The history of the Dogo Argentino and the two brothers who created
the breed is as colorful and passionate as the history of Argentina
itself. Antonio Nores Martinez was not quite 18 years old and
Agustin a year younger in 1925 when Antonio first conceived and took
the first step in his vision of a big game hound created
specifically for the varied and rugged Argentine countryside.
"I still remember as if it were yesterday... the day when my brother
Antonio told me for the first time his idea of creating a new breed
of dog for big game, for which he was going to take advantage of the
extraordinary braveness of the Fighting Dog of Cordoba. Mixing them
with other breeds which would give them height, a good sense of
smell, speed, hunting instinct and, more than anything else deprive
them of that fighting eagerness against other dogs, which made them
useless for pack hunting. A mix that would turn them into sociable
dogs, capable of living in freedom, in families and on estates,
keeping the great courage of the primitive breed, but applied to a
useful and noble end; sport hunting and vermin control." - Agustin
Nores Martinez, History Of The Dogo Argentino
The "Fighting Dog of Cordoba"
It is important to point out that the Fighting Dog of Cordoba, a
breed established in that area consisting of Mastiff, English
Bulldog, Bull Terrier, and Boxer, is now extinct. Much of the early
work on the new breed was devoted to eliminating the fighting
eagerness and developing the hunting instinct. An effort that was
essential and highly successful.
The formula Antonio started was:
1) The Fighting Dog of Cordoba, to which
he added blood from..
2) The Pointer to give him a keen sense of smell which would be
essential for the hunt.
3) The Boxer added vivacity and gentleness
4) The Great Dane it's size
5) The Bull Terrier, fearlessness
6) The Bulldog gave it an ample chest and boldness
7) The Irish Wolfhound brought it's instinct as a hunter of wild
game
8) The Dogue de Bordeaux contributed it's powerful jaws
9) The Great Pyrenees it's white coat and
10) The Spanish Mastiff gave it's quota of power
The brothers gathered ten Cordoban bitches as their nucleus and
began bringing in the first of the contributing breeds as studs
until the early offspring showed promise in the desired direction.
At a certain point in the program they had as many as thirty bitches
in their care. This undertaking would not have been possible for two
young men still in school had it not been for the help given them by
their family and friends of their father. The senior Martinez hired
a kennel man to care for the dogs while Antonio and Agustin were in
school and the brothers spent all their pocket money on food for the
dogs. They were also helped by food donations given by their
father's friends. Such help was gladly accepted by the brothers in
those early years but the dream and the plan on how to make it a
reality was Antonio's. His was the genius that guided the program
and Agustin was always at his side. Later in life when Antonio
became a respected surgeon, his medical knowledge improved and
refined his dream. He wrote the first standard for the new breed in
1928. Sadly Antonio never lived to see his dream become reality. He
was killed by a man who intended to rob him during a boar hunt in
1956. Agustin then took over the dream, working on the new breed,
bringing it back from near devastation and moving the headquarters
for the breed from Cordoba to Esquel, located in Patagonia in
southern Argentina. Agustin Nores Martinez was the Argentine
Ambassador to Canada and he used this opportunity of travel to
spread Dogos throughout the world. Big game hunters in Argentina and
it's neighboring countries were using the Dogo on boar and puma. The
Dogo Argentino was fast becoming a legend.
The Dogo Argentino is an endurance hound much like his Irish
Wolfhound ancestor. He is expected to track the wild boar across
vast pampas, corner the animal and attack and hold it for the
hunters. He is capable of dazzling bursts of speed for short
distances, but his forte is covering long distances at a gallop
(hence the arched loins to give impetus at the gallop). Having
cornered the boar, he must have enough strength in reserve to attack
and hold a wild boar weighing up to 400 pounds. In a traditional
boar hunt the hunter will jump on the boar and kill it with a knife
thrust to the heart while the Dogo's are locked on with a death
grip.
In A Brief History of the Argentinean Bulldog, by Agustin Nores
Martinez, as translated from the original Spanish:
"I feel as a conscience imperative to make absolutely clear, which
is the bulldog's background, the breeds that took part, what is what
we intended to do, and which are the requirements or conditions that
a bulldog must meet to be a typical example of the breed. This
present extension, is a ratification of what was written in my first
book. The fears I point to in the prologue to the four editions are
confirmed a lot of times, when we see young people who ten years ago
had never seen a bulldog, taking the part of "judges" in
exhibitions, and who seemed to dream with "an own bulldog" awarding
specimens which are far away indeed from what a good bulldog must
be, as my brother Antonio and I intended in fifty long years of work
and achievements.
To the enthusiasts and honest judges, who really want to know what
the bulldog must be like is dedicated this knew (sic) book
containing the objective history, step by step about how the bulldog
was achieved and the extensive glossary of the standard that I make
in chapter XV of this book. To the others, those who mix the bulldog
with the Bullterrier to make them of lower height and weight,
fighters against their own kind is not this book addressed, but a
piece of advice: To devote themselves to the breeding of the
Bullterrier in any of it's two varieties - White and Color
Bullterrier, or the Stafford terrier (sic) - breeds which were
created for fights, really noble animals, by the way, of
extraordinary courage to fight against on another and with those
dogs, let their low instincts loose if that is what they want, but,
for God's sake!, do not spoil a breed which was made, after great
sacrifices to be useful for mankind.
Since 1937 - more than forty years ago - a group of enthusiasts
have been developing in Patagonia, with real sacrifice, the hunting
instinct of the bulldog and trying to take away from them the
ancestral fighting eagerness."
On the other hand, a few generations of bulldogs fighting between
them will have make (sic) it involutionate, and we have painfully
confirmed it already, to the useless Cordovan fight dog, insociable
with it's own kind, harmful for domestic animals an (sic) useless as
hunters or watching dogs. Happily there is, both in the country and
them for big game or they train them as watch - dogs, with which
each generation will gradually improve and coming nearer and nearer
to the goal we intended more than half a century ago." - Agustin
Nores Martinez,
The Dogo Argentino was recognized by the Cinologic Federation of
Argentina and the Argentina Rural Society in 1964. The Argentina
Kennel Club, a member of the Federation Cynologique International
(FCI) recognized the breed on July 31, 1973.
Undoubtedly a big game hound, the attributes of the parent breeds
also give versatility. Early on in Argentina the Dogo was used for
obedience, military, police work and as guides for the blind. Much
has been said about the Dogo's courage and tenacity in the field, an
honestly inherited trait courtesy of the Bulldog. However, this same
courage and single mindedness of purpose gives rise to a great
sensitivity and kindness towards humans especially the youngest and
those most in need.
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