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  2. Borzoi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borzoi

    The system by which Russians over the ages named their sighthounds was a series of descriptive terms rather than actual names. Borzoi is the masculine singular form of an archaic Russian adjective that means 'fast'. Borzaya sobaka ('fast dog') is the basic term for sighthounds used by Russians, though sobaka is usually dropped.

  3. Chortai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chortai

    The Chortai is believed to have been developed from the now extinct Krymstaja and Gorskaja breeds and was a favourite breed of the Russian nobility; one was exhibited at the London Zoo in 1829 as a Russian Greyhound although otherwise they have rarely been seen outside their own country.

  4. Wolf hunting with dogs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolf_hunting_with_dogs

    Wolf hunting with dogs is a method of wolf hunting which relies on the use of hunting dogs.While any dog, especially a hound used for hunting wolves may be loosely termed a "wolfhound", several dog breeds have been specifically bred for the purpose, some of which, such as the Irish Wolfhound, have the word in their breed name.

  5. Bankhar Dog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bankhar_Dog

    The Bankhar dog (Buryat: хотошо, Mongolian: банхар, Russian: Бурят-монгольский волкодав), is a landrace livestock guarding dog. Originally bred by the Buryat people , their success contributed to their spread across Buryatia and Mongolia and into adjacent regions before they were nearly annihilated in the mid ...

  6. Central Asian Shepherd Dog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Asian_Shepherd_Dog

    Russian biologists and scientists have studied the local dog population [9] since the 18th century. After the Communist revolution, the Soviet government focused on working dog breeds for the Red Army, and imported the best breed representatives to Russia as per military dogs' and guard dogs' requirements. Over the decades, this practice harmed ...

  7. Wolfhound (2006 film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfhound_(2006_film)

    Wolfhound of the Grey Hound Clan (Russian: Волкодав из рода Серых Псов, romanized: Volkodav iz roda Serykh Psov) is a 2006 Russian slavic fantasy film directed by Nikolai Lebedev, based on the novel of the same name by Maria Semenova.

  8. Moscow Watchdog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moscow_Watchdog

    The Moscow watchdog (Russian: московская сторожевая, tr. Moskovskaya Storozhevaya) is a guard dog developed in the former Soviet Union, now Russia.It descends from crosses between the St. Bernard, the Caucasian Shepherd Dog and the Russian Pinto Hound. [1]

  9. East European Shepherd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_European_Shepherd

    The East European Shepherd was bred in the Soviet Union in the early twentieth century. In the 1920s a number of German Shepherds were imported from Germany into the Ukrainian SSR, where a breeding programme was established with the aim of adapting the breed to the harsher Soviet climatic conditions.