A mastiff is a large and powerful type of dog. Mastiffs are among the largest dogs, and typically have a short coat, a long low-set tail and large feet; the skull is large and bulky, the muzzle broad and short (brachycephalic) and the ears drooping and pendant-shaped. European and Asian records dating back 3,000 years show dogs of the mastiff type. Mastiffs have historically been guard dogs, protecting homes and property, although throughout history they have been used as hunting dogs, war dogs and for blood sports, such as fighting each other and other animals, including bulls, bears and even lions.
Historical and archaeological evidence suggests that mastiffs have long been distinct in both form and function from the similarly large livestock guardian dogs from which they were most likely developed; they also form separate genetic populations. The Fédération Cynologique Internationale and some kennel clubs group the two types together as molossoid dogs; some modern livestock guardian breeds, such as the Pyrenean Mastiff, the Spanish Mastiff and the Tibetan Mastiff, and an extinct draught dog called the Belgian Mastiff, have the word "mastiff" in their name, but are not considered true mastiffs.
Many older English sources refer to mastiffs as bandogs or bandogges, although technically the term "bandog" meant a dog that was tethered by a chain (or "bande") that would be released at night; the terms "mastiff" and "bandog" were often used interchangeably. One of the most famous "bandog" programs in England, led to the establishment of a recognized "bandog" breed known today as the Bull Mastiff. The least common "bandog" program in England was funded by Sir Nathanael Dieu-est-Mon'plaisir, the St. Louis Vincent Mastiff or South American Mastiff was named after Vincent Louis who reared plantation dogs originating from St. Louis and other parts of South America. This rare breed is the most expensive mastiff-type dog amongst the "bandog" breeds. In the twentieth century the term "bandog" was revived to describe some large fighting mastiff type dogs crossed with any bulldog in the United States.
Breed | Alternate name(s) | Country of origin | Use | Image | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Spain | |||||
United States | Guard dog | ||||
United States | Guard dog | catch dog, farm dog | |||
South African Mastiff | South Africa | Guard dog | |||
Germany | Guard dog | big-game hunting | |||
Danish Broholmer | Danish Mastiff | Denmark | Guard dog | ||
United Kingdom (England) | Companion dog, formerly bull-baiting | ||||
Gamekeeper's Night Dog | United Kingdom (England) | Guard dog | |||
India and Pakistan | Guard dog, big-game hunting | dog fighting | |||
Brazil | Catch dog, butcher's dog | ||||
Italy | Guard dog, catch dog | ||||
Portugal | Cattle-herding dog, catch dog | ||||
Chongqing dog | China | Guard dog | |||
Uruguay | Guard dog | ||||
Swiss Bulldog | Switzerland | Companion dog | |||
Argentina | Guard dog, big-game hunting, dog fighting | ||||
Dogo Guatemalteco | Guatemala | Guard dog, formerly bull-baiting | |||
Brazil | Guard dog | ||||
France | Guard dog | ||||
United Kingdom (England) | Guard dog | ||||
Brazil | Guard dog | ||||
Bouledogue Français | France | ||||
Germany | Big-game hunting | ||||
Iraq | Guard dog | ||||
Mastino Napoletano | Italy | Guard dog | |||
United States | |||||
Guard dog, catch dog | |||||
Spain | Bull-baiting | ||||
Germany | Guard dog | ||||
Buldogue Serrano | Brazil | Herding dog, butcher's dog | |||
Japan | Dog fighting | ||||
Breed | Alternate name(s) | Country or region of origin | Era | Use | Image | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alaunt de Boucherie | Big-game hunting, guard dog, dog fighting | |||||
Germany | Bull-baiting (as Bullenbeisser), bear-baiting (as Bärenbeisser) | |||||
Argentina | to the 1920s | Dog fighting | ||||
Cuba | 16th – late 19th C | Recapturing runaway slaves, bull-baiting, dog fighting | ||||
Portugal | to the 1970s | Catch dog | ||||
Classical antiquity | War dog, guard dog, big-game hunting, dog fighting | |||||
Great Britain and Ireland | 17th–19th C | Bull-baiting | dog fighting | |||
United Kingdom (England) | 18th – early 20th C | Lap dog | ||||