Breed Standard
Italian Greyhound
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FCI-Standard N° 200 / 17. 06. 1998 / GB
ITALIAN
GREYHOUND
(Piccolo Levriero Italiano)
TRANSLATION
: Mrs. Peggy Davis.
ORIGIN : Italy.
DATE OF
PUBLICATION OF THE ORIGINAL VALID STANDARD : 30.03.1992.
UTILIZATION : Racing dog.
CLASSIFICATION F.C.I. : Group
10 Sighthounds. Section 3 Short-haired Sighthounds. Without
working trial.
BRIEF HISTORICAL SUMMARY : The little
Italian Greyhound descends from small-sized greyhounds which
already existed in ancient Egypt at the court of the
Pharaohs. Passing through Laconie (Greece), where numerous
representations on vases and bowls confirm this, the breed
arrived in Italy at the outset of the 5th century BC. Its
greatest development occured during the era of the
Renaissance at the court of the nobles. It is not rare to
find the Italian Greyhound represented in the paintings of
the greatest Italian and foreign masters.
GENERAL
APPEARANCE : Of an elongated shape, its body fits into a
square and its forms recall, in miniature, those of the
Greyhound and the Sloughi. May be considered as a model of
grace and distinction.
IMPORTANT PROPORTIONS : Its
length is equal or only just inferior to the height at the
withers. Length of skull is equal to half the length of the
head. Length of head can reach the 40% of the height at the
withers.
BEHAVIOUR / TEMPERAMENT : Reserved,
affectionate, docile.
HEAD : Of elongated shape and
narrow; its length can attain 40% of the height at the
withers.
CRANIAL REGION :
Skull : Flat with the
superior axes of the skull and muzzle parallel. Length of
the skull is equal to half the length of the head. Lower
orbital region well chiselled.
Stop : Frontal nasal
depression only very slightly marked.
FACIAL REGION :
Nose : Of a dark colour, preferably black, with well
opened nostrils.
Muzzle : Pointed.
Lips : Thin and
tight, with edges of lips very darkly pigmented.
Jaws/Teeth : Jaws elongated with well aligned incisors crown
shape, strong in relation to size of dog. Teeth sound and
complete, set square to the jaws; scissor bite.
Cheeks :
Lean.
Eyes : Large and expressive, neither deep-set nor
protruding. Iris of dark colour, eyelid rims pigmented.
Ears : Set very high, small, with fine cartilage, folded in
itself and carried well back on the nape and upper part of
the neck. When the dog is attentive, the base of the ear is
erected and the lobe tends to stand out laterally on the
horizontal, position commonly known as « flying ears » or «
propeller ears ».
NECK :
Profile : Upper line
slightly arched and broken at its base towards the withers.
Length : Equal to that of the head.
Shape : Truncated
cone, well muscled.
Skin : Lean and without dewlap.
BODY : Its length is equal or barely inferior to the
height at the withers.
Topline : Straight profile with
arched dorsal-lumbar region. The lumbar curve merging
harmoniously in the line of the rump.
Withers : Quite
well defined.
Back : Straight, well muscled.
Croup :
Very sloping, wide and muscled.
Chest : Narrow, deep, let
down to the elbows.
TAIL : Low set, fine even at
base, tapering progressively to its tip. It is carried low
and straight in its first half, the 2nd half curved. Pulled
up between the thighs towards the topline, it should surpass
the level of the hip-bone slightly. Covered with short hair.
LIMBS
FOREQUARTERS : On the whole straight and
vertical with lean muscles.
Shoulder : Very slightly
sloping with well developed, lean and salient muscles.
Upper arm : With a very open scapular-humeral angle, and of
a parallel direction to the median plane of the body.
Elbows : Neither out nor tied-in at elbows.
Forearm :
Length of the limb measured from ground to elbow just
slightly longer than the distance from elbow to the withers;
very lightly boned; forearm in perfect vertical position as
much from the front as in profile.
Pastern : In the
prolonged vertical line of the forearm; seen in profile it
is a little slanting.
Forefoot : Of almost oval shape,
small, with arched and closely-knit toes. Pads pigmented.
Nails black or dark according to coat colour or that of the
foot, where white is tolerated.
HINDQUARTERS : Seen
from behind on the whole straight and parallel.
Upper
thigh : Long, lean, not voluminous, with very distinct
muscles.
Second thigh : Very sloping, with fine bone
structure and well apparent groove in leg muscle.
Hock
and metatarsal : In prolongation of a vertical line drawn
from the ischial tuber.
Hindfoot : Less oval than the
forefoot, with arched and closely-knit toes; pads and nails
pigmented like the forefoot.
GAIT / MOVEMENT :
Springy, harmonious, no hackney gaiting (high-stepping).
Gallop fast with sharp spring.
SKIN : Fine and tight
on all parts of the body except for the elbows where it is
slightly less tight.
COAT
HAIR : The hair is
short and fine all over the body without the slightest trace
of fringes.
COLOUR : Self-coloured in black, grey,
slate grey and yellow (in Italian = Isabella) in all
possible shades. White is tolerated only on the chest and
feet.
SIZE AND WEIGHT :
Height at the withers :
males and females from 32 to 38 cm.
Weight : Males and
females : maximum 5 kg.
FAULTS : Any departure from
the foregoing points should be considered a fault and the
seriousness with which the fault should be regarded should
be in exact proportion to its degree.
Continous ambling.
Hackney or highstepping movement.
ELIMINATING FAULTS
:
Accentuated convergence or divergence of the
facial-cranial axes.
Nose totally or half depigmented.
Nasal bridge concave or convex.
Overshot or undershot
mouth.
Wall eye; total depigmentation of eyelid rims.
Tail carried over the back; anury or short tail, whether
congenital or artificial.
Dewclaws.
Multicoloured
coat; white except in chest and feet as mentioned above.
Size below 32 cm or over 38 cm, as well in males as in
females.
N.B. : Male animals should have two
apparently normal testicles fully descended into the
scrotum.