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The Partnership of Dog and Human
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The Partnership of Dog and Human
Authorities agree that the dog was the first of man's domesticated animals.  
How and when this domestication took place, however, remains unknown.  
A 50,000-year-old cave painting in Europe seems to show a dog like animal
hunting with men.  But most experts believe the dog was domesticated only
within the last 15,000 years.  Moreover, fossil remains that would
substantiate the presence of dogs with humans have not yet been unearthed
for periods earlier than about 10,000 BC.  One theory holds that humans
took wolf pups back to their camp or cave, reared them, allowed the tame
wolves to hunt with them, and later accepted pups of the tame wolves into
the family circle.  Another theory suggests that dogs were attracted to food
scraps dumped as waste near human living sites.  As they scavenged and
kept the site clean, the dogs rendered a service to the humans.  In turn, the
humans would accept the presence of the scavengers and would not drive
them away.  Still other theories maintain that the dog was domesticated to
pull sleds and other conveyances bearing the heavy game killed by humans,
to provide a ready source of food, or to act as a sacrificial animal for
magical or religious purposes.

Studies of primitive human societies still in existence tend to substantiate
some of these theories.  Whatever the ultimate reason for the
domestication of the dog, however, the final submission must have been
the consequence of thousands of years of caution and "deliberation" by the
dog before it would cast its lot with humans.  Also, the dog, itself a hunter,
had to suppress its desire to kill the other animals domesticated by humans.  
Instead, it had to learn to protect them.

Some feral dogs live today; that is, they have returned to the wild state.  
The dingo of Australia, for example, spends only a portion of its time with
humans.  When the mating urge seizes it, the dog runs off to the wild.  
Another, the dhole of India, is reputed to be a fierce, untamable dog.

The partnership between dog and master has long been shown in paintings
and other art forms and in writings.  Prehistoric paintings done about 15,000
years ago on the wals of Spanish caves show doglike animals accompanying
humans on a hunt.  Dogs are amply illustrated in the sculptures and pottery
of ancient Assyria, Egypt, and Greece.  The ancient Egyptians worshiped
Anubis as the god of death.  Anubis was portrayed with the head of a jackal
or a dog.  The Egyptians were great lovers of dogs and were responsible for
developing many breed by crossing dogs with jackals, wolves, and foxes.

Homer, the Greek author of the 'Odyssey' in the 9th century BC, is believed
to be one of the first to write about dogs.  They were mentioned often in
his classic epic.  The ancient Greeks believed that the gates of the
underworld were guarded by a savage three-headed dog named Cerberus.  
The belief might have been derived from the widespread practice in
Greece of using watchdogs.  The ancient Romans relied on watchdogs, too.  
So many dogs were kept in the larger Roman cities that any house with a
watchdog was required to have a sign warning "Cave Canem" (Beware the
Dog).  The Romans also used dogs for military purposes, some as attack dogs
and some as messengers.

During the 400 years of the Han Dynasty of China, which began in the 3rd
century BC, dogs were portrayed in many pieces of pottery.  These were
effigy pieces that symbolized the burial of favored dogs with their masters.
 Toy dogs were also popular among the ancient Chinese: the little animals
were used to provide warmth when carried in the wide sleeves of their
gowns.

Many of the European hound breeds were developed in the Middle Ages,
when coursing was popular with the nobility.  In coursing, the prey is
pursued until exhausted.  Then it is killed .  Coursing was eventually
replaced by fox hunting, which was considered less cruel.

Throughout the years dogs have been bred for many reasons, such as for
hunting, for herding, and for guarding.  Breed histories and pedigrees,
however, were not methodically compiled until the 19th century with the
establishment of the first kennel clubs.  The world's firs dog show took place
in Great Britain in 1859.  The first all-breeds show in the United States was
held in Detroit, Mich. in 1875, although Chicago, ILL was the site a year
earlier of a show exclusively for sporting dogs.  In 1884 the AKC was
organized in New York City.  Today's breeds are a standardization of the
desirable traits of the older breeds, especially those characteristics that
have proved useful over the centuries.  Dog breeders try to perpetuate
those traits while maintaining a friendly disposition in a dog, a trait so
important for a family pet.

People have been amply repaid for this long partnership and rapport with
the dog.  Care and love have been exchanged for loyalty, companionship,
and fun.