
 IOEBA
OFFICE
P.O. Box 2600
Tehachapi, CA. 93581
Phone: (661) 822-5463
E-mail:register@ioeba.net
BUSINESS
HOURS:
9:00 A.M. to 3:30 P.M.
PACIFIC TIME
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IOEBA
Olde English Bulldogge History
The Olde English Bulldogge originated in England between 1600 and 1700.
These were the early ancestors to many of the Bull breeds that exist
today including the English Bulldog and the American Bulldog. They
were bred to participate in blood sports like bull baiting. This
so called sport, became quite popular in England through out the middle
of the 18th Century. Bull baiting primarily consisted of staking
out a bull and allowing several Bulldogges to attack it. A dog of
great courage and agility was needed for bull baiting. This dog was of
medium size; larger dogs were considered to be the result of mastiff
crosses.

Around 1835, laws were passed in England prohibiting
bull baiting and the Olde English Bulldogges main purpose of existence
vanished. Within a decade the numbers of bulldogs declined
drastically almost to extinction. Dog show fanciers eventually
decided to reconstruct the breed, but wanted to tone down the aggressive
temperament of the original Olde English Bulldogge. They crossed
the remnants of the existing stock with the pug and over the years that
followed they developed the modern English Bulldog. Unfortunately
though, this modern dog is wrought with all kinds of genetic health
problems.
The modern Olde English Bulldogge is a
reconstruction of the original Olde Bulldogge of the 17th and 18th
century. Various genetic crosses have been used in carefully and
thoughtfully planned breeding programs to obtain this goal. The
foundation of most of today's Olde English Bulldogges can be traced to
English Bulldog, American Bulldog, APBT and Mastiff.
These dogs were used very selectively in various combinations to
obtain the desired physical and mental traits of the original Olde
English Bulldogge. The result has been a good looking Bulldogge of
great athletic ability that is much healthier and physically fit without
most or all of the problems that plague today's modern English Bulldogs.
The goal of all Olde English Bulldogge breeders should be to produce
genetically healthier Bulldogges that are free breathers, free breeders,
and free whelpers.

The
IOEBA's detailed breed standard is the best guide as to what the perfect
Olde English Bulldogge should look like according to the International
Olde English Bulldogge Association. It is recommended that it be
used by today's Olde breeders in an effort to maintain the high
standards that the breeders of the past and the IOEBA have set fourth.
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