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Dogs and Human
Beings: A Story of Friendship
Sophia Menache
1
May he follow in the steps of Kitmir.
University of Haifa, Israel
The wide consensus in research with
regard to the modernity of keeping companion animals lies behind
the prevailing conclusions about attitudes toward the canine
species in premodern societies. These were reviewed mainly from
a utilitarian perspective. Characterized, in part, by the
protective shelter of the extended household and, as such, free
of the tensions affecting the nuclear family in industrial
cities, premodern societies supposedly lacked in the emotional
stress and indigence that condition or encourage dog keeping. A
careful examination of the sources, both narrative and
pictorial, however, suggests more ambivalent attitudes thus
challenging widespread research premises and justifying further
analysis. This study, covering rural and urban societies in the
ancient and medieval periods, examines references to dogs as
companion animals in traditional societies.
In recent years, the various attitudes of human beings toward
the keeping of companion animals have received much attention,
especially as forms of a psychological projection mechanism (Ronecker,
1994). People attribute their own expectations and desires to
animals, including those natural impulses that they most fear in
themselves. (Geertz, 1971; Douglas, 1971; Firth, 1963; Berger,
1971; Klaits, 1974). Willis (1974) finds in the way that people
relate to animals "a key to read off certain otherwise
inaccessible information about the way human beings conceived of
themselves and the ultimate meaning of their own lives"
(Levi-Strauss, 1967). Savishinsky (1983) goes further,
maintaining that "petkeeping patterns illuminate aspects of . .
. the nature of status systems, the dynamics of child
socialization, the process of human bonding, and the roots of
cultural symbols and metaphors."
These general remarks acquire further weight in the analysis of
prevailing attitudes toward dog keeping, dogs being perhaps the
first domesticated animals allowed entrance to the deepest
emotional aspects of a person's life. With their constant
presence in human experience, coupled with their nearness to the
feral world, dogs have become the alter ego of human beings, a
reflection of both human culture and human savagery. As White
(1991) commented, "There is much of man in his dogs, much of the
dog in us, and behind this, much of the wolf in both the dog and
man." On the other hand, some argue that the mastery over dogs
is actually the displacement of a person's wish to enslave other
people (Fox, 1972; Malinowski, 1948). Thus an egoistic
anthropomorphism may lie at the heart of the human-canine
relationship. Whatever the factors behind dog keeping, there is
a general consensus that "the history of pets remains too much
the history of their masters, revealing more about the owning
society than the owned" (Phineas, 1973).
Historians, however, have directed little attention to human
attitudes toward dog keeping, though they have shown an
awareness of some of the changes in this regard (Walton, 1979).
The lack of an historical perspective to dog keeping seems quite
surprising in light of the growing consciousness of the weight
of popular culture in understanding the past -- domestic animals
being a basic component of daily life (Haudricourt, 1961). It
further prevents a long-range analysis, with a more serious
balance of changing socioeconomic, cultural, and mental factors
that had influenced the relationship between human beings and
their pets. In approaching dogs as convenient symbols for
whatever people want to make of them (Stevens, 1972; Sahlins,
1976; Leach, 1964; Adler, 1993), social research emphasizes the
centrality of dog-keeping in modern society; although some
premises are advanced toward the past, most of these lack
satisfactory proof. There is a broad consensus that attachment
to dogs -- with all its emotional strength -- seemingly results
from the previous divorce of humankind from nature and the
encroachment of modernization, especially the urbanization
process (Clark, 1977). In other words, when the megacities
detached human beings from the countryside, people found in the
dog a suitable substitute for the natural world that had been
left behind. Phineas (1973), for example, saw in the
disappearance of the extended household unit a main catalyzer
for petkeeping, since it created the need for additional family
members. These additions had to be docile in order to balance
the many stresses of the industrial city. Pets served as
surrogate, and less expensive, children. He further contends
that pets became a symbol of freedom for workers, who also
valued them as a defender of property. Thomas (1984), as well,
denies any concern for animal rights in the Judaeo-Christian
tradition, thus indirectly rejecting the possibility of
petkeeping in traditional, monotheistic societies. He identifies
as the main catalyzers of petkeeping, besides intellectual
developments, the growth of towns and the emergence of an
industrial order, in which animals became increasingly marginal
to the process of production.
The wide consensus with regard to the modernity of petkeeping
lies behind the prevailing conclusions about attitudes toward
the canine species in pre-modern societies. These were reviewed
mainly from a utilitarian perspective. Characterized in part by
the protective shelter of the extended household and, as such,
free of the tensions affecting the nuclear family in industrial
cities, pre-modern societies supposedly lacked the emotional
stress and indigence that condition or encourage dog keeping. In
support of this approach, one should further note the negative,
even hostile, attitudes toward petkeeping, especially dog
keeping, in the monotheistic traditions (Menache, 1997). A
careful examination of the sources, both narrative and
pictorial, however, suggests more ambivalent attitudes, thus
challenging widespread research premises and justifying further
analysis.
This study examines references to dogs as companion animals in
traditional societies, covering both rural and urban societies
in the ancient and medieval periods. Reference to "urban"
societies in the pre-modern period embraces heterogenous
phenomena and, of course, all very different from the megacities
of our own days. The large cities of the Roman Empire, like
Rome, Antioch, Carthage, and Constantinople, counted in their
best days up to one million inhabitants; in medieval Europe, on
the other hand, cities held an average of about 10,000 to 30,000
residents, and 100,000 only in exceptional cases. Moreover, the
existence of social frames, like fraternities, guilds, and
convents, precluded the sense of alienation that is at the core
of contemporary megacities. It is the premise of this study that
the different attitudes toward dogs, being the receptors of
people's dreams, expectations, and fears, were affected by
changing circumstances. Although the image of dogs changed in
response to differences in time and space, these changes did not
affect the basic attachment of Western persons to the canine
species. In this regard, one can discern a long story of
friendship from the ancient period through the middle ages and
up to our own days.
Dogs in the Ancient World: The Pagan Tradition
Homeric narrative -- considered the "Bible of the Greeks" --
presents the meritorious roles of dogs in daily experience. Dogs
appear as men's very helpful auxiliaries for hunting and
safeguarding purposes (Odyssey XVII: 291-327). These tasks
confronted dogs with the most dangerous of the wild animals,
like lions and bears (Iliad XVIII: 573; Odyssey XIV: 21), thus
creating a suitable arena in which canines could prove their
courage and tenacity. Little wonder that Xenophon approached
hunting dogs as one of the most important possessions worthy of
adorning an estate (Agesilaus, 9. 6; cf. David., 1993).
Dogs were not only employed for sport purposes; they also proved
their skills as guardians of important public buildings. They
were employed as sentinels in the temple of Jupiter on the
Capitoline (Plinius Secundus, Naturalis historiae libri XXXVII,
X. 79; Claudius Aelianus, De natura animalium, VII: 13), a
practice that was also common to the temples of Hephaestus at
Etna, Athena at Daunia, and Adrianus at Sicily (Claudius
Aelianus, De natura animalium, XI: 3, 5, 13, 20; Plutarch, De
sollertia animalium, 13, 11, 23; Seneca, De brevitate vitae, 11;
Cicero, Pro Sextio Roscio Amerino, 20; cf. Gourevitch, 1968).
Plato, further, considered s as the trustful protectors of sheep
(Republic, III, 416a). In the framework of the oikos -- and the
obligation of its head to avenge any harm to the household,
slaves and animals included -- the killing of a shepherd dog was
punished like the murder of the shepherd himself (Iliad XII:
303, XV: 583, X: 183). In Spartan society, hounds were
considered private property, and their temporary use by someone
other than the master, was conditioned on the prior consent of
the owner, usually a wealthy man.
Dogs also proved their merit in times of war. The canis bellator
or canis pugnator (fighting ) was assigned crucial military
roles, a practice that probably originated in the Orient. Aelian
reports the case of a dog that fought bravely at his master's
side in the Battle of Marathon, its meritorious behavior
perpetuated in pictorial representations (De natura animalium,
VII: 38). Philip the Macedonian used dogs in the Thracian war to
force the Arbelians to leave the forest in which they had found
shelter (Polyaenus, Stratagemata, IV: 2, 26). The same tactic
was followed by the consul Pomponious Matho against the Sardes
in 230 B.C. (Supplementum ad Titus Livius, XX, 20). Dogs thus
came to mirror the most cherished virtue of ancient society;
first and foremost, the bravery and courage expected from a
citizen on the battlefield, whether in the Greek polis or in the
Roman Republic.
Beyond the utilitarian level, dogs further emerge as the loyal
companion of gods as well as people (Odyssey XX: 14, XVIII: 291,
302, 327), and there are many references to dogs as companion
animals, with all the emotional strength attached to this
concept. Kyniskos and Kyniska, the male and female for "puppy,"
were used by the Spartans as personal names and affectionate
nicknames. Especially in aristocratic circles, dogs escorted
their owners to social and political gatherings (Odyssey XVII:
62), and an impressive number of vases show canines waiting to
be fed behind a table; the Odyssey explicitly refers to
delicacies generously provided them by their masters ( X: 216).
Plato considered dogs as a model for the guardians of the ideal
State because they were both gentle and spirited (Republic , II,
374e-376c). Among the many qualities associated with dogs,
ancient writers emphasized their loyalty, perception (being the
sole animal to recognize their names), memory, and devotion
toward offspring (Quintus Smyrnaeus, XVI: 281 ff.; Plutarch, De
amore prolis, II, 40; Lucretius V, 862; Varro, De re rustica II,
9; Cicero, De natura deorum, II, 63). Some authors further
enlisted historical testimony to prove canine loyalty. When the
Persian invasion caused the Athenians to evacuate their city
(480 B.C.), Plutarch reports:
Much affecting fondness was shown by the tame domestic animals,
which ran along with yearning cries of distress by the side of
their masters as they embarked. A story is told of one of these,
the dog of Xanthippus the father of Pericles, how he could not
endure to be abandoned by his master, and so sprang into the
sea, swam across the strait by the side of his master's trireme,
and staggered out on Salamis, only to faint and die straightway.
They say that the spot which is pointed out to this day as
'Dog's Mound' is his tomb. (Lives, Themistocles, X. 6)
The perseverance and faithfulness of Xanthippus's dog were
hardly exceptional. Pliny the Elder celebrated the fact that
"dogs alone know their master, and also recognize a sudden
arrival as a stranger; they alone recognize their own names, and
the voice of a member of the household; they remember the way to
places however distant, and no creature save man has a longer
memory." He demonstrated canine trustworthiness in this
impressive list of faithful dogs:
We are told of a dog that fought against brigands in defense of
his master and although covered with wounds would not leave his
corpse, driving away birds and beasts of prey; and of another
dog in Epirus who recognized his master's murderer in a
gathering and by snapping and barking made him confess the
crime. The king of the Garamantes was escorted back from exile
by 200 dogs who did battle with those that offered resistance.
The people of Colophon and also those of Castabulum had troops
of dogs for their wars; these fought fiercely in the front rank,
never refusing battle, and were their most loyal supporters,
never requiring pay. When some Cimbrians were killed, their
hounds defended their houses placed on wagons. When Jason of
Lycia had been murdered, his dog refused to take food and
starved to death. But a dog the name of which Duris gives as
Hyrcanus when king Lysimachus's pyre was set alight threw itself
into the flame, and similarly at the funeral of King Hiero.
Philistus also records the tyrant Gelo's dog Pyrrhus; also the
dog of Nicomedes, king of Bithynia, is recorded to have bitten
the king's wife Consingis because she played a rather loose joke
with her husband. Among ourselves the famous Vulcatius,
Cascellius's tutor in civil law, when returning on his cob from
his place near Rome after nightfall was defended by his dog from
a highwayman; and so was the senator Caelius, an invalid, when
set upon by armed men at Piacenza, and he did not receive a
wound till the dog had been despatched. But above all cases in
our own generation it is attested by the National Records that
in the consulship of Appius Julius and Publius Silius when as a
result of the case of Germanicus' son Nero punishment was
visited on Titius Sabinus and his slaves, a dog belonging to one
of them could not be driven away from him in prison and when he
had been flung out on the Steps of Lamentation would not leave
his body, uttering sorrowful howls to the vast concourse of the
Roman public around, and when one of them threw it food, it
carried it to the mouth of its dead master; also when his corpse
had been thrown into the Tiber it swam to it and tried to keep
it afloat, a great crowd streaming out to view the animal's
loyalty. (Naturalis historiae, VIII: 61)
Aelian further attributes to dogs the good management of
household affairs, especially among the poor(De natura animalium,
VI: 10; cf. Lewinsohn, 1954). Though acknowledging that these
"proletarians" are devoid of reason -- "which can be a man's
salvation or his destruction" -- Aelian also credits canines
with possessing "a presentiment of an impending famine; they are
the first, too, to know when a pestilence or an earthquake is
approaching. They can foretell fair weather and the fertility of
the crops" (De natura animalium, VI: 16).
Dogs, thus, gradually lost their animal essence. They were
credited with magical skills that went beyond those of the
ordinary human being, thereby hinting at the many fears and
concerns, which effected ancient society. Although these
testimonies are of a general nature, there is also specific
mention of gender differentiations among dogs. Aelian praises a
pregnant bitch that gave birth to nine puppies only after
accomplishing her hunting duties. "And if the women of Liguria
pride themselves that they also after giving birth rise up and
devote themselves to their household duties, they will, on
hearing what the aforesaid bitch did, gorge their pride and hide
their heads in shame" (De natura animalium,VII: 12). The virtues
assigned to canines also included devotion to the institution of
marriage. By barking, a lap dog of Sicily caused a husband to
capture his adulterous wife in concert with her paramour
(Claudius Aelianus, De natura animalium, VII: 29; cf. Aymard,
1960). After such a display of moral sensitivity, it is no
wonder that the Stoics were often represented as dogs, probably
a reference to one of their cardinal virtues as truth-tellers (Petronius,
Satyricon, 43). Aelian could therefore conclude, "It fills me
with pain that a dog should be shown to have more loyalty, more
kindly feeling than man" (De natura animalium, VII: 10; I: 8,
IV: 40, VI: 25, 62, VII: 28, 29, 38, 40, X: 41, 45, XI: 13, XII:
35).
The ubiquity of dogs in ancient society is corroborated in
contemporary art, which reflected not only the canines' value in
daily practice, especially in hunting, but first and foremost
their unique status as companion animals. From among the many
representations of dogs in hunting themes, one should mention
the wall painting "Dogs chasing a boar," the vase painting
"Hunter with his dog," the clay plaque "Hunter with his dog,"
the sculpture "Dogs attacking wild boar," and the fresco
"Hunting scene" (Beazley, 1939; Reinach, 1922; Anderson, 1985).
In sepulchral monuments from the late archaic to the Hellenistic
period, dogs were depicted protecting their owners both against
the living and against the forces of hell, thus fulfilling their
functions as companion animals after death, as well. The
significant role that dogs played in both daily practice and
religious cult is revealed through the abundant portrayals in
marble, rock crystal, and terra cotta, by the vases in the shape
of dogs, and by paintings. One may take note of several Greek
grave reliefs like Alxenor's "Man with Dog," "Man with Dog," and
"Monument of Agathocles"; the Roman sarcophagus cover of "Boy
with Dog" and the relief of the "Conclamation Ceremony" (Greek
and Roman Sculpture, 1931; Reinach, 1897).
Analysis of the prevailing attitudes to the canine species in
Greek and Roman society clearly shows, at a superficial level,
the ubiquity of dogs in daily life. True, the many functions
fulfilled by dogs in hunting, guardianship, and war can hardly
be regarded as proof of petkeeping; they seemingly corroborate
the utilitarian essence commonly attributed to the human-animal
relationship in the pre-modern period. Nonetheless, a careful
analysis of the sources shows ample evidence of a projection
mechanism, with the most cherished values of ancient society,
such as faithfulness, memory, intelligence, and heroism,
projected on dogs; sometimes canines even surpassed the skills
of the average human being. Indeed, against the fragile,
ephemeral essence of human affections, dogs came to represent
complete devotion to their masters, an attachment that brooked
no other considerations. One may therefore conclude that long
before the megacities detached Western people from the
countryside, canines, as companion animals, became a repository
of the Greeks' and Romans' pursuit of limitless loyalty and
model bravery.
One God -- No Dogs
The development of the monotheistic creed adversely affected the
harmonious relationship between humankind and the canine species
(Menache, 1997). From the very beginning, acknowledgment of
human domination "over every living thing that moveth upon the
earth" (Genesis 1: 27-28) favored an instrumental approach to
animals, their very existence being justified by their serving
the needs of human beings (Batany, 1984; Davidson, 1980). Though
this instrumental approach was common to all animals,
monotheistic religions show a most extreme opposition to dogs
and to dog-keeping. Dogs were regarded as unclean animals in
both Judaism and Islam, though there is not a clear theological
justification of the kind that Genesis provides against the
snake, for example. On the other hand, the peremptory tone of
biblical pronouncements against dogs faithfully reflects the
ecological environment across Asia Minor, where Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam developed; the wild, desertic areas of
Asia Minor were affected by hordes of pariah packs, which
created serious security and sanitary problems (Taton, 1957).
Beyond the geo-ecological framework, the open aversion to dogs
further reflects the clergy's animosity against too close a
relationship between the faithful and their dogs; this might
jeopardize the former's devotion to one Almighty, jealous God,
thereby "visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children
unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me"
(Exodus 20: 5) (Menache, 1997).
The agrarian livelihood of some groups, however, eventually
encouraged the toleration of hunt and watchdogs, and there are
few testimonies of affection and tenderness toward dogs in both
Jewish and Islamic traditions. Attachment to dogs reached its
zenith in Western Christendom toward the end of the Middle Ages,
thus reflecting the continuity of dog-keeping in pre-modern
times.
The Jewish Tradition
The apocryphal Book of Tobit refers to Tobias' dog, who
faithfully accompanied its owner on his journey to Media (5:16,
10:14; cf. Pfeiffer, 1949). Tobias' dog is the only dog
favorably mentioned in Scripture. Rabbinical literature,
however, does indicate that dog owning had been common practice
among Jews in agricultural villages, especially between the 3rd
and 6th centuries (Baba Kamah 15a, 22a, 23a-b, 24b, 33a; cf.
Jachter, 1992). Furthermore, there are some halachic (Jewish
law) indications of the acknowledgment of canine loyalty and
courage, which justify a charitable attitude to pets. Following
Deuteronomy 11:15, the Talmud states that one may not eat before
feeding them (Berachot 40a, Gittin 62a). When Rabbi Avihu was
invited to Caesarea, he was accorded great honor, but in the
company of a dog. To the annoyed Rabbi's query, his host
explained that the dog had saved his wife during a brigands'
attack on the city. This meritorious behavior thus justly earned
the animal its owner's recognition for the rest of its life.
This story was used by Rabbi Meir to emphasize God's
omnipotence, which in times of danger turns the "natural enemies
of men" [i.e., dogs] into their allies. The mysterious actions
of the Almighty may also explain why, after exiling Cain from
paradise, God furnished the first criminal in the history of
humankind with a dog to defend him from the attack of savage
animals(Bereshit Rabbah, 22: 12). The ambivalent approach to the
canine species is further manifested in the tradition that
placed dogs on a pedestal, in parallel with the Chosen People.
To the question why God bestowed Israel with His commandments,
Rabbi Simeon ben Lakish said: "There are three distinguished in
strength: Israel among the nations, the dog among the animals,
[and] the cock among the birds" (Beitza 25b). And Rabbi Yehudah
heChassid mentions the loyalty of dogs as a virtue that should
be imitated by Jewish sons in the respect and faithfulness they
owe their parents (Sefer Chassidim, 60, 47).
The Jewish tradition, though somewhat ambivalent on the subject,
disrupts the close attachment to dogs found in ancient culture.
At a theological, dogmatic level, petkeeping was identified with
the behavior patterns of non-Jews and, as such, reprehensible
(Slay, 1986). On the other hand, a careful analysis of the
sources may advance a less rigid perspective. The astonishment
of Rabbi Avihu in Caesarea, at the benefits dispensed to his
host's dog, together with Rabbi Meir's negative approach to
canines -- defined as the "natural enemies of men" --
corroborate the negative approach of the religious, intellectual
elite to dog keeping. This group, which found dogmatic
justification in the Bible, expressed itself in a rather
compelling tone throughout Rabbinical literature (Menache,
1997). Still, the same sources hint at the approach to dogs as
companion animals among the common people. God seemingly
recognized the linkage, one may say dependence, between human
beings and dogs when he provided Cain with the company of a dog,
not only against wild animals but, perhaps first and foremost,
also against the solitude of his erratic existence. In this
regard, one may argue that acknowledgment of dogs as companion
animals, as an antidote against loneliness, goes back to the
very roots of human existence upon earth.
The Moslem Tradition
Both shared monotheistic tenets and the geographical environment
encouraged a similarly ambivalent attitude toward dogs in
medieval Islam. On a theological, dogmatic level, dogs were
considered unclean animals, and there was a clear admonition by
the Prophet Muhammad to kill all dogs (Menache, 1997). On the
other hand, in pre-Islamic times, the dog was the only domestic
animal given a proper name (Al-Djahiz., 1, 313-14). This
practice suggested some emotional sensitivity, especially among
nomadic and rural groups, which were well aware of the
usefulness and devotion of the canine species (Al-Djahiz., 1,
297-98). Sultan Mohammed al-Nasir, who was well known for his
love of the chase, left 80 different groups of hunting dogs;
these were carefully raised by special officials nominated for
this purpose (Ahmad Ibn 'Ali al-Maqrizi, 2, 748-49). The Prophet
himself was said to have promised a divine reward to an old
woman for her act of charity to a thirsty dog. According to
Moslem tradition, moreover, the dog Kitmir will be allowed to
enter paradise (Koran, CýXVIII, 17). The dog had persisted in
following to a cave seven noble youths who, in an effort to
avoid it, threw stones and broke three of the dog's legs so that
the poor animal could no longer stand. Then the mouth of Kitmir
opened, and it said in human speech: "I, too, am the creature of
God, as I love Him as my Creator; and loving God, I love thee
also who love God. Sleep, masters, and I will keep watch over
you." Hearing these words, the seven youths were astounded and,
taking the dog in their arms, carried it into the cave, where
they slept for over three hundred years. Having become the
symbol of fidelity for its loyalty to the merciless youths,
Kitmir -- in the opinion of al-Baydawi -- was given the gift of
speech by Allah (1, p. 557; cf. Gregorius Turonensis and Jacobi
a Voragine).
Beyond the mythical level, there are further indications of a
growing awareness in medieval Islam of canine skills. Though al-Qazwini
defined dogs as "the basest, and filthiest, and most shameless
of animals," he still acknowledged that it is a faithful beast,
patient in undergoing hardships and in enduring hunger, in
rendering service and in keeping off enemies. It follows up game
with quick intelligence and, although kept hungry, it is
faithful and will not leave its master, acknowledging the duty
of obedience. And in respect of followers, the Arabs have made
this comparison: "Starve thy dog, and it will follow thee." It
sleeps little and lightly. When its belly pains it, it eats ears
of wheat and is cured. They say the hunting dog must have long
legs, a small head and prominent eyes; its best food is bread
crumbled in broth.
Al-Djahiz -- whose Kitab al-hayawan furnishes the richest
documentation on dogs in Arabic sources -- further praised dogs'
memory and loyalty (their skill in recognizing their owners
after long periods of absence) (2, 128), their intelligence (2,
120), and the service they provide as a watch (2, 143, 173, 174,
177). Particularly touching are his references to spoiling dogs,
which will never sleep on the ground if they can enjoy the
texture of a delicate carpet and will always prefer a pillow to
them both (2, 161).
Against the basic opposition of Islam to dog keeping (Menache,
1997), the sources, notwithstanding the theological nature of
most of them, thus indicate an ambivalence very similar to that
found in Rabbinical literature; namely, the existence of
dog-keeping -- the scope of which is open to further analysis --
in open discrepancy with theological tenets. One should further
note that both Jewish and Moslem societies were agricultural in
essence, and the urbanization process was nonexistent and,
therefore, completely irrelevant to the scope or the very
existence of dog keeping. Though dogs were assigned functional
roles in daily practice, especially in hunting and guardianship,
there are clear indications of emotional attachment to the point
that at least one among them, Kitmir, after being granted the
gift of speech, was allowed by the Prophet to enter Paradise.
Kitmir thus reflected, in a most faithful manner, the longings
of human beings for a life after death and, in a more mundane
level, their urgent need for fluent communication with their
dogs.
Medieval Christendom
The approach of medieval Christendom to the canine species
represents a combination of the biblical (i.e., basically a
negative perspective) and the classical heritage (essentially
positive). Receptive as it was of the classical heritage,
Christendom was not immune to the worthy aspects of dogs, which
left their mark in medieval literature. Commenting upon the
parable of Dives and Lazarus (Luke 16: 19-25), Ambrose of Milan,
one of the four recognized Doctors of the Latin Church, blessed
dogs "that represent those who guard the flock and protect it
against the wolves . . . keep guard for their masters' safety .
. . and display noteworthy smelling skills" (Sister M. Theresa,
1931). Ambrose reports in detail the genealogies of several dogs
-- carefully established in patterns similar to those that
served fourth century aristocracy -- and birthday parties
celebrated in their honor (Ambrosius, xiv, 747-48).
Acknowledgment of the canine instincts led Basil the Great to
deduce that dogs had achieved the power of reason, while their
loyalty should embarrass all sinners who were ungrateful to
their benefactors (Homily on the Hexameron, 104). John Scotus
Erigena admitted that dogs had some advantages over people, such
as memory and faithfulness, both virtues exemplified by Argos,
Odysseus's dog, which recognized its master after twenty years
of absence (Odyssey, 17, 291-327; Divisione Naturae Libri
Quinque, 168-69). Hildegarde of Bingen went even further,
assigning to human beings and dogs a similar nature that
instilled the devil's desire for revenge on these animals.
Moreover, following Plutarch's allegation (De amore prolis, 1
and 2, 478b-f, 479b), Hildegarde claimed that dogs were able to
detect human lechery as well as to augur events, unfortunate or
auspicious, about to befall people (De cane, 1327-28; cf.
Klingender, 1971). Besides this acknowledgment of canine skills,
which may be evaluated as a result of classical influence -- as
much as this was real in the Early Middle Ages -- we find here
clear proof of dog keeping, to the point that birthday parties
and genealogies for dogs became common practice among the fourth
century Italian aristocracy. One should further note the attempt
by Hildegarde of Bingen to incorporate dogs into the endless
treasury of medieval myth when, together with the faithful as a
whole, dogs became a common target of the devil's attack. Again,
such a premise stood in open opposition to the clergy's tendency
to see in dogs, especially black dogs, an incarnation of the
forces of hell, a disposition that was also common to Moslem
jurists (Menache, 1997). The attempt to introduce dogs under the
safe wings of Catholic orthodoxy also colored medieval
hagiography.
Among the more popular dogs in the Middle Ages was the faithful
companion of St. Roch (1295-1327), the patron saint of those
suffering from the plague, who was stricken by the pestilence
himself. Alone, he withdrew into the woods to die, but his dog
refused to abandon him and provided him daily with a loaf of
bread (Fliche, 1950; Bessodes, 1931; Cahier, 1966). A similar
story was told about St. Simon Stock (1164-1265), the sixth
General of the Carmelites, who lived in the forest of
Toubersville, in Kent, and was fed by his dog (Monbrun, 1869).
Besides their exemplary role in safeguarding saints, dogs helped
simple mortals, including infants. This was the peculiar case of
Guinefort, the hunting dog which popular practice elevated to
sainthood. According to the testimony of the 13th century
Dominican, Etienne de Bourbon, subsequent to Guinefort's unjust
killing after it had saved its master's child from a snake's
attack, the dog was bestowed a martyrological halo by the
peasants of Dombes in the Lyons area. They attributed to
Guinefort therapeutic powers, especially on behalf of sick
children (Etienne de Bourbon, 325-28). As well proved by Jean
Claude Schmitt (1979), these peasants actually confused the
dog's story with the legend of St. Guinefort, a martyr who was
murdered during the Roman persecutions and whose cult was spread
by the Order of Cluny from the 11th century onwards
(Baring-Gould, 1978).
The miraculous role of dogs in daily practice as well as their
endless fidelity became a common subject in medieval art. Dogs
were depicted licking the wounds of St. Roch or lying at the
feet of St. Bernard, St. Benignus, and St. Wendolin. In the
portraits of St. Dominic, dogs carry a lighted torch -- the
Dominican Order being the protector of orthodoxy and its members
earning the prestigious classification of canes Domini [the
Lord's dogs] (Ferguson, 1954). Thus, canines gradually gained
the blessing of Catholic orthodoxy and were accorded an
honorable status at the side of the saints. Instead of fighting
a lost battle against dog keeping, the Catholic religious
establishment made a significant step toward popular practice
and, in the Late Middle Ages, enlisted canines in the service of
an almighty, loving God and His most distinguished
representatives on earth, the saints.
The Church's gradual acceptance of dogs in the congregation of
the faithful hints at the development of dog keeping in Western
Christendom, especially from the 13th century. Beyond the
mythical, symbolic level, there are further indications of a
growing awareness of canine skills, especially for hunting
purposes (Menache, forthcoming). In the Early Middle Ages, s
formed part of the burial gifts for persons of high social
standing. Five graves containing dogs, probably used by the
deceased for hunting -- two of the dogs wearing leather collars
-- were found at Vendel (Ohman, 1983). In the Late Middle Ages
hunting gradually lost most of its primary economic role and was
more and more identified with the nobility (Menache,
forthcoming). In the framework of this class-identification,
-keeping, as well, was associated with the upper class. Hardouin
de Fontaines-Guerin wrote that all nobleman must be trained to
hunt with dogs and to develop a love and mastery of the
sport(Tresor de venerie, 1-3). Gaston Phoebus (1331-91), who
wrote one of the most popular hunting treatises, further
recommends that in order to cheer one's s on, the owner should
be well acquainted with their names and call them continually by
name. He himself could name individual hounds with appellations
such as Bauderon, Baudellette, Bloquiau, Briffault, Cliquau,
Fillette, Huielle, Huiiau, Loquebaut, Mirre, and Ostine (Thiebaux,
1967). In this regard, one should note Claude Levi-Strauss's
remarks (1967):
Dogs do not form an independent society; as "domestic" animals
they are part of human society. We design them by metaphorical
names. Consequently when the relation between (human and animal)
species is socially conceived as metaphorical, the relation
between the respective systems of naming takes on a metonymical
character....The names of dogs in effect reproduce in its
entirety a portion of names formally similar to human Christian
names although rarely borne by ordinary human beings....It will
readily be agreed that the metaphorical names given to dogs
place the role of the figure of speech at the level of the
signifying.
According to medieval hunting treatises, owners should be
acquainted with the voice and the character of each of their
dogs, and huntsmen should especially encourage the pack with an
extensive vocabulary of different supporting cries (Gaston
Phoebus, 34, 183 ff.; Guicennas, 14). One may argue that all
these expressions of care and love toward dogs were in fact of a
utilitarian character, destined to assure the success of
medieval nobility in hunting. But we have also testimonies of
dog keeping seldom connected with hunting. Le roman du lévrier
Achiles, "li courtois," a French poem written in Italy in the
early fifteenth century, belongs to this category. After a
lively description of the exceptional beauty of his pet, the
anonymous writer gives Achiles speaking skills; it could
therefore tell that its master, the count, had decided to
provide it a female partner as a means to perpetuate Achiles's
pedigree, which would become a source of admiration for all
Italy (Thomas, 1913). In this regard, one should bear in mind
Savishinsky's (1983) observations regarding the use of pets as a
symbol of status in cultures with established patterns of
domestication and, particularly, in stratified societies. He
further argues that "examples from the Middle Ages show how pets
become a kind of living heraldry, an animated, almost totemic
symbol of class and group identity." This kind of "living
heraldry" is rather manifest in the illustrations accompanying
Les très riches heures of Jean de Berry, whose devotion and love
of dogs was well known to his contemporaries (Durrieu, 1909).
Contemporary sources, further, reflect a significant awareness
of the canines' skills as guardians (Ottonis Morenae, 43; cf.
Ortalli, 1983) and their bravery in very difficult situations.
Thus, in a report of the Duke of Bourbon's futile enterprise in
Africa (1390), specific reference was made to canine help, which
actually saved the Christians from the Moslems' furious attack (Dupleix,
1634). Among aristocratic circles, therefore, there was a
gradual return to the classical heritage in the appreciation of
canine virtues. Medieval nobles, the main representatives of
knightly ideals, projected on their dogs their own longings for
faithfulness and heroism. They further turned their dogs into
their partners, sharing with them the excitement of the chase
and thereby creating a sense of solidarity between the master
and his/her dog against wild animals.
Emotional attachment to dogs, however, was not restricted to
medieval aristocracy, but embraced the bourgeoisie, as well.
Alexander Neckham reports the ubiquity of dogs in
twelfth-century London streets, gnawing bones, spoiling the
peasants' merchandise, and generally getting in the way. (Tigner
Holmes, 1952). In the Menagier de Paris, written between 1392
and 1394 for the instruction of a young lady, the bridegroom
asks his new spouse "to be very private and loving with your
husband" and illustrates his request as follows:
With domestic animals you see that a greyhound, a mastiff, or a
small dog -- whether walking in the street, eating, or sleeping
-- always stays close to the one from whom he gets his food and
avoids, and is reserved and timid with, everyone else. If the
dog is far away from is master, he always has his heart and his
eye on him. Even if his master beats him and throw stones at
him, he follows him nevertheless, wagging his tail; and he
appeases his master by lying down before him and follows him by
rivers, woods, thieves' dens, and battles. Another example can
perhaps be taken from the dog Macaire, who saw his master being
killed in a wood and after he was dead did not leave him, but
lay down near the dead man, and by day even went far away to
seek food, which he carried back in his mouth without eating it
-- sleeping, drinking, and eating near the corpse -- guarding
the body of his master, quite dead in the woods. Later, the same
dog attacked and several times fought the man who had killed his
master. Every time he found him, he attacked and fought him, and
finally he defeated him on the field on the island of Notre Dame
at Paris.
Although one may wonder about the fate awaiting a wife who was
expected to fulfill such 'canine' expectations, there is
significance in the husband's additional request "to think most
especially, carefully, and diligently of your house pets, like
the little dogs and birds . . . for they cannot talk, and,
therefore, if you have any, you must speak and think for them"
[emphasis mine] (Bayard, 1991). This clear manifestation of dog
keeping could hardly be justified in terms of an 'urbanization'
process in Paris at the end of the fourteenth century. After the
Black Death, Paris counted only about some tens of thousand
inhabitants who represented a confederation of different social
groups, each of them giving its members a sense of solidarity
and cohesion.
Dog keeping, though, did not remain the monopoly either of a
narrow aristocracy or of the emerging bourgeoisie. In the
thirteenth century fabliau Del Houstillement au vilain, there is
a touching description of the typical peasant who has a small
garden and a dog for watch (Evans, 1969). There is also an
attractive picture of a peasant playing with his dog in Marie's
fable, De l'asne ki voelt juer a sun seignur. Shepherds usually
had huts in which their faithful dog passed the night with them.
Thus, medieval Western society as a whole gradually discovered
the advantages of dog keeping. As companion animals, dogs became
an integral component of daily life of all social strata, each
one with its own needs and its own dogs.
Conclusion
Analyzing the keeping of companion animals in modern society,
Charles Phineas (1973-74) argues:
It was the growing role confusion of the middle classes in a
maturing industrial economy that drew them to pets. Cut off from
the bases of economic and political power, their essential
functions gone, the middle class required control over a subject
being to give them any sense of purpose. Small wonder that pet
ownership and fascist voting relate so closely in Weimar
Germany.
Economic, political, or personal crises were hardly unique to
Weimar Germany; they are more or less constant factors in the
history of humankind. So is the presence of dogs, especially in
Western culture. The generally negative and hostile attitudes of
monotheistic religions did not succeed in eradicating the canine
species from human society, and people's attachment to dogs
permeated both ancient and medieval cultures. In the detour from
ideology to daily experience, people exalted dogs for their
loyalty, memory, intelligence, as well as their oracular and
therapeutic skills. All these virtues not only elevated dogs to
the apex of the animal kingdom but also placed their
qualifications above those of ordinary people.
To sum up, petkeeping did not result from a market society, but
from the tendency of human beings, whether in the framework of
traditional societies or industrial cities, to project onto
their pets -- dogs being perhaps the most important members in
this category -- their most cherished values and expectations.
True, the content of this projection changed from time to time
and the bravery expected from dogs in ancient cultures is today
replaced by affection, as an antidote to the loneliness inherent
in urban life. Dog keeping, though, did not emerge from the
detachment of modern human beings from nature, though this
detachment did change its meaning. Dog keeping appears, rather,
as a constant component in the annals of Western civilization
and, in fact, is entitled to be freed of the modernism ascribed
to it.
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1 Correspondence should be sent to the
author at the Department of History, University of Haifa, Haifa
31999 Israel, email: S.MENACHE@UVM.HAIFA.AC.IL. While I was
writing the final draft of this paper my dear dog, Rocki, died.
I would like to dedicate this paper to his memory.
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