Infobox dog breed
<!-- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Dog_breeds#Infobox_Dogbreed_template -->
| name = Rafeiro do Alentejo
<!-- for full explanation of the syntax used in this template. -->
| altname = {{ubl|Rafeiro of Alentejo{{r|fci2}}}}
{{Infobox Dogbreed
| country = Portugal
| altname = Alentejo Mastiff, Portuguese Mastiff, Mutt of Alentejo
| image = Rafeiro male.jpg
| country = [[Portugal]]
| image_caption =
| image = Rafeiro male.jpg
| weight =
| image_caption = Rafeiro do Alentejo male
| maleweight = {{cvt|45|–|60|kg}}{{r|fci2}}
| name = Rafeiro do Alentejo, Alentejo Mastiff
| femaleweight = {{cvt|35|–|50|kg}}{{r|fci2}}
| fcigroup = 2
| height =
| fcisection = 2.2 Mastiffs, Mountain Type
| maleheight = {{cvt|66|–|74|cm}}{{r|fci2}}
| fcinum = 96
| femaleheight = {{cvt|64|–|70|cm}}{{r|fci2}}
| fcistd = http://www.fci.be/uploaded_files/096gb2002_en.doc
| coat = short to medium-length; straight, thick, dense
| akcgroup= FSS
| colour = yellow, fawn, brindle, wolf grey or black - always with white markings
| akcstd= http://www.akc.org/breeds/rafeiro_do_alentejo/index.cfm
| kc_name = [[Clube Português de Canicultura]]
| akcfss = true
| kc_std = https://www.cpc.pt/racas/racas-portuguesas/rafeiro-alentejo/
| ukcgroup =[[Guardian Dog Group]]
| kc2_name =
| ukcstd =http://www.ukcdogs.com/WebSite.nsf/Breeds/AlentejoMastiff
| kc2_std =
| fcistd = http://www.fci.be/Nomenclature/Standards/096g02-en.pdf
| note =
}}
}}
<!-- End Infobox Dogbreed info. Article Begins Here -->
The '''Rafeiro do Alentejo''' or '''Alentejo Mastiff''', also called the '''Portuguese Mastiff''', is a large [[dog breed|breed]] of [[dog]] that originated in [[Portugal]]. The Rafeiro do Alentejo is of the [[livestock guardian dog]] [[Dog type|type]], and the name refers to its area of origin, [[Alentejo]], in south-central Portugal. The word ''rafeiro'' means [[Mixed-breed dog|''mongrel'']] in Portuguese.


The '''{{lang|pt|Rafeiro do Alentejo|italic=no}}'''{{efn|name=a }} or '''Rafeiro Alentejano''' is a Portuguese [[dog breed|breed]] of [[flock guardian dog]]. It is named for its area of origin, the [[Alentejo]] region of southern Portugal.{{r|pugnetti|p=33}} It is recognised by the [[Clube Português de Canicultura]],{{r|cpc}} and was definitively accepted by the [[Fédération Cynologique Internationale]] in 1954.{{r|fci2}}
== Description ==


===Appearance===
== History ==
The Rafeiro is a very large dog, averaging 47.5&nbsp;kg (104.5&nbsp;lb) and 73&nbsp;cm (28.7&nbsp;in) at the [[withers]].<ref>[http://www.fci.be/uploaded_files/096gb2002_en.doc Fédération Cynologique Internationale Breed Standard]</ref> The head is described as bear-like. Eyes should be dark, never yellow. The ears are set medium high and fold downwards. The dog has a deep chest, and should have a general aspect of length (not ''whippety'', the standard says.)


The Rafeiro is a traditional [[flock guardian dog]] of the [[Alentejo]] region of southern Portugal. Dogs of this type were used to protect flocks during the biannual [[transhumance]] to high summer pastures in the mountains, and then back to the lowlands for the winter.{{r|fci}} In the late nineteenth century they began to be known as Rafeiro do Alentejo.{{r|dgav|p=253|fci|}} The earliest [[breed standard]] dates from 1953; the breed was definitively accepted by the [[Fédération Cynologique Internationale]] in the following year.{{r|fci2}}
The fur is short to medium, the same length all over, and can be black, yellow, and fawn (a light brown colour) with white markings, or white with other colours. The [[Coat (dog)|coat]] can be streaked or [[brindle]]d or dappled.


Among the marked economic and social changes in Portugal in the 1970s was the large-scale movement of people from rural areas to towns and cities, one consequence of which was an abrupt and significant decrease in pastoral farming.{{r|dgav|p=253}} Flock guardian dogs were no longer needed, and numbers of the Rafeiro fell sharply, to the point that by the early 1980s it was close to [[extinction]], with only a few dogs remaining in the hands of a small group of breeders.{{r|dgav|p=253}}
===Temperament===
The breed standard describes the breed as "sober" (meaning "marked by seriousness, gravity, or solemnity of conduct"<ref>The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition</ref>), his movement as slow and rolling, and as having a calm expression. Individual dogs may vary in behaviour and temperament, and puppies must be well socialized.


A [[breed club]], the {{lang|pt|italic=no|Associação dos Criadores do Rafeiro do Alentejo}}, was established in 1994 in [[Monforte, Portugal|Monforte]], in the [[District of Portalegre]]; it was a successor to an earlier club, the {{lang|pt|italic=no|Clube Português do Rafeiro do Alentejo}}.{{r|dgav|p=253|cpc2|acra}}. The society and the ''[[câmara municipal]]'' of Monforte jointly established a breeding centre for the dogs, the {{lang|pt|italic=no|Centro de Reprodução do Rafeiro do Alentejo}}, in the town.{{r|dgav|p=253}}
As with all very large dogs, they are not the dogs for beginners. Dogs of this size and type have the potential to be a danger to others if not well socialized at an early age, and are recommended only for the experienced dog handler who has the time to socialize and train the dog. This [[Mountain dog]] matures slowly, is very independent, and often does not respond to traditional force methods of dog [[obedience training]]. They are extremely territorial and will protect the sheep, households, and families they feel were placed under their protection. They are not aggressive but protective and are said to get along quite well with children.


In 2006 there were {{val|1165}} bitches registered in the [[stud-book]].{{r|sprega}} The area of distribution of the Rafeiro corresponds closely with the historic region of Alentejo, with the exception of areas closest to the Atlantic coast.{{r|sprega}}
==History==
Rafeiro do Alentejo are of the very ancient [[molosser]] [[Dog type|type]] that migrated with humans from Central Asia. When the dogs arrived in the Iberian Peninsula is not known; they may have come with nomads sometime in prehistory, or have been brought by the Romans when they ruled the area thousands of years ago. It is often supposed that the breed is related to the [[Tibetan Mastiff]], but no proof of this exists. Perhaps in the future, DNA evidence will prove when the dogs arrived and what their ancestry is, but for now there is no proof, only legends, guesswork, and speculation.


A dog of this breed named [[Bobi (dog)|Bobi]] was confirmed by [[Guinness World Records]] to be both the oldest living dog and the oldest dog ever, with a claimed age of 30 years and 226 days on 1 February 2023.{{r|bbc|guinness}} He died at the claimed age of 31 years and 165 days on 21 October 2023.{{r|bbc2}} Doubts about the claims were expressed by [[veterinary surgeon]]s, and Guinness opened an investigation; it found insufficient evidence of the age of the dog, and the records were annulled.{{r|guard|bbc3|guinness2}}
What is known is that this breed and the ancient types from which it descended have been used to move sheep from mountains in northern Portugal to the plateau of Alentejo and back to the mountain. Due to changes in agriculture and livestock raising, and the elimination of large predators, the breed ceased to have economic use and began to decline. [[Animal fancy|Fanciers]], however, have been able to keep the breed alive, although, in Portugal, it is still considered "vulnerable".<ref>{{pt icon}} [http://rafeirodoalentejo.net/main.htm Associação Dos Criadores Do Rafeiro Do Alentejo, official breed club for the Rafeiro do Alentejo in Portugal] Less than 5,000 females is considered vulnerable; the estimate is 1700 Rafeiro do Alentejo in 2002.</ref> Today the Rafeiro do Alentejo is most often kept as a [[Companion dog|companion]] and [[guard dog]].


== Characteristics ==
The Rafeiro do Alentejo (Alentejo Mastiff) is recognised by the [[Fédération Cynologique Internationale]] in Group 2, Section 2.2 Mastiffs, Mountain Type, Portugal (breed number 96). Other Portuguese breeds in Section 2.2 include the [[Cão da Serra da Estrela]] (number 173) and the [[Cão de Castro Laboreiro]], number 150.<ref>[http://www.fci.be/nomenclatures_detail.asp?lang=en&file=group2#section2 Fédération Cynologique Internationale Group 2, Section 2.2]</ref> The ''Associação Dos Criadores Do Rafeiro Do Alentejo'' is the official breed club for the Rafeiro do Alentejo in Portugal.<ref>[http://www.cpc.pt/?clubes/filiados Affiliated Clubs page of the Clube Português De Canicultura]</ref> Rafeiro do Alentejo are now included in the [[Foundation Stock Service]] of the [[American Kennel Club]] (as the Rafeiro do Alentejo) and fully recognised by the [[United Kennel Club]] in the United States, in the [[Guardian Dog Group]] (as the Alentejo Mastiff). It may also be sold by commercial breeders under the Rafeiro do Alentejo name or any of the various translations and English versions of the name, with registration by minor kennel clubs that require little to no breed verification for registration, or listed by internet-based dog registry businesses where it is promoted as a [[Rare breed (dog)|rare breed]] for those seeking a unique pet.


The Rafeiro is a large dog, slightly longer than it is tall, with a broad chest. The head is massive; the eyes are small and dark, the ears small, triangular and hanging. The coat is dense and straight, of short or medium length. It may be black, fawn, wolf grey or yellow, either brindled or not, but always with white markings; or may be white marked with these colours.{{r|fci}} It is not as thick as the coat of other [[pastoral dog]]s such as the [[Polish Tatra Sheepdog|Polish Tatra]].{{r|dh}}
== Health ==
Little data exists for health problems in this breed. However, when bred to be very oversize, they may be subject to [[Hip dysplasia (canine)|hip dysplasia]], and dogs with deep chests sometimes suffer from bloat.<ref>[http://www.scamperingpaws.com/health/dogbreeds.shtml Dog Breeds and Their Health Problems]</ref>


==See also==
== Use ==
* [[Pastoralism]]


The traditional use of the Rafeiro was as a [[flock guardian dog]], used to protect [[extensive farming|extensively-managed]] flocks from predators.{{r|dgav|p=253}} It was also used in hunting for [[game (hunting)|large game]]; historic photographs show that it was among the dogs in the hunting packs of [[Carlos I of Portugal|Carlos I]], who had a [[Ducal Palace of Vila Viçosa|palace]] in Alentejo.{{r|dgav|p=253}} In the twenty-first century the dogs are used to [[guard dog|guard]] farms and other property as well as flocks, and are also kept as [[companion animal]]s.{{r|dgav|p=253}}
==References==
{{reflist}}


==External links==
== Notes ==
{{notelist | refs=
<!--Editors: breed registry, club, rescue, and kennel information links are placed on DMOZ, not here-->
{{efn|name =a |{{IPA|pt|ʁɐˈfɐj.ɾu ðu ɐ.lẽˈtɛ.ʒu}}{{cn|date=September 2024}}}}
* [http://rafeirodoalentejo.net/origem.htm Origins of the Rafeiro do Alentejo (in Portuguese)]
}}
* [http://www.ambienteinsular.uac.pt/arquivo/abril2004/artigos3.htm Mitochondrial diversity of strains of Four Dog Breeds (in Portuguese) Biology Department, University of the Azores, retrieved 3 Oct 2008]

* [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0506405/]
== References ==
{{commonscat}}
{{reflist|45em|refs=

<ref name=acra>[http://www.acra.org.pt/1/a_acra_1193197.html A ACRA] (in Portuguese). Monforte, Portugal: Associação de Criadores do Rafeiro do Alentejo. Accessed May 2023.</ref>

<ref name=bbc>Kathryn Armstrong (3 February 2023). [https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-64507336 Bobi breaks Guinness World Record for oldest dog ever]. ''BBC News''. Accessed October 2023.</ref>

<ref name=bbc2>Kathryn Armstrong (23 October 2023). [https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-67194721 Bobi, the world's oldest dog ever, dies aged 31]. ''BBC News''. Accessed October 2023.</ref>

<ref name=bbc3>Ido Vock (22 February 2024). [https://web.archive.org/web/20240222150557/https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-68372456 Former world's oldest dog stripped of title]. ''BBC News''. Archived 22 February 2024.</ref>

<ref name=cpc>[https://www.cpc.pt/racas/racas-portuguesas/rafeiro-alentejo/ Rafeiro do Alentejo] (in Portuguese). Lisboa: Clube Português de Canicultura. Accessed May 2023.</ref>

<ref name=cpc2>[https://www.cpc.pt/o-cpc/clubes-filiados/ Clubes Filiados] (in Portuguese). Lisboa: Clube Português de Canicultura. Accessed May 2023.</ref>

<ref name=dgav>[s.n.] (2021). [https://web.archive.org/web/20240119034536/https://www.dgav.pt/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Catalogo-Oficial-Racas-Autoctones-Portuguesas.pdf ''Catálogo Oficial de Raças Autóctones Portuguesas''] (in Portuguese). Lisboa: Confederação dos Agricultores de Portugal; Direção-Geral de Alimentação e Veterinária. Archived 19 January 2024.</ref>

<ref name=dh>David Hancock (2014). [https://books.google.it/books?id=QijDBAAAQBAJ&pg=PT27&hl=en ''Dogs of the Shepherds: A Review of the Pastoral Breeds'']. Ramsbury, Marlborough: The Crowood Press. {{ISBN|9781847978097}}.</ref>

<ref name=fci>[http://www.fci.be/Nomenclature/Standards/096g02-en.pdf FCI-Standard N° 96: Rafeiro do Alentejo (Rafeiro of Alentejo)]. Thuin, Belgium: Thuin, Belgium: Fédération Cynologique Internationale. Accessed May 2023.</ref>

<ref name=fci2>[http://www.fci.be/en/nomenclature/RAFEIRO-OF-ALENTEJO-96.html Rafeiro do Alentejo (96)]. Fédération Cynologique Internationale. Accessed March 2020.</ref>

<ref name=guard>Kim Willsher (22 February 2024). [https://web.archive.org/web/20240222125051/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/feb/22/bobi-the-portuguese-mastiff-stripped-of-record-as-worlds-oldest-ever-dog Bobi the Portuguese mastiff stripped of record as world's oldest ever dog]. London: ''The Guardian''. Archived 22 February 2024.</ref>

<ref name=guinness>Sanj Atwal (2 February 2023). [https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/news/2023/2/oldest-dog-ever-record-broken-by-30-year-old-bobi-from-portugal-736224 Oldest dog EVER record broken by 30-year-old Bobi from Portugal]. London: Guinness World Records Limited. Accessed May 2023.</ref>

<ref name=guinness2>Vicki Newman (22 February 2024). [https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/news/2024/2/guinness-world-records-concludes-oldest-dog-ever-review-launched-after-bobis-dea-765022 Guinness World Records concludes oldest dog ever review launched after Bobi's death]. London: Guinness World Records Limited. Accessed May 2023.</ref>

<ref name=pugnetti>Gino Pugnetti, Elizabeth Meriwether Schuler (1980). [https://archive.org/details/simonschustersgu00pugn/page/33 ''Simon & Schuster's Guide to Dogs'']. New York; London; Toronto; Sydney; Tokyo; Singapore: Simon & Schuster. {{isbn|0671255274}}.</ref>

<ref name=sprega>[https://web.archive.org/web/20240917155111/https://sprega.com.pt/conteudo.php?idesp=c%E3es&idraca=Rafeiro%20Alentejano Cães – Raça Rafeiro Alentejano] (in Portuguese). Vale de Santarém: Sociedade Portuguesa de Recursos Genéticos Animais. Archived 17 September 2024.</ref>


}}


{{Portugese dogs}}
{{Portugese dogs}}
{{Pastoral dogs}}
{{Livestock guardians}}


[[Category:Dog breeds]]
[[Category:FCI breeds]]
[[Category:Dog breeds originating in Portugal]]
[[Category:Dog breeds originating in Portugal]]
[[Category:Molossers]]
[[Category:Livestock guardian dogs]]

[[Category:Livestock guardians]]

[[Category:Mountain dogs]]
{{bots|deny=Citation bot}}
[[Category:Rare dog breeds]]

Latest revision as of 13:11, 22 November 2024

Rafeiro do Alentejo
Other names
  • Rafeiro of Alentejo[1]
OriginPortugal
Traits
Height Males 66–74 cm (26–29 in)[1]
Females 64–70 cm (25–28 in)[1]
Weight Males 45–60 kg (99–132 lb)[1]
Females 35–50 kg (77–110 lb)[1]
Coat short to medium-length; straight, thick, dense
Colour yellow, fawn, brindle, wolf grey or black - always with white markings
Kennel club standards
Clube Português de Canicultura standard
Fédération Cynologique Internationale standard
Dog (domestic dog)

The Rafeiro do Alentejo[a] or Rafeiro Alentejano is a Portuguese breed of flock guardian dog. It is named for its area of origin, the Alentejo region of southern Portugal.[2]: 33  It is recognised by the Clube Português de Canicultura,[3] and was definitively accepted by the Fédération Cynologique Internationale in 1954.[1]

History

[edit]

The Rafeiro is a traditional flock guardian dog of the Alentejo region of southern Portugal. Dogs of this type were used to protect flocks during the biannual transhumance to high summer pastures in the mountains, and then back to the lowlands for the winter.[4] In the late nineteenth century they began to be known as Rafeiro do Alentejo.[5]: 253 [4] The earliest breed standard dates from 1953; the breed was definitively accepted by the Fédération Cynologique Internationale in the following year.[1]

Among the marked economic and social changes in Portugal in the 1970s was the large-scale movement of people from rural areas to towns and cities, one consequence of which was an abrupt and significant decrease in pastoral farming.[5]: 253  Flock guardian dogs were no longer needed, and numbers of the Rafeiro fell sharply, to the point that by the early 1980s it was close to extinction, with only a few dogs remaining in the hands of a small group of breeders.[5]: 253 

A breed club, the Associação dos Criadores do Rafeiro do Alentejo, was established in 1994 in Monforte, in the District of Portalegre; it was a successor to an earlier club, the Clube Português do Rafeiro do Alentejo.[5]: 253 [6][7]. The society and the câmara municipal of Monforte jointly established a breeding centre for the dogs, the Centro de Reprodução do Rafeiro do Alentejo, in the town.[5]: 253 

In 2006 there were 1165 bitches registered in the stud-book.[8] The area of distribution of the Rafeiro corresponds closely with the historic region of Alentejo, with the exception of areas closest to the Atlantic coast.[8]

A dog of this breed named Bobi was confirmed by Guinness World Records to be both the oldest living dog and the oldest dog ever, with a claimed age of 30 years and 226 days on 1 February 2023.[9][10] He died at the claimed age of 31 years and 165 days on 21 October 2023.[11] Doubts about the claims were expressed by veterinary surgeons, and Guinness opened an investigation; it found insufficient evidence of the age of the dog, and the records were annulled.[12][13][14]

Characteristics

[edit]

The Rafeiro is a large dog, slightly longer than it is tall, with a broad chest. The head is massive; the eyes are small and dark, the ears small, triangular and hanging. The coat is dense and straight, of short or medium length. It may be black, fawn, wolf grey or yellow, either brindled or not, but always with white markings; or may be white marked with these colours.[4] It is not as thick as the coat of other pastoral dogs such as the Polish Tatra.[15]

Use

[edit]

The traditional use of the Rafeiro was as a flock guardian dog, used to protect extensively-managed flocks from predators.[5]: 253  It was also used in hunting for large game; historic photographs show that it was among the dogs in the hunting packs of Carlos I, who had a palace in Alentejo.[5]: 253  In the twenty-first century the dogs are used to guard farms and other property as well as flocks, and are also kept as companion animals.[5]: 253 

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Portuguese pronunciation: [ʁɐˈfɐj.ɾu ðu ɐ.lẽˈtɛ.ʒu][citation needed]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g Rafeiro do Alentejo (96). Fédération Cynologique Internationale. Accessed March 2020.
  2. ^ Gino Pugnetti, Elizabeth Meriwether Schuler (1980). Simon & Schuster's Guide to Dogs. New York; London; Toronto; Sydney; Tokyo; Singapore: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0671255274.
  3. ^ Rafeiro do Alentejo (in Portuguese). Lisboa: Clube Português de Canicultura. Accessed May 2023.
  4. ^ a b c FCI-Standard N° 96: Rafeiro do Alentejo (Rafeiro of Alentejo). Thuin, Belgium: Thuin, Belgium: Fédération Cynologique Internationale. Accessed May 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h [s.n.] (2021). Catálogo Oficial de Raças Autóctones Portuguesas (in Portuguese). Lisboa: Confederação dos Agricultores de Portugal; Direção-Geral de Alimentação e Veterinária. Archived 19 January 2024.
  6. ^ Clubes Filiados (in Portuguese). Lisboa: Clube Português de Canicultura. Accessed May 2023.
  7. ^ A ACRA (in Portuguese). Monforte, Portugal: Associação de Criadores do Rafeiro do Alentejo. Accessed May 2023.
  8. ^ a b Cães – Raça Rafeiro Alentejano (in Portuguese). Vale de Santarém: Sociedade Portuguesa de Recursos Genéticos Animais. Archived 17 September 2024.
  9. ^ Kathryn Armstrong (3 February 2023). Bobi breaks Guinness World Record for oldest dog ever. BBC News. Accessed October 2023.
  10. ^ Sanj Atwal (2 February 2023). Oldest dog EVER record broken by 30-year-old Bobi from Portugal. London: Guinness World Records Limited. Accessed May 2023.
  11. ^ Kathryn Armstrong (23 October 2023). Bobi, the world's oldest dog ever, dies aged 31. BBC News. Accessed October 2023.
  12. ^ Kim Willsher (22 February 2024). Bobi the Portuguese mastiff stripped of record as world's oldest ever dog. London: The Guardian. Archived 22 February 2024.
  13. ^ Ido Vock (22 February 2024). Former world's oldest dog stripped of title. BBC News. Archived 22 February 2024.
  14. ^ Vicki Newman (22 February 2024). Guinness World Records concludes oldest dog ever review launched after Bobi's death. London: Guinness World Records Limited. Accessed May 2023.
  15. ^ David Hancock (2014). Dogs of the Shepherds: A Review of the Pastoral Breeds. Ramsbury, Marlborough: The Crowood Press. ISBN 9781847978097.