The Bulldog Diary today will tell you about the stories and histories of the evolution of the French Bulldog from ancient times to the present
Fa Niu is a very cute and cute "fierce dog", they always look stupid, cute, very popular with girls.

How popular is the Honna? Just take a look at the two videos below...
And put on the mask and push the oil, dare to ask the famous husky and Tai Ri Tian have treatment?
In addition, the national goddess Fan Bingbing is also one of the loyal lovers of the French cow, the following to share with you a few photos of the life of Fan Bingbing and the French cow
After looking at the beautiful women's photos, we began to enter today's theme, some historical stories of the process of breeding the french cattle
Content from @Bullfight and Fox
What role did the British Industrial Revolution play on the French Bulldog? Because of the Industrial Revolution in England in the 19th century, it was difficult for local nottingham weavers to survive in Britain. The Textile Industry in England from 1850 to 1860, the garment industry was very turbulent. Because machines replace people.
British handicraft families had to find another way. There was a large concentration of English bulldogs in Nottingham at the time, where not only the larger bulldogs we see now, but also the smaller toy-headed bulldogs.
Many Nottingham weavers moved to France, many came to Calais, and they brought their own little pit bulls. These little bulls are perfectly adapted to the new environment, and they can live in crowded apartments and cramped houses. Also because they were master rat catchers at the time, they were very popular during the time of the plague. In the agricultural areas of northern France, they became very popular rattraps and domestic companion dogs, and their numbers soon rose, soon exceeding some of the dog breeds in mainland England.
In the abbatoir and suburubs regions, local butchers and meat traders used the rat hounds there to mate with small pit bulldogs, who sometimes looked like little buggies, sometimes like little pit bulls, and eventually became French bulldogs. Other historians say they are also related to myna, but there is no exact genealogy or material to prove this.
Bus drivers, shoemakers, petty traders, policemen are all lovers of these balls. They quickly became fashionable pets, and they can be seen all the time in brothels, cafes, and on the road. Artists of that time, like Degas and Lautrec, provided them with good historical materials.
Mistinguette, Colette, Mac Oaland, King Edward VII of England, and many of Britain's dukes, earls, all made the French bulldog develop and popularize faster. French bulldogs were also bred at the Russian royal court. They said the puppies were imported from France. Later, more and more people in Austria, Germany, and the United States also began to breed this dog.
Because of their reputation and innately excellent qualities and characteristics, they are very popular with men and drift to other continents.
In 1880 the French Bulldog began to be truly regulated, breeding. Parisian breeders, bullfighting fans began meeting regularly every week.
This variety was first registered in 1885.
The first exhibition in 1887 under the name of the French Bulldog.
In 1888, marcle Rogle, as the president of France at the time and a lover of French bulldogs, began to breed the breed seriously with a 10-year-old French kennel club.
When the breeding program first began, the French Central Kennel Club suggested that the already formed Gordon Bennert (French Bulldog Lovers Club) and the Marcle Rogle Club be united. Of course both sides saw each other's advantages and hopes, and this is what we know today as the boulder club (French Bulldog Club).
Eventually, under the unified impetus of the club, the French bulldog was formed today.