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PUG HOODIE

£22.00
Available Options:
Child & Adult Sizes:
Design:Back or Front of Clothing:
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Pug hooded top 80% comed cotton, 20% polyester, brushed back fleece, double layered hood, kangaroo pocket, wristband and cuffs with elasthane, twin needle finish throughout.

You can have design on front or back of hoodie, just select from dropdown menu.

Click on enlarge for full size picture.

All hoodies will be sent with a small specimen hunters logo to one side.

You can view logo in t-shirt section.

Posting for hoodies within the uk is £2.50.

For more info please read F,A,Q.

INFO:

Bred to adorn the laps of the Chinese sovereigns during the Shang dynasty (before 400 BCE). They were known as "Lo-Chiang-Sze" or "Foo" (ceramic foos, transmogrified into dragon, with their bulging eyes are similar in appearance to the pug).

References to pug-like dogs have been documented as early as 551 BCE by Confucius, who described a type of "short mouthed dog".

The lo-sze or early pug may have been the predecessor of today's modern Pekingese. The pug's popularity spread to Tibet, where they were mainly kept by Buddhist monks, and then went on to Japan, and finally Europe.

The exact origins of the pug are unknown, as Emperor Qin Shi Huang, the first Emperor of China, destroyed all records, scrolls and art related to the pug at some point during his reign which lasted between 221 and 210 BCE.

Chinese fu dogs, also called lion dogs or fo dogs, were thought of as guardians and statues of them were placed outside temples. The faces of these statues resemble Oriental short-faced dogs, such as the Japanese chin Tibetan Spaniel, Lhasa apso, Pekinese and the pug.

16th AND 17th CENTURIES:

The breed was imported to Europe in the 16th century by the Dutch East India Company. It is said to have become the official dog of the House of Orange in 1572 after a pug named Pompey saved the life of the Prince of Orange by alerting him to the approach of assassins. A pug travelled with William III of England and Mary II of England when they left the Netherlands to ascend to the throne of England in 1688. During this period the pug may have been bred with the old type King Charles Spaniel, but in any event the modern English King Charles Spaniel emerged with pug characteristics.

The breed eventually became popular in other European countries. Pugs were painted by Goya in Spain , and in Italy they were dressed in matching jackets and pantaloons while riding up front with the coachman on a private carriage. They were used by the military to track animals and people, and were also employed as guard dogs.

18th AND 19th CENTURIES:

The popularity of the pug continued to spread in France during the eighteenth century. Before her marriage to Napoleon Bonaparte I of France, Josèphine de Beauharnais had her pug named Fortune to carry concealed messages to her family while she was confined at Les Carmes prison. The pet was the only recipient of visiting rights.The pug was also well known in Italy.

The English painter William Hogarth owned a series of pugs, to which he was devoted. In 1745 he painted his self-portrait together with that of his pug, Trump, now in the Tate Gallery London.

In nineteenth century England, the breed flourished under the patronage of the monarch Queen Victoria. Her many pugs, which she bred herself, included Olga, Pedro, Minka, Fatima and Venus. Her involvement with the dogs in general helped to establish the Kennel Club, which was formed in 1873.

In paintings and engravings of the 18th and 19th centuries, they usually appeared with longer legs and noses, and with cropped ears. The modern pug's appearance probably appeared after 1860 when a new wave of pugs were imported directly from China. These pugs had shorter legs and the modern style pug nose. Ear cropping was outlawed in 1895.

The pug arrived in the United States during the nineteenth century (the American Kennel Club recognized the breed in 1885) and was soon making its way into the family home and show ring. In 1981 the pug Dhandys Favorite Woodchuck won the Westminster Kennel Club show in the United States, the only pug to have won since the show began in 1877. The World Champion (Best in Show or BIS) at the 2004 World Dog Show held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil was a pug, Double D Cinoblu's Masterpiece. The Pug Dog Club of America was founded in 1931 and recognized by the AKC that same year.

If you would like to add any more info, or you think parts of this write up are incorrect please contact us.

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