close

Your Cart is currently empty.
Shopping Cart
Add Site to FavoritesAdd Page to FavoritesMake HomepageShare This PageEmail This PagePrint This PageSave Page as PDF
  • Banner Advertisements
  • Banner Advertisements
  • Banner Advertisements
  • Banner Advertisements
PDFPrintE-mail


Africanis
View Full-Size Image


Africanis


Call for Pricing


Nicknames

:

African Dog
Bantu Dog
Hottentot Hunting Dog
Khoikhoi Dog
Kafir Dog
Zulu Dog
Umbwa Wa Ki-Shenzi

Country of origin

:

South Africa


Trait :-

     


Classification & standards :-
Not recognized by any major kennel club


Description :-
The Africanis is a group of South African dogs not recognised as a breed. It is believed to be of ancient origin, directly descended from hounds and pariah dogs of ancient Africa, introduced into the Nile Valley from the Levant. The Swahili name for the breed is umbwa wa ki-shenzi meaning common or mongrel or "traditional dog". Africanis is also an umbrella name for all the aboriginal dogs in southern Africa.


Appeareance

:

The Africanis is a short-coated, medium-sized dog, well-muscled and slightly longer than tall. It can be of any colour and occasionally come with a ridgeback. The Africanis has over the years been shaped by Africa for Africa. Its beauty is embodied in the simplicity and functionality of its body. It is slenderly built, agile, supple, and capable of great speed.

Temperament

:

The Africanis is well disposed without being obtrusive: a friendly dog showing watchful territorial behaviour. The breed is independent and territorial, but highly trainable.


Health :-

The Africanis needs neither pampering nor special food. It is consistently healthy and has, over the years, developed a natural resistance against internal and external parasites.


History

:

There is ample evidence that no  canine  domestication took place in Africa and that the traditional African dog is a descendant of dogs that had been domesticated in the  East and came to Africa. Their earliest presence has been established in  Egypt and dated at 4700 BC.  Archaeological records show that, from then on, the dog spread rapidly along the  Nile into  Sudan and even beyond. At the same time, migrations, trade, and  transhumance took it deep into the  Sahara. By 2000 BC, this moving frontier stopped for a long period. Meanwhile, throughout the Egyptian dynasties, the breeding of swift and slender hounds together with a variety of common dogs became very popular.

For thousands of years, the aboriginal  Stone Age San ( Bushman) populations in  Southern Africa hunted without the help of dogs. Although the  Khoikhoi brought domestic  sheep along a western migratory route to the  Cape of Good Hope just before the  Christian era, there is no conclusive evidence that dogs were part of their party.

The domestic dog first arrived in Southern Africa with the migration of the Early  Iron Age  Bantu speaking people. Dogs of  Nilotic origin consecutively joined the Early and also Later Iron Age migrations. It is generally accepted that these migrations travelled along the  Central Rift and the  Lacustrine region. They followed  tsetse-free corridors through  Zambia and  Zimbabwe to reach  Botswana and finally South Africa. The earliest evidence for the presence of a domestic dog in South Africa has been established by Dr. Ina Plug, deputy director of the  Transvaal  Museum. The remains were found near the Botswana border and dated at 570 AD. By 650 AD the presence of the house dog is established in the Lower  Thukela valley. By 800 AD it is part of a  Khoisan settlement in  Cape St. Francis, indicating that contact and trade between Bantu and Khoisan had been established.

For hundreds of years this exclusive primitive canine gene pool adapted to various conditions of the Southern African landscape and, through natural selection, evolved into ecotypes all belonging to the same  landrace. It is sometimes argued that dogs brought by the  Arab trade, Eastern seafarers, and  Portuguese explorers might, over the years, have "contaminated" the traditional African dog. In other opinions, these chances are scant. Exotic canine influences became more likely after the colonisation of  Transkei and  Zululand during the 19th century.

The true Africanis is still found today in tribal areas where people maintain their traditional lifestyle. The fast-changing South Africa and the impact that this causes on rural societies, together with a certain disdain for the traditional dog and the status that the ownership of an exotic breed provides, poses an increasing threat to the continuation of the aboriginal Africanis. The  Africanis Society of Southern Africa was founded to conserve this ancient gene pool. Conserving the Africanis as a land race stands for conserving  biodiversity.

Today, the Africanis is recognized by the  Kennel Union of Southern Africa (KUSA) as an emerging breed.


Availability

In Stock: 3

Usually ships in:

1-4w.gif

:

:

:

:


Customer Reviews:

There are yet no reviews for this product.
Please log in to write a review.





Herding Dog Breeds

Herding Dog Breeds (0)


Hound Dog Breeds

Hound Dog Breeds (0)


Mixed Dog Breeds

Mixed Dog Breeds (0)


Non-Sporting Dog Breeds

Non-Sporting Dog Breeds (0)


Sporting Dog Breeds

Sporting Dog Breeds (0)


Terrier Dog Breeds

Terrier Dog Breeds (0)


Toy Dog Breeds

Toy Dog Breeds (0)


Working Dog Breeds

Working Dog Breeds (0)




Support

Email Subscriber

Mail Format: