Did Alexander have a named Dog?
Moderator: pothos moderators
Did Alexander have a named Dog?
What were the Ancient Dogs like. Akin to wolves as nearly all doge to day are hybrids.
-
- Hetairos (companion)
- Posts: 401
- Joined: Tue Apr 25, 2006 5:07 am
- Location: US
jasonxx...google images of the Alexander Sarcophagus. There is at least one dog depicted in the beautiful carvings on the side. The hunting scene side. It's beneath a horse of one of the central characters.
It doesn't look very wolf-like though, reminds me of a cross between a greyhound and a huntin' dog type hound.
It doesn't look very wolf-like though, reminds me of a cross between a greyhound and a huntin' dog type hound.
-
- Hetairos (companion)
- Posts: 401
- Joined: Tue Apr 25, 2006 5:07 am
- Location: US
Hope that's not too big.
Last edited by athenas owl on Sat Jan 27, 2007 4:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Hetairos (companion)
- Posts: 401
- Joined: Tue Apr 25, 2006 5:07 am
- Location: US
- smittysmitty
- Hetairos (companion)
- Posts: 490
- Joined: Thu Oct 09, 2003 1:08 pm
- Location: Australia
The tomb frieze allegedly depicting Philip and Alexander also displays similar dogs.
By the way I think the dogs name was actually 'Rusty'.
You guys are really impressing me these days - we can now get pictures uploaded on the forum. Fantastic I reckon!
I won't bother asking how you do that, the qouting process still has me baffled
cheers!
By the way I think the dogs name was actually 'Rusty'.
You guys are really impressing me these days - we can now get pictures uploaded on the forum. Fantastic I reckon!


cheers!
Hi guys,
I always thought that Peritas would look like the statue in the Hellenistic room of the British Museum. Nothing like a greyhound, but more like a thin St. Bernard: hairy, muscular and (probably, because I don't know the scale of the statue) quite big. I think that it is a Molossian dog.
I'm not claiming it is Alexander's dog or even of the same race, but the fact that both Alexander's and this dog's statues are so close to each other, probably made my mind accept the association!
Best,
Alejandro
I always thought that Peritas would look like the statue in the Hellenistic room of the British Museum. Nothing like a greyhound, but more like a thin St. Bernard: hairy, muscular and (probably, because I don't know the scale of the statue) quite big. I think that it is a Molossian dog.
I'm not claiming it is Alexander's dog or even of the same race, but the fact that both Alexander's and this dog's statues are so close to each other, probably made my mind accept the association!
Best,
Alejandro
-
- Pezhetairos (foot soldier)
- Posts: 49
- Joined: Tue Oct 17, 2006 5:49 am
Peritas
Greetings All,
I hope you will enjoy exploring these sites.. just a quick overview of possibilities and wishful thinking... (Laughing) If I recall correctly, there were three primary dog types: the heavier Molosser type, a hunting type dog and a smaller coursing type.
Statue:
http://www2.flickr.com/photos/441243246 ... 109921560/
Mosaic:
http://penelope.uchicago.edu/~grout/enc ... ssian.html
A Greek breeder's site:
http://www.moloss.com/breeds/stuvx/s005/
Molloser breeds today
http://www.bulldoginformation.com/molos ... -dogs.html
http://www.moloss.com/001/ptxt/breed.html
A few breed pages claiming descent:
http://us.iams.com/iams/en_US/jsp/IAMS_ ... emast.html
http://us.iams.com/iams/en_US/jsp/IAMS_ ... pmast.html
http://www.dogbreedinfo.com/nebolishmastiff.htm
A bit of history:
http://penelope.uchicago.edu/~grout/enc ... canes.html
http://www.bulldoginformation.com/molos ... story.html
An earlier Pothos response I found:
We don't know what breed of dog Peritas was. The Molossians were famous for their mastiffs, not greyhounds. Many dog breeds claim to be the one Peritas belonged too, including numerous Greyhound sites. All we know is that it was a favorite dog that he raised by hand and was named after the Macedonian month of January. For those wondering what a Molossian mastiff would look like, a close representation would be an Anatolian Shepherd, i.e. a mastiff people haven't messed with too much yet (but they're beginning). As for lion hunting, that would be a use of the typical hunting dog (altho in Macedon they'd get tested against boar) and there are numerous stories of Alexander encountering hunting dogs in India. To get an idea of the typical 'hound' of the time in Macedon, see the Stag Hunt mosiac from Pella, where we have a 35-45 lb. 'yellow Pariah Dog type' , i.e. not unlike a Dingo, your classic domestic dog gone wild, i.e. to be larger would be inefficient.
I hope you will enjoy exploring these sites.. just a quick overview of possibilities and wishful thinking... (Laughing) If I recall correctly, there were three primary dog types: the heavier Molosser type, a hunting type dog and a smaller coursing type.
Statue:
http://www2.flickr.com/photos/441243246 ... 109921560/
Mosaic:
http://penelope.uchicago.edu/~grout/enc ... ssian.html
A Greek breeder's site:
http://www.moloss.com/breeds/stuvx/s005/
Molloser breeds today
http://www.bulldoginformation.com/molos ... -dogs.html
http://www.moloss.com/001/ptxt/breed.html
A few breed pages claiming descent:
http://us.iams.com/iams/en_US/jsp/IAMS_ ... emast.html
http://us.iams.com/iams/en_US/jsp/IAMS_ ... pmast.html
http://www.dogbreedinfo.com/nebolishmastiff.htm
A bit of history:
http://penelope.uchicago.edu/~grout/enc ... canes.html
http://www.bulldoginformation.com/molos ... story.html
An earlier Pothos response I found:
We don't know what breed of dog Peritas was. The Molossians were famous for their mastiffs, not greyhounds. Many dog breeds claim to be the one Peritas belonged too, including numerous Greyhound sites. All we know is that it was a favorite dog that he raised by hand and was named after the Macedonian month of January. For those wondering what a Molossian mastiff would look like, a close representation would be an Anatolian Shepherd, i.e. a mastiff people haven't messed with too much yet (but they're beginning). As for lion hunting, that would be a use of the typical hunting dog (altho in Macedon they'd get tested against boar) and there are numerous stories of Alexander encountering hunting dogs in India. To get an idea of the typical 'hound' of the time in Macedon, see the Stag Hunt mosiac from Pella, where we have a 35-45 lb. 'yellow Pariah Dog type' , i.e. not unlike a Dingo, your classic domestic dog gone wild, i.e. to be larger would be inefficient.
-
- Strategos (general)
- Posts: 1229
- Joined: Sat Jul 13, 2002 5:31 pm
- Location: Vancouver B.C. Canada
Dogs in Alexander's time
There's a beautiful sculpture of a dog in the Acropolis museum in Athens. Life size and life-like. I go to see it every time I'm there and spend a bit of time looking at it. I'm a dog lover, so interested in this sort of thing. They actually found a tomb for a dog when they were building the new Syntagma underground station.
I agree with the descriptions of the Molossion hounds. I would imagine them to be very powerful, not slender and sleek like greyhounds.
I agree with the descriptions of the Molossion hounds. I would imagine them to be very powerful, not slender and sleek like greyhounds.
- marcus
- Somatophylax
- Posts: 4871
- Joined: Fri Aug 16, 2002 7:27 am
- Location: Nottingham, England
- Has thanked: 45 times
- Been thanked: 3 times
This is a Molossian Hound
I popped myself up to the British Museum today, and took this photo of a 2nd century sculpture of a Molossian hound. It's the one Alejandro referred to in an earlier post. I don't know if it was lifesize - I suspect it was larger than life, because it is colossal - 3.5 to 4 feet tall, if not bigger ... a real Hound of the Baskervilles!ruthaki wrote:I agree with the descriptions of the Molossion hounds. I would imagine them to be very powerful, not slender and sleek like greyhounds.
ATB