Last time we introduced the fawn dog, today we will introduce Dubin.
Dubin, also known as Dubin, is actually a very large type of dog.
Whether it is film and television drama or daily life, the common thing is actually like this.

Doberman is divided into American and German, simply put, German Doberman is the original appearance, the slimmer ears of the American system are more erect and more spiritual.
Ben Meow gives you a brief introduction to the history of Dubin.
Based on a dog breed called Biberhund around the 7th century, the German Doberman was born by mating with a 14th-century dog breed called Taner and a black tan combination.
In 1884 the breed standards for the dog were established. There were two species at the time, one called the Bristle Doberman, which was later called the "Standard Schnauzer", which was the "Sliza" that Ben Meow said before. Schnauzers come in many types, and standard Schnauzers are actually very large dogs. The other was the short-haired Doberman, later known as the "German Doberman".
Doberman doesn't have to be black-brown, but also has a full-body brown case.
The German Doberman was almost extinct after World War II. In 1958, a man named Warner Jung smuggled four large mini Dobermans and a German Doberman from East Germany at the time, and the dog began breeding and eventually survived.
The Mini Doberman was not actually bred by a standard Schnauzer like the Mini Schnauzer, but existed about two hundred years ago, when The Durbin was not yet born. In the paintings and sculptures of the seventeenth century, images similar to miniature Dubin appear. The dog was introduced to the United States in 1919, recognized by the AKC in 1952, introduced to Britain in 1938, and recognized in the same year.
This kind of dog is very similar to a Chihuahua, a very proud dog, easy to train, but not easy to get along with other dogs. Dobermans are natural guard dogs, intelligent, with strong bouncing power, but prone to fractures...
Their ears are moderately upright and their limbs are slender and powerful. The slender and long tail hangs downwards, a bit like a saber, and some Dobermans have their tails broken, only about 5cm in length, as a veterinarian I do not judge the tail, but Europe and other places have banned tail cutting and ear cutting.
There is also a doberman called the Austrian shorthair Doberman.
Its ancestor was an ancient indigenous Doberman. At the end of the 19th century, dobermans bred on Austrian farms were endangered. In the first half of the 20th century, the Doberman breed of indigenous dogs began to be concentrated and bred. The breeding Doberman was recognized by the Austrian Doberman Club in 1928.
After the Second World War, the dog was once again in danger of extinction, and a small number of dogs were gathered and bred to preserve it.
To distinguish it from the coarse-haired Doberman (Schnauzer), the dog is called the Austrian Shorthair Doberman. It is basically used in foreign rural areas, and Ben Meow has never seen it.
Durbin was nearly destroyed in war, but many animals did not survive human breeding.
The current Doberman has become more delicate and well-proportioned than earlier breeds, of course, they are still masters of combat and highly alert guardians, and their status in the top ten popular dogs is also high.
There are many dogs that look like Doberman, especially black-brown haired dogs are always silly and unclear, ben meow will find a good talk in the future
Author: Doctor Gong