Scottish Dunface Explained

Scottish Dunface
Country:Scotland
Facecolour:brown

The Scottish Dunface, Old Scottish Short-wool, Scottish Whiteface[1] or Scottish Tanface was a type of sheep from Scotland. It was one of the Northern European short-tailed sheep group, and it was probably similar to the sheep kept throughout the British Isles in the Iron Age. By the mid-nineteenth century it had mostly been displaced by the Scottish Blackface and it became extinct on the mainland of Scotland in the late nineteenth century. However, several local types of Dunface survived on islands around Scotland, giving rise to or contributing to existing breeds including the Shetland, North Ronaldsay, Hebridean and Boreray.

Characteristics

The Scottish Dunface was a short-tailed sheep with short, fine wool. Its face was often brownish, and its fleece could be various colours: white, black, brown or dun. In most varieties the ewes were polled and the males horned,[2] but in Hebridean populations all animals were horned, often having two or even more pairs.[3]

History

The sheep kept throughout the British Isles up to the Iron Age were small, variable in colour and short-tailed. From Roman times onwards these were progressively displaced in Britain, first by white-faced sheep with longer tails, and later by long-tailed, black-faced, horned sheep.

The short-tailed Iron Age sheep survived in the Scottish Highlands and Islands as the Dunface, and by the latter part of the 18th century this was still the only type of sheep found in that area.[4] However, over the following century the Dunface continued to be displaced by long-tailed sheep: the Scottish Blackface and the Cheviot. The last flock of Dunface sheep on the mainland of Scotland is believed to have died out near Inverness about 1880.[5] After this the descendants of the Dunface survived only on remote islands (St Kilda, Shetland and Orkney) and as ornamental animals in parks.

Dunface sheep gave rise to or contributed to several modern breeds:

The Dunface was similar in origin and appearance to several other short-tailed sheep of the British Isles. These include the Manx Loaghtan of the Isle of Man,[6] and the extinct Kerry Mountain and Cladagh of western Ireland.[7]

Husbandry

Dunface sheep were kept in small flocks, tended during the day by a boy or girl, then housed at night. Fine fleeces were valued.[8]

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=zrzt7S8YesIC Trow-Smith, Robert (1959), A History of British Livestock Husbandry 1700–1900, Routledge and Kegan Paul, pp 122, 148.
  2. Hall, Stephen J. G. and Clutton-Brock, Juliet (1989), Two Hundred Years of British Farm Livestock, British Museum (Natural History),, pp. 102, 111
  3. https://archive.org/details/b30545225 Macaulay, Kenneth (1764), The History of St Kilda, Becket, T. and De Hondt, P. A., London, p. 129
  4. [George Culley|Culley, George]
  5. Book: Trow-Smith, Robert. A History of British Livestock Husbandry, 1700-1900. Taylor & Francis. 2005-11-03. 9780415381123. en.
  6. Kinsman D (2001), Black Sheep of Windermere: A History of the St Kilda or Hebridean Sheep. Windy Hall Publications. pp. 101–144.
  7. http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1297-9686-13-4-381.pdf Ryder, M. L. (1981), "A survey of European primitive breeds of sheep", Ann. Génét. Sél. Anim., 13 (4), pp. 381–418.
  8. Ryder, M. L. (1983), Sheep and Man. Duckworth, London (quoted in Adalsteinsson, Stefan (2000), 1000 Years of Sheep in Shetland: lecture to Shetland Sheep 2000 Conference.)