are also known as Longhaired Siamese, being distinguished by coat length have the same head and body type, but non-blue eyes and a wide variety of coat patterns , a breed derived from crosses of
Persians to Siamese , a breedless cross between a Siamese and a
Domestic Shorthair •
Balinese – natural mutation of the Siamese cat; a longhaired Siamese. In the largest US registry, the
CFA is limited to the four traditional Siamese coat colours of seal point, blue point (a dilute of seal point), chocolate point, and lilac point (a dilute of the chocolate point). Other registries in the US and worldwide recognise a greater diversity of colours. •
Birman – after almost all the individuals of the breed died out during the years of
World War II, French breeders reconstructed the breed through interbreeding with various other breeds, including the Siamese. Modern Birman cats have inherited their pointed coat patterns from the Siamese. •
Burmese – is a breed of domesticated cats descended from a specific cat, Wong Mau, who was found in Burma in 1930 by
Joseph Cheesman Thompson. She was brought to San Francisco, USA, where she was bred with Siamese. •
Havana Brown – resulted from crossing a chocolate-point Siamese with a black cat. •
Colourpoint Shorthair – a Siamese-type cat registered in CFA with pointed coat colours aside from the traditional CFA Siamese coat colours; originally developed by crosses with other shorthair cats. Considered part of the Siamese breed in most cat associations but considered a separate breed in CFA and WCF. Variations can include tabby (US: lynx) points and tortie points. •
Himalayan – longhaired breed originally derived from crosses of
Persians to Siamese and pointed domestic longhair cats to introduce the point markings and the colours chocolate and lilac. After these initial crosses were used to introduce the colours, further breed development was performed by crossing these cats to the Persian breed. In Europe, they are referred to as colourpoint Persians. In CFA, they are a colour division of the Persian breed. •
Javanese – in CFA, a longhaired version of the
Colourpoint Shorthair (i.e. a "Colourpoint Longhair"). In WCF, "Javanese" is an alias of the
Oriental Longhair. •
Neva Masquerade – derived in Russia by naturally or selectively crossing
Siberian cats with Siamese cats or related colourpoint cats. It bears the Siamese colourpoint gene, but the original
foundation stock is unclear. •
Ocicat – a spotted cat originally produced by a cross between Siamese and
Abyssinian. •
Oriental Shorthair – a Siamese-style cat in non-pointed coat patterns and colours, including solid, tabby, silver/smoke, and tortoise-shell. •
Oriental Longhair – a longhaired version of the
Oriental Shorthair. •
Ragdoll – selectively bred from "alley cats"
foundation stock in the USA. It bears the Siamese colourpoint mutation gene. •
Savannah – a domestic hybrid cat breed. It is a hybridisation between a serval and a domestic cat. (The first was bred with a Siamese) •
Snowshoe – a cream and white breed with blue eyes and some points that were produced through the cross-breeding of the Siamese and bi-coloured
American Shorthair in the 1960s. •
Thai Cat – also called the Wichianmat or Old-Style Siamese, the traditional type of Siamese imported from Thailand in the 19th century and still bred in Thailand today; and throughout the first half of the 20th century, the only type of Siamese. •
Tonkinese – originally a cross between a Siamese cat and a
Burmese. Tonkinese × Tonkinese matings can produce kittens with a Burmese sepia pattern, a Siamese pointed pattern, or a Tonkinese mink pattern (which is something in between the first two, with less pattern contrast than the Siamese but greater than the Burmese); often with aqua eyes. •
Toybob – cat breed of Russian origin. It bears the Siamese colourpoint mutation gene. •
Mekong Bobtail (Thai Bobtail) ==In media, literature and film==