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Albert Heim Foundation
A brief historical summary of the Foundation
Nearly complete dog skulls from Neolithic settlements, treasures of our collections
At the end of the last century large amounts of remains from Neolithic dwellings were found
on the shores of Swiss lakes. Along with the archaeological remains, a vast number of
animal bones were excavated. These bones were mainly considered to be remains from
hunting and animal breeding and subsequent butchering and eating by our ancestors 3,000 -
5,000 years ago. In his book "Untersuchungen der Thierreste aus den Pfahlbauten der
Schweiz" the zoologist and paleontologist from Basel, Karl Ludwig Rütimeyer (1825 - 1895),
tried to reconstruct the Neolithic wildlife along with the domestic animals. For Rütimeyer the
dogs he found were not domestic breeds from wild ancestors, but he thought them to belong
to a now extinct wild species (Canis familiaris). Rütimeyer did not concentrate as much on
the dog as on the bovines. The true founder of scientific cynology was the professor for
zoology and anatomy at the University of Berne and director of the Natural History Museum,
Theophil Studer (1845 - 1922). From 1874 on Studer's research concentrated on the origin
of the domestic dog and the evolution of modern breeds. In order to gain exact and
reproducible results, he consistently made use of craniometric methods, which consist in the
comparison of metric values and proportions of skulls. During his years at the Museum he
collected a large number of modern domestic and wild dogs.
After Studer's death his collection was doomed to be forgotten because of financial problems
and because the Museum had storage problems. His successor, Prof. Franz Baumann,
although not personally involved in canine research, did not want to store away into
oblivion these collections and he sought contacts with the "Schweizerische Kynologische Gesellschaft" i.e. the Swiss equivalent of the Kennel Club.
These
consultations lead to the idea of a foundation under the responsibility of the Museum. The foundation was
to be named after the world famous Professor for geology, Albert Heim (1849 - 1937).
How the Foundation got its name
Prof. Albert Heim (1849-1937), drawing by his daughter
Dog show in Weissbad, Appenzell and 1918 at another show judging Bernese Mountain Dogs
Albert Heim was not only a scientist and a teacher, but a very avid cynologist, as many of his
still cited publications show. He was a breeder of Newfoundland dogs -- he even imported dogs from
Newfoundland, quite a feat at that time -- and an international judge on many dog shows.
In this function his main concerns were the Swiss Mountain Dogs. The Appenzeller Cattle Dog and the Great Swiss
Mountain Dog presumably owe their existence to Albert Heim.
In honor of this great scientist and his 80th anniversary our Foundation received his name on
the meeting of the board on April 14th 1929 in Berne. The charter of the Foundation was
legally signed on March 21st and April 14th 1930.
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The growth of the Foundation and it's collections
A sample of our collections totaling over 2,000 skulls
According to the latest charter (1986) the Foundation aims at: a) The promotion and the
consolidation of the Studer Collections. b) The support of scientific canine research, the
propagation of the results and the dissemination of cynological knowledge. During the first
years of it's existence the growth of the collections made good progress, but scientific results
showed only very gradually. After a complete stand-still following the death of Theophil Studer,
research on the collections re-started under the leadership of Prof. Walter Huber (1917 - 1984). The
results were either published by himself or by numerous of his students. More and more
cynology once again became a focal point of the Museum. In addition to problems on the
origins of domestic dog, problems that were crucial to Studer and his contemporary, new
questions arose: The changing of breeds, variability, the heredity of deformities and
physiological problems in connection with body size. Independent of this research at the
Natural History Museum there was an anatomical and medical research of high standard at
the veterinary faculties of Berne and Zürich. Although there were no connections between
those research topics and those more oriented towards prehistoric topics at the Museum,
they should be mentioned here. And, to be complete, since about 1940 there was one more
research topic: canine ethology.
In the meantime the funds of the Foundation have constantly risen and the Foundation is
lucky to be able to grant research funds for many scientific projects, mainly to students of the
veterinary sciences. One main reason for the good contacts to the faculty of veterinary
sciences was that the board of trustees once again found a veterinary, Dr. Mark Flückiger, as
a member. In order to inform the public on the results of such scientific work, it has been
decided that abstracts of all projects funded by the Foundation had to be published in the
official paper of the Swiss Cynological Society.
It should be noted that in the last years several exhibitions on canine topics could be produced
and shown. One of the largest exhibitions with over 40 panels was first presented in 1979 at the world
exhibition in Berne. As the title "From Neolithic to Modern Dog " suggests, we tried to show the long
way from the wild ancestors to modern dog.
Supporting scientific research is but one of the activities of the Foundation. This is done by
the members of the board of trustees. The main duty of the author is to care for the
collections here at the Museum. As previously mentioned, these collections mainly consist of
skulls. At the moment (October 1994) we have 2,038 skulls from 174 breeds, 216 furs from
99 breeds and 187 complete skeletons from 83 breeds in our collections. The whole of this
collection is mostly well documented (pedigree, photos, reports from judges, etc.) and the
most important measurements are registered in a database. A very well cared for library with
over 500 volumes on dogs and a collection of reprints are not only accessible to the
scientist but to the public as well.
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