The story of the Cane Corso, coincides extraordinarily with
the history of the Italic peoples, in all the splendor and their
misery. Unfortunately this race, saved in the last few years from
what seemed an inexorable and fatal decline, reaches us with a
scanty but still significant historical and iconographic background
from which a few enthusiasts have tried to reconstruct the origins
of this race. The etymology of the name Corso is still uncertain.
The most credible hypothesis are those which indicate Greek origins:
KORTOS = wall and from the Latin: COHORS = guard of the courtyard.
Until recently the oldest documentation citing the name of the Cane
Corso, consisted of a few poems and some prose dating from 1500. In
1998 the A.I.C.C. or Associazione Italiana Cane Corso published a
study on the race which brought to light the military use of the
Cane Corso, in 1137 in Monopoli di Sabina (near Rome), the finding
of kennels from the period and the close links between the race and
Roman history. All of this allows us to consider the Cane Corso, as
the principal evidence of an ancestral race which has maintained
particular characteristics over the centuries, which take us back in
time, not just to the period tied to agricultural economy
immediately prior to the industrial revolution, but even further
back linking dog fanciers with the great civilizations of the past;
the rise and fall of the Roman empire, the middle ages and modern
times. The Cane Corso, has maintained through natural selection over
the centuries, the closest possible contact with environment and the
roles which man has asked this precious companion to play. We are
talking about hard times when the success and survival of a race
depended exclusively on their ability to render work, so the choice
of raising and keeping a dog was a purely economic one. A
responsibility taken which had to correspond to the acquisition of a
good or service, nothing superfluous was allowed. The Cane Corso,
which we can admire today is the best evidence of the theory which
sustains that when a race exhibits certain morphological and
behavioral characteristics relating to the work it is required to
do, then that race shows harmony of form and balanced character. The
past of the Cane Corso, is not only largely present and alive but
also extraordinarily current, as if time had just slipped away. The
Corso has conserved from its ancestors the Molossi of Epiro and the
pugnaces of Rome, used in war and for fighting in the circus, the
aggressive and combative nature necessary for successfully reaching
its goal, with no hesitation and with surprising potential force.
Through contact with man in social situations he has learned to
react only when necessary, becoming an excellent interpreter of
human gestures. With these characteristics the Cane Corso, has
survived until today. In small settlements in the south of Italy
where they have maintained an archaic system of agriculture and a
multi purpose dog is an essential partner.
The modernization of agriculture and systems of breeding, in
particular the disappearance of breeding in the wild and semi-wild
state. The disappearance of wild game and the use of firearms with
the consequently different techniques of hunting have reduced the
traditional uses of the Cane Corso. It is for this reason that the
diffusion of the Corso has suffered drastic reduction since the
Second World War. The situation at the beginning of the 1970s was
worrying for the very survival of the race, then reduced to a modest
number of examples and no longer considered by in official
dog-fancying circles despite the efforts of individuals like the
Count Bonatti and Professor Ballotta. It was in the 1976 that an
enthusiastic dog lover and researcher of the rural traditions of
Italy, Doctor Breber, brought the Cane Corso, to the attention of
the public and official dog fancying circles in an article published
in a number of the ENCI (Italian Kennel Club) magazine. He followed
this first step with the setting up of a rescue mission carried out
by a group of enthusiasts who had made contact with Dr. Breber in
the meantime. In October of 1983 these enthusiasts formed the
S.A.C.C. (Società Amatori Cane Corso). The common intentions of
rescuing the race were the basis for the forming of the SACC, which
suffered its first shock in 1986 when Dr. Breber abandoned the
society. This fact has little resonance at the time as the group was
not well known and lived on the edges of dog-fancying officialdom.
This was a determining factor in the future direction of the race as
was the contribution of the man who was among the first to
contribute to the new interest in the race and who provided the dogs
for the first litter: Basir the model for the standard of the race
was the son of Dauno and Tipsi, two dogs chosen by Dr. Breber. When
Dr. Breber left the SACC centered itself around the kennels in
Mantova run by Giancarlo Malavasi with the entire breeding program
of the race and the running of the SACC in the hands of Stefano
Gandolfi, Gianantonio Sereni and Ferdinando Casolino. The need to
move the breeding program forward at all costs become the
justification for centralized running of the association which was
not very democratic and often object of not positive chattering. For
these reasons the SACC, two vice-presidents from different times
stand out, Mr. Oreste Savoia and Dr. Flavio Bruno. In this period it
must be highlighted that the activities of the SACC for the
recognition of the Cane Corso were carried out with energy and
appreciable results. Unfortunately the same cannot be said from the
dog fanciers point of view because the level of quality of the
litter thrown by Basir in 1980 were never repeated and the subjects
produced, appeared and today still appear distant from the desired
model and show considerable variation. In that period the SACC
successfully organized dog fanciers meetings with the scope of
making the race known and allow the judges of the ENCI to carry out
tests and measurements.
This activity produced an official standard document edited by Dr.
Antonio Morsiani ratified by the judging committee of the ENCI in
1987. In the same edition of the standard, perhaps because of the
need to differentiate the Cane Corso as much as possible from the
other Italian Molosso hounds, the Neapolitan Mastiff, for the
purposes of recognition, some inaccuracies were allowed which led to
considerable discussion. The most important regards the closure of
the teeth in that the standard requires a slight prognathism. The
level bite is only tolerated, however being just as common in the
Corso. This is shown not only in the many positions taken by
enthusiastic breeders (including Breber) but also in the official
records of the first convention, Convegno nazionale di Civitella
Affadena, June 16th 1990. In 1992 in order to better follow the
evolution of the Race the ENCI decided to record the births of Corsi
born of parents verified by the judges and as such considered heads
of blood lines, in an unofficial book called the Libro Apperto or
open book. The data contained in this book was transferred into the
official books when the race was officially recognized on January
20th 1994. The enthusiasm for this race, the curiosity and the
knowledge that a greater number of dogs and a greater interest in
the race would have helped in the push for recognition, lead to an
uncontrolled increase in the production of litters with a consequent
reduction in the average quality of the offspring. In this phase the
SACC, not only omitted take any action to inhibit this phenomenon,
but rather took every opportunity to publicize the race and
themselves as its saviors. Under this pressure the number of Corsi
produced jumped from a few tens of animals at the beginning to the
current 2500 annual registrations. Given the lack of improvement in
the quality of the animals produced the success of the race was
vaunted in terms of numerical increase. This choice penalizing the
zootecnical aspects paid of in terms of political ratification. On
May 22nd 1996 at Arese the best Cane Corso were gathered. CH Boris
was used as the model for the presentation of the characteristics of
the race at the upper levels of the F.C.I. A few months later in
November 1996 the Cane Corso was recognized at an international
level. This seemed a positive result but it lead to further
worsening of the system because many enthusiast from outside of
Italy, inspired by the novelty of the situation bought the Corso
without due care or consideration. Often their chose was based on
lack of information, ready availability, colour or the price of the
puppies. What has been revealed in the last few years is the total
lack of a serious information service and management of the race at
an international level. In the general confusion, those few who have
tried to organize the Cane Corso enthusiasts in their own country
have found difficulty in opening communication with the SACC which
has often hid its obvious shortcomings behind a veneer of arrogance.
In July of 1999, after years of superficial management and repeated
appeals against the controlling bodies the Enci finally relieved the
SACC of recognition as the official club for the race of the Cane
Corso». In an attempt to obviate the situation some enthusiasts have
founded the A.I.C.C. If the second millenium closes under a cloud of
uncertainty for the Cane Corso, the third millenium opens with a
great hope; the presidents of several national associations, Mr.
Renzo Carosio for the Italian AICC, Mr. Micheal Ertaskiran for the
American ICCF and Mr. Erik de Vries for the Dutch CCNL have decide
to work together towards an international coordination of the race
based on the commitment of serious dog lovers.