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  2. Cultural depictions of dogs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_depictions_of_dogs

    As the aristocracy often used hunting dogs, dogs were shown as symbols in heraldry. In the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance, heraldry became a highly developed discipline. Dogs of various types, and occasionally of specific breeds, occur as charges and supporters in many coats of arms, and often symbolise courage, vigilance, loyalty, and ...

  3. Portal:Dogs/Selected picture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Dogs/Selected_picture

    A team of fourteen mixed-breed dogs mushing. Mushing is a general term for a sport or transport method powered by dogs, and includes carting, sled dog racing, skijoring, freighting, and weight pulling. More specifically, it implies the use of one or more dogs to pull a sled on snow.

  4. Piebald - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piebald

    A piebald mare. In British English piebald (black and white) and skewbald (white and any colour other than black) are together known as coloured.In North American English, the term for this colouring pattern is pinto, with the specialized term "paint" referring specifically to a breed of horse with American Quarter Horse or Thoroughbred bloodlines in addition to being spotted, whereas pinto ...

  5. Staffordshire dog figurine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staffordshire_dog_figurine

    The spaniels were seated in pairs, decorated with a gold chain and locket, and with a creamy white base coat. [10] The Staffordshire spaniel was the quintessential Victorian bourgeois status-symbol ornament: no mantelpiece was complete without a pair of spaniels standing guard. Staffordshire dogs were also placed on the window sill.

  6. List of individual dogs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_individual_dogs

    Jiggs II, a.k.a. Sergeant Major Jiggs II, a.k.a. Silent White Richard, was the second of a number of English bulldogs to serve as mascots of the United States Marine Corps. Jonathan, a husky, is the University of Connecticut's mascot, and is named after the state of Connecticut's first governor. Nigger, a black Labrador, the mascot of The ...

  7. List of fictional dogs in comics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_dogs_in...

    Black dachshund. nl:Tekko Taks (Dutch) Henk Kabos: Anthropomorphic black dog who is a time-traveling detective. [92] Tige Pit bull: Buster Brown: Richard Felton Outcault: Buster's dog. [93] Tippie Scottish Terrier: Cap Stubbs and Tippie: Edwina Dumm: Cap's dog. [94] Titus Great Dane: Batman: Peter Tomasi: Damian Wayne's dog in the comic book ...

  8. Australian Kelpie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Kelpie

    These were mostly black, or very dark brown, dogs – hence the name collie, which has the same root as coal. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] (The official collie breeds were not formed until about 10 or 15 years after the Kelpie was established as a breed, [ 4 ] and the first recognised Border Collie was not brought to Australia until after the Federation in 1901 ...

  9. Puli dog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puli_dog

    Other less common coat colors are white, gray, or cream (off-white or fakó in Hungarian). A variety of the cream-coated dogs have black masks. The white Pulis are not albino, nor do they have blue eyes. They commonly have dark pigment, black pads, black noses and black pigment inside the mouth. The white gene is recessive to the pure black gene.