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Great Dane Breed Standard
Working Group
General Appearance
The Great Dane combines, in its regal appearance, dignity, strength and elegance
with great size and a powerful, well-formed, smoothly muscled body. It is one
of the giant working breeds, but is unique in that its general conformation
must be so well balanced that it never appears clumsy, and shall move with a
long reach and powerful drive. It is always a unit-the Apollo of dogs. A Great
Dane must be spirited, courageous, never timid; always friendly and dependable.
This physical and mental combination is the characteristic which gives the Great
Dane the majesty possessed by no other breed. It is particularly true of this
breed that there is an impression of great masculinity in dogs, as compared
to an impression of femininity in bitches. Lack of true Dane breed type, as
defined in this standard, is a serious fault.
Size, Proportion, Substance
The male should appear more massive throughout than the bitch, with larger frame
and heavier bone. In the ratio between length and height, the Great Dane should
be square. In bitches, a somewhat longer body is permissible, providing she
is well proportioned to her height. Coarseness or lack of substance are equally
undesirable. The male shall not be less than 30 inches at the shoulders, but
it is preferable that he be 32 inches or more, providing he is well proportioned
to his height. The female shall not be less than 28 inches at the shoulders,
but it is preferable that she be 30 inches or more, providing she is well proportioned
to her height. Danes under minimum height must be disqualified.
Head
The head shall be rectangular, long, distinguished, expressive, finely chiseled,
especially below the eyes. Seen from the side, the Dane’s forehead must be sharply
set off from the bridge of the nose, (a strongly pronounced stop). The plane
of the skull and the plane of the muzzle must be straight and parallel to one
another. The skull plane under and to the inner point of the eye must slope
without any bony protuberance in a smooth line to a full square jaw with a deep
muzzle (fluttering lips are undesirable). The masculinity of the male is very
pronounced in structural appearance of the head. The bitch’s head is more delicately
formed. Seen from the top, the skull should have parallel sides and the bridge
of the nose should be as broad as possible. The cheek muscles should not be
prominent. The length from the tip of the nose to the center of the stop should
be equal to the length from the center of the stop to the rear of the slightly
developed occiput. The head should be angular from all sides and should have
flat planes with dimensions in proportion to the size of the Dane. Whiskers
may be trimmed or left natural. Eyes shall be medium size, deep set, and dark, with a lively intelligent
expression. The eyelids are almond-shaped and relatively tight, with well developed
brows. Haws and mongolian eyes are serious faults. In harlequins, the eyes should
be dark; light colored eyes, eyes of different colors and walleyes are permitted
but not desirable. Ears shall be high set, medium in size and of moderate thickness,
folded forward close to the cheek. The top line of the folded ear should be
level with the skull. If cropped, the ear length is in proportion to the size
of the head and the ears are carried uniformly erect. Nose shall be black, except in the blue Dane, where it is a dark
blue-black. A black spotted nose is permitted on the harlequin; a pink colored
nose is not desirable. A split nose is a disqualification. Teeth shall be strong, well developed, clean and with full dentition.
The incisors of the lower jaw touch very lightly the bottoms of the inner surface
of the upper incisors (scissors bite). An undershot jaw is a very serious fault.
Overshot or wry bites are serious faults. Even bites, misaligned or crowded
incisors are minor faults.
Neck, Topline, Body
The neck shall be firm, high set, well arched, long and muscular. From the nape,
it should gradually broaden and flow smoothly into the withers. The neck underline
should be clean. Withers shall slope smoothly into a short level back with a
broad loin. The chest shall be broad, deep and well muscled. The forechest should
be well developed without a pronounced sternum. The brisket extends to the elbow,
with well sprung ribs. The body underline should be tightly muscled with a well-defined
tuck-up.
The croup should be broad and very slightly sloping. The tail should be set
high and smoothly into the croup, but not quite level with the back, a continuation
of the spine. The tail should be broad at the base, tapering uniformly down
to the hock joint. At rest, the tail should fall straight. When excited or running,
it may curve slightly, but never above the level of the back. A ring or hooked
tail is a serious fault. A docked tail is a disqualification.
Forequarters
The forequarters, viewed from the side, shall be strong and muscular. The shoulder
blade must be strong and sloping, forming, as near as possible, a right angle
in its articulation with the upper arm. A line from the upper tip of the shoulder
to the back of the elbow joint should be perpendicular. The ligaments and muscles
holding the shoulder blade to the rib cage must be well developed, firm and
securely attached to prevent loose shoulders. The shoulder blade and the upper
arm should be the same length. The elbow should be one-half the distance from
the withers to the ground. The strong pasterns should slope slightly. The feet
should be round and compact with well-arched toes, neither toeing in, toeing
out, nor rolling to the inside or outside. The nails should be short, strong
and as dark as possible, except that they may be lighter in harlequins. Dewclaws
may or may not be removed.
Hindquarters
The hindquarters shall be strong, broad, muscular and well angulated, with well
let down hocks. Seen from the rear, the hock joints appear to be perfectly straight,
turned neither toward the inside nor toward the outside. The rear feet should
be round and compact, with well-arched toes, neither toeing in nor out. The
nails should be short, strong and as dark as possible, except they may be lighter
in harlequins. Wolf claws are a serious fault.
Coat
The coat shall be short, thick and clean with a smooth glossy appearance.
Color, Markings and Patterns
Brindle--The base color shall be yellow gold and always brindled
with strong black cross stripes in a chevron pattern. A black mask is preferred.
Black should appear on the eye rims and eyebrows, and may appear on the ears
and tail tip. The more intensive the base color and the more distinct and even
the brindling, the more preferred will be the color. Too much or too little
brindling are equally undesirable. White markings at the chest and toes, black-fronted,
dirty colored brindles are not desirable.
Fawn--The color shall be yellow gold with a black mask. Black
should appear on the eye rims and eyebrows, and may appear on the ears and tail
tip. The deep yellow gold must always be given the preference. White markings
at the chest and toes, black-fronted dirty colored fawns are not desirable.
Blue--The color shall be a pure steel blue. White markings at
the chest and toes are not desirable.
Black--The color shall be a glossy black. White markings at the
chest and toes are not desirable.
Harlequin--Base color shall be pure white with black torn patches
irregularly and well distributed over the entire body; a pure white neck is
preferred. The black patches should never be large enough to give the appearance
of a blanket, nor so small as to give a stippled or dappled effect. Eligible,
but less desirable, are a few small gray patches, or a white base with single
black hairs showing through, which tend to give a salt and pepper or dirty effect.
Mantle--The color shall be black and white with a solid black
blanket extending over the body; black skull with white muzzle; white blaze
is optional; whole white collar is preferred; a white chest; white on part or
whole of forelegs and hind legs; white tipped black tail. A small white marking
in the blanket is acceptable, as is a break in the white collar.
Any variance in color or markings as described above shall be faulted to
the extent of the deviation. Any Great Dane which does not fall within the above
color classifications must be disqualified.
Gait
The gait denotes strength and power with long, easy strides resulting in no
tossing, rolling or bouncing of the topline or body. The backline shall appear
level and parallel to the ground. The long reach should strike the ground below
the nose while the head is carried forward. The powerful rear drive should be
balanced to the reach. As speed increases, there is a natural tendency for the
legs to converge toward the centerline of balance beneath the body. There should
be no twisting in or out at the elbow or hock joints.
Temperament
The Great Dane must be spirited, courageous, always friendly and dependable,
and never timid or aggressive.
Disqualifications
Danes under minimum height.
Split nose. Docked Tail.
Any color other than those described under "Color, Markings and Patterns."
Approved March 8, 1999
Effective April 28, 1999
Standard: Copyright The American Kennel Club 1999
Images: Copyright The Great Dane Club of America
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