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History of the Vizsla

The Hungarian or Magyar Vizsla represents one of the best in sporting dogs and loyal companions and has a strong claim to being one of the smallest of the all-round pointer-retriever breeds.  Their size is one of the Vizsla's most attractive characteristics and through the centuries they have held a unique position for a sporting dog -- that of household companion and family dog.  The Vizsla is not content to be "put in the kennel with the dogs" after the hunt and only reaches their fullest capacity when they are a member of the family they serve.

 

The ancestors of the Vizsla are assumed to have been hunters and companions of the Magyar hordes which swarmed over Central Europe more than a thousand years ago and settled into what is now Hungary. The breed is depicted in various etchings that date back to the 10th century and manuscripts tracing to the 14th century. Apparently, the breed was a favorite of early barons and warlords who, either deliberately or by accident, preserved its purity through the years.

 

The breed's innate hunting instinct was fostered by the terrain of Hungary, which was almost entirely agricultural and pastoral. The breed evolved into one suited to the climatic conditions and available game. This has resulting in a swift and cautious dog of superior nose and generally high-class hunting ability, combining the best assets of pointer and retriever.

 

Although the great wars of Europe interrupted normal breed progress, a small amount of Vizslas existed that continued the breed's growth. Importation into the US began in the 1950s, and the breed was admitted to the AKC registry in 1960.

(credit: American Kennel Club and Vizsla Club of America)

 

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