STANDARD

Accueil ADULTS PUPPIES CHAMPIONS STUDS STANDARD

FCI-Standard No 139 / 02. 04. 2001

IRISH TERRIER - TERRIER - IRISH TERRIER - IRISH TERRIER


BRIEF HISTORICAL SUMMARY : Ireland has produced four Terrier breeds, all of which are markedly different from terriers on the continent and in England.  The dog now officially called Irish Terrier is possibly the oldest of the Irish terrier breeds but records are so scarce that it would be difficult to prove this conclusively.  Before the 1880s the colour of the Irish Terrier had not been settled.  Apart from red they were sometimes black and tan and sometimes brindle.  At the end of the 19th century efforts were made to breed out the black and tan and the brindles so that by the 20th century all Irish Terriers showed the red coat.  The red coated Irish Terrier soon made its appearance on show benches in England and in the United States where it was enthusiastically received.  The Irish Terrier’s reputation was enhanced during the First World War when they were used as messenger dogs in the terrifying noise and confusion of trench warfare, thus proving both their intelligence and their fearlessness.  The first breed club was set up in Dublin on March 31st 1879 and the Irish Terrier was the first member of the terrier group to be recognised by the English Kennel Club in the late 19th century as a native Irish Breed.


N.B. Male animals should have two apparently normal testicles fully descended into the scrotum.