s, photographed in 1915, one of the smaller breeds, are primarily
lap dogs The origin of the word
spaniel is described by the
Oxford English Dictionary as coming from the
Old French word
espaigneul which meant "Spanish (dog)"; this in turn originated from the
Latin Hispaniolus which simply means "Spanish".
Celtic origin theory In the appendices added to the 1909 re-print of Caius' work, the editors suggested that the type of dogs may have been brought into the
British Isles as early as 900 BC by a branch of the
Celts moving from Spain into
Cornwall and on into Wales, England and Ireland. Theories on the origin of the
Welsh Springer Spaniel support this theory, as it is believed that the breed specifically is a direct descendant of the "
Agassian hunting dog" described in the hunting poem
Cynegetica attributed to
Oppian of Apamea, which belonged to the Celtic tribes of
Roman Britain: There is a strong breed of hunting dog, small in size but no less worthy of great praise. These the wild tribes of Britons with their tattooed backs rear and call by the name of Agassian. Their size is like that of worthless and greedy domestic table dogs; squat, emaciated, shaggy, dull of eye, but endowed with feet armed with powerful claws and a mouth sharp with close-set venomous tearing teeth. It is by virtue of its nose, however, that the Agassian is most exalted, and for tracking it is the best there is; for it is very adept at discovering the tracks of things that walk upon the ground, and skilled too at marking the airborne scent.
Roman origin theory Another theory of the origin of the spaniel is that the
ancient Romans imported spaniels into
Britannia by way of the trade routes to the
Far East. Colonel David Hancock adds a belief that the sporting type of spaniel originated in China from the short-faced ancestors of dogs such as the
Pekingese,
Pug and
Shih Tzu. The theory goes that these ancestors were introduced into Southern Europe and evolved into the small sporting spaniels of the period around AD 1300–1600. The issue of how a short-muzzled dog could evolve into a longer-muzzled dog is addressed by pointing to the evolution of the
King Charles Spaniel into the
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel in less than a century. ==Hunting==