Siamese
The Siamese is one of the first
distinctly recognised breeds of Oriental cat.
The exact origins of the breed are unknown, but it is
believed to be from Southeast Asia, and is said to be descended
from the sacred temple cats of Siam (now Thailand).
In Thailand, where they are one of several native
breeds, they are called Wichien-maat (a name meaning "Moon
diamond").
In the twentieth century the cats became one of the most
popular breeds in Europe and North America.
The Breed
Description
All Siamese have a creamy base coat with coloured points on
their muzzles, ears, paws and lower legs, tails and (in males)
scrota. The pointed pattern is a form of partial albinism,
resulting from a mutation in tyrosinae, an enzyme involved in
melanin production. The mutated enzyme is heat-sensitive; it
fails to work at normal body temperatures, but becomes active
in cooler areas of the skin. This results in dark colouration
in the coolest parts of the cat's body, including the
extremities and the face, which is cooled by the passage of air
through the sinuses.
All Siamese kittens, although pure cream or white at birth,
develop visible points in the first few months of life in
colder parts of their body.
By the time a kitten is four weeks old the points should be
clearly distinguishable enough to recognise which colour they
are. Siamese cats tend to darken with age, and generally adult
Siamese living in warm climates have lighter coats than those
in cool climates.
Originally the vast majority of Siamese had seal (extremely
dark brown, almost black) points, but occasionally Siamese were
born with blue (a cool grey) points, genetically a dilution of
seal point; chocolate (lighter brown) points, a genetic
variation of seal point; or lilac (pale warm gray) points,
genetically a diluted chocolate.
These colours were at first considered "inferior" seal
points, and were not qualified for showing or breeding. Each of
these shades were eventually accepted by the breed
associations, and became more common through breeding
programmes specifically aimed at producing these colours.
Later, outcrosses with other breeds developed Siamese-mix cats
with points in other cat colours and patterns including red
point, lynx (tabby) point, and tortoise-shell ("tortie")
point.
In the United Kingdom, all pointed Siamese-style cats are
considered to be part of the Siamese breed.
In the United States, the major cat registry, the Cat
Fanciers' Association, considers only the four original
colourations as Siamese: seal point, blue point, chocolate
point, and lilac point. Oriental cats with colourpoints in
colours or patterns aside from these four are considered
Colourpoint Shorthairs in the American cat fancy.
Siamese have almond-shaped, bright blue eyes and short,
flat-lying coats. Many Siamese cats from Thailand had a kink in
their tails but over the years this trait has been considered
to be a flaw and breeders have largely eradicated it, although
it persists among street cats in Thailand.
Many early Siamese were cross-eyed to compensate for the
abnormal uncrossed wiring of the optic chiasm, which is
produced by the same albino allele that produces coloured
points. Like the kinked tails, the crossed eyes have been seen
as a fault and through selective breeding, the trait is far
less common today.
Temperament
Siamese are affectionate and intelligent cats, renowned for
their social nature. They enjoy being with people and are
sometimes described as "extroverts."
They are extremely vocal, with a loud, low-pitched voice
that has been compared to the cries of a human baby, and
persistent in demanding attention.
They also have a great need for human companionship. Often
they bond strongly to a single person.
These cats are typically active and playful, even as
adults. The social orientation of Siamese cats may be related
to their lessened ability to live independently of humans.
Siamese coat colouration is appealing to humans, but is
ineffective for camouflage purposes. They are less active at
night than most cats, possibly because their blue eyes lack a
tapetum lucidum, a structure which amplifies dim light in the
eyes of other cats. Like blue-eyed white cats, they may also
have reduced hearing ability. Therefore, being dependent on
humans may have been a survival trait for ancestors of the
Siamese.
History
Siamese cats (in Thai, ?????????? or wichien-maat) have existed
for centuries in Thailand (formerly Siam).
The pointed cat known in the West as "Siamese" is one of
several breeds of cats from Siam described and illustrated in
manuscripts called "Tamra Maew" (Cat Poems), estimated to have
been written in the 1700s.
The breed was first seen outside their Asian home in 1884, when
the British Counsul-General in Bangkok, Edward Blencowe Gould
(1847-1916), brought a pair of the cats back to Britain for his
sister, Lilian Jane Veley (who went on to be co-founder of the
Siamese Cat Club in 1901).
The cats were shown at the Crystal Palace in 1885, and the
following year another pair (with kittens) were imported by a
Mrs. Vyvyan and her sister. Compared to the British Shorthair
and Persian cats that were familiar to most Britons, these
Siamese imports were longer and less "cobby" in body, had heads
that were less round with wedge-shaped muzzles and had larger
ears.
These differences and the pointed coat pattern which had not
been seen before by Westerners, produced a strong
impression--one early viewer described them as "an unnatural
nightmare of a cat".
But these striking cats also won some devoted fans and over
the next several years fanciers imported a small number of
cats, which together these formed the base breeding pool for
the entire breed in Britain.
It is believed that most Siamese in Britain today are
descended from about eleven of these original imports. Several
sources give Gould's brother Owen Nutcombe Gould (1857-1929) as
the British Consul-General in Bangkok, but Owen was only 27 in
1884 and not known to be in Bangkok.
In their early days in Britain they were called the
"Royal Cat of Siam", reflecting reports that they had
previously been kept only by Siamese royalty. Later research
has not shown evidence of any organised royal breeding
programme in Siam.
The original Siamese imports were, like their descendants in
Thailand today, medium-sized, rather long-bodied, muscular,
graceful cats with moderately wedge-shaped heads and ears that
were comparatively large but in proportion to the size of the
head. The cats ranged from rather substantial to rather slender
but were not extreme in either way.
In the 1950s - 1960s, as the Siamese was increasing in
popularity, many breeders and cat show judges began to favor
the more slender look and as a result of generations of
selective breeding, created increasingly long, fine-boned,
narrow-headed cats; eventually the modern show Siamese was bred
to be extremely elongated, with thin, tubular bodies, long,
slender legs, a whip-thin tail and long, narrow, wedge-shaped
heads topped by extremely large, wide-set ears. The major cat
organisations altered language and/or interpretation of their
official breed standards to favor this newer streamlined type
of Siamese, and the minority of breeders who stayed with the
original style found that their cats were no longer competitive
in the show ring.
By the mid-1980s, cats of the original style had disappeared
from cat shows, but a few breeders, particularly in the UK,
continued to breed and register them, resulting in today's two
types of Siamese – the modern "show-style" Siamese, and the
"traditional" Siamese, both descended from the same distant
ancestors, but with few or no recent ancestors in common.
In the late 1980s, breeders and fans of the older style of
Siamese organised in order to preserve old, genetically healthy
lines from extinction, educate the public about the breed's
history and provide information on where people could buy
kittens of the more moderate type. Several different breeders'
organisations have developed, with differing breed standards
and requirements (such as whether or not cats must have
documented proof of ancestry from an internationally recognised
registry).
Partially due to such disagreements, there are several
different names used for the cats, including "Traditional
Siamese", "Old Style Siamese", "Classic siamese" and
"Appleheads" (originally a derogatory nickname coined by
modern-type Siamese breeders as an exaggerated description of
less extremely wedge-shaped heads).
The popularity of the older body style has also led to
pointed mixed-breed cats that may have few or no Siamese
ancestors being sold as "Traditional Siamese" to uninformed
buyers, further increasing confusion over what a "real" Siamese
looks like.
In Germany, in addition to the regular Siamese (Siamkatze)
breed category in which modern show-style Siamese are shown, a
breed called Thaikatze ("Thai cats") is recognised, which
includes Siamese cats of the less extreme type but in which
some crosses with other breeds is permitted.
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