Dogs have lived in Egypt for thousands of years and there are many artistic depictions of them. These include both carvings and paintings. Thousands of mummified dogs were placed in one tomb that has been known for some time but only recently properly studied. Many of these dogs may have been killed as part of a ritual but some had received better and more careful treatment and were likely to have been loved pets.
A number of distinctly different breeds
were recognised. Rosellini attempted to put together a collection of the
various dog types found and produced the following 2 plates. Most modern
popular breeds have existed for a mere few hundred years but many people try to
link them to Egyptian dogs for prestigious reasons but without factual proof. Today’s
Pharaoh hound for example has been proven to be a modern mix designed to
resemble the original. Africa’s Basenji is more likely to have descended from
Egyptian types. Sighthounds were reserved for the elite people and their descendants
have continued until today. Today’s Baladi dog in Egypt is another likely
survivor from ancient times and is probably related to the desert pariah found
throughout the middle-east and which has probably followed Bedouin and earlier
hunter gatherers where ever they moved, throughout the Arabian peninsula and
perhaps the ancient fertile crescent where man settled and grew crops. These
desert dogs have survived in harsh conditions often without help from man and
are the natural stock of today’s Canaan breed selected from these pariahs. The
popular and intelligent (one has been shown to know over a thousand words)
border collie, with known origins in the English/Scottish border area has also
been claimed by some to have desert pariah connections.