HISTORY OF THE ALABAI BREED
The Central Asian Sheep-Dog, Turkmen Wolfhound or Alabai is one of the most
ancient breeds of dogs.
Military collisions, necessity of protection of
settlements gave a push to usage of dogs for guard and fighting. This fact has
started dog's selection by physical data from shepherd's dogs. In this way an
early "mastiff similar" dogs were intended not only for persecution of animals
and support of herds appeared, but also for protection of the person and
protection of dwelling. The term "mastiff similar" unites group of breeds that
begin the origin from Tibetan Shepherd's and sentry dogs.
For the first
time this dog was described by hunt-writer Yuate in 1845 under the name of
Tibetan mastiff. The Tibetan mastiff is large, rough and crude dog, with
enormous force, heavy and short head, a wide muzzle and crude lips. Far
ancestors of the Tibetan mastiff - large wolf similar dogs. The earliest mention
of the Tibetan mastiff was at 1121 B.C. when one of them, training for search of
people has been presented to the Chinese emperor.
From Tibet these dogs
have got to Mongolia, Mesopotamia and Central Asia. Having got mixed up with a
local livestock the Tibetan mastiffs have lost long wool and became more
homogeneous painting but the main features were kept (large growth, rough
combining, massive head with a volumetric rather short muzzle). The closest
descendant of the Tibetan mastiff is the Mongolian sheep-dog. It is a large dog:
growth of dogs - 75cm, females are lower, powerful skeleton, a wide breast.
Mongolian Sheep-Dog is malice, active; with an advanced sentry reflexes. Tibetan
mastiff and the Kirghiz sheep-dog have very close descriptions. Journal "Dog's
breeding" (1929, #7) in Tkachenko's article: "The Kirghiz sheep-dog is large
wolf-similar dog of powerful combining. It is possessing perfectly advanced
instinct of protection. It is affectionate to the owner; it perfectly grazes
herds of rams and protects them from the steppe wolf. As this description shows
the Kirghiz Sheep-Dog is the descendant of the ancient Asian mastiff-similar
dogs with the blood of the local dogs".
Our Central Asian Sheep-Dogs are
also descendants of the ancient mastiff similar dogs. The population of those
areas of Central Asia where were engaged in cattle breeding concerned to a dogs
very well. In hierarchy the dog was right after the domestic cattle that were
their basic riches.
Professor, academician of the Kazakh Academy of
sciences S.N.Bogolyubsky was one of the first scientists studying the Central
Asian sheep-dog. In 1927 he has published in the journal "Dog breeding and
training" №15 article "Concerning the shepherd's dogs of Turkmenistan ". The
Central Asian sheep-dog or Alabai is the breed developed during the most ancient
times in conditions of extensive "subsistence economy" at "unconscious natural
selection by methods of national selection".
The name Central Asian
(Turkmen) Sheep-Dog meets in 1935. In a number of exhibition catalogues this dog
refers to as the Turkestani sheep-dog, but probably with abolition of the name
Turkestan and introduction of the term Central Asia, the Turkestani sheep-dog is
renamed in Central Asian. It has taken place by the end of 40th years,
A.P.Mazover thought, that most the best livestock, with the purest and
homogeneous type is concentrated in Turkmenistan. The best Turkmen dogs are
rough and strong type with short or average length, rough and dense
wool.
Dogs of Tadjikistan are cruder with a friable folded skin. In
Uzbekistan also are numerous livestock of the Central Asian Sheep-Dog. Outside
the former USSR the Central Asian sheep-dogs (or as it name in Turkmenistan -
Alabai) are distributed in Afghanistan, Northern Pakistan, Northern States of
India, East Iran. In each of these regions breed has got the special specific
features. To show a special role of Turkmen people in cultivation and selections
of Alabai, it is necessary to name a dog Turkmen Alabai.
In 1947
A.P.Mazover wrote: "The Central Asian sheep-dog has very well kept
characteristic for the Tibetan dogs muzzle that wide at the basis and on the end
which at the further culture of cultivation was transformed in peculiar mastiff
and further to bulldogs and boxers. Thus the Central Asian Sheep-Dog (Alabai) is
the closest to the initial form of the Tibetan mastiff after the Mongolian
Sheep-Dog".
From the book "Domestic breeds of dogs"
Kalinin,
Ivanova, Morozova Moscow, 1992г.
Head Types Within All Standards
Classic Brick Head - The most Common in the Breed. Do you see the brick as in his
muzzle.
Bear Head -
More cheeky, More Stop. Looks like Grizzly Bear.
Wedge Head - Almost No Stop, Longer
Muzzle, type often confused with a none existent "horse head"