Karl Friedrich Louis Dobermann | |
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A portrait of a Dobermann Pinscher in 1909, after only 19 years from the initiation of the breed's formation process.
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Born |
Apolda, Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, (now Thuringia) |
2 January 1834
Died | 9 June 1894 Apolda, Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach |
(aged 60)
Nationality | German |
Karl Friedrich Louis Dobermann (born Tobermann; January 2, 1834 in Apolda – June 9, 1894 in Apolda) was the first breeder of Doberman Pinscher. He started the creation of this dog breed in the town of Apolda, in the Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach around 1890, following the Franco-Prussian War.
Dobermann served in the dangerous role of local tax collector, and ran the Apolda dog pound. With access to dogs of many breeds, he aimed to create a breed that would be ideal for protecting him during his collections, which took him through many dangerous, bandit-infested areas. He set out to breed a new type of dog that, in his opinion, would be the perfect combination of strength, loyalty, intelligence, and ferocity. Later, Otto Goeller and Philip Gruening continued to develop the breed to become the dog that is seen today.
After Dobermann's death in 1894, the Germans named the breed Dobermann-pinscher in his honor, but a half century later dropped the "pinscher" on the grounds that this German word for terrier was no longer appropriate. The British did the same a few years later.