Home
About Us
About the Breed
Dame's and Sire's
Puppies & Litter's
Puppy Application
Customer Reviews
Home
About Us
About the Breed
Dame's and Sire's
Puppies & Litter's
Puppy Application
Customer Reviews
More
  • Home
  • About Us
  • About the Breed
  • Dame's and Sire's
  • Puppies & Litter's
  • Puppy Application
  • Customer Reviews

  • Home
  • About Us
  • About the Breed
  • Dame's and Sire's
  • Puppies & Litter's
  • Puppy Application
  • Customer Reviews

About the Cane Corso Breed

Our Breeds

 

The Cane Corso is an Italian breed of mastiff. It is usually kept as a companion dog or guard dog; it may also be used to protect livestock. In the past it was used for hunting large game, and also to herd cattle.


History

According to the breed standard of the Fédération Cynologique Internationale, the Cane Corso was once distributed throughout much of the Italian peninsula, but in the recent past was found only in Puglia, in southern Italy. After the collapse of the mezzadria system of share-cropping in the 1960s, the dogs became rare. The modern breed derives from selective breeding from about 1980 of a few surviving animals. A breed society, the Società Amatori Cane Corso, was formed in 1983. The breed was recognized by the Ente Nazionale della Cinofilia Italiana in 1994; it was provisionally accepted by the Fédération Cynologique Internationale in 1996 and received full acceptance in 2007. It was recognized by the American Kennel Club of the United States in 2010.

In the period 2011–2019 the number of annual registrations in Italy was in the range of 3000–4250.


Characteristics

The Cane Corso is a large dog of molossoid type and is closely related to the Neapolitan Mastiff. It is well muscled and less bulky than most other mastiff breeds. According to the international standard, dogs should stand some 24-28 in (62–70 cm) at the withers and weigh 100-110 lb (45–50 kg); bitches are about 23-26 in (58-66 cm) and weigh 90-100 lb (40-45 kg)

The head is large, slightly over one third of the height at the withers in length, with a well-defined stop. The top of the cranium is flat and slightly convergent to the muzzle. The eyes are oval in shape and set well apart. The iris of the eye should be as dark as possible.

The coat is short, dense and lustrous. It may be black, various shades of grey (lead-grey, light grey or slate-grey) or fawn (dark fawn, light fawn, or stag red), or dark wheaten (‘fromentino’); it may be brindled. Minor white markings on the chest, the feet or the nose are tolerated.

The Cane Corso is genetically pre-disposed to elbow and hip dysplasia, to patellar luxation and to retinal dysplasia. It has above-average susceptibility to demodicosis, ectropion, entropion, gastric dilatation volvulus (bloat), hypothyroidism, idiopathic epilepsy, mycotic otitis and nictitans gland prolapse (cherry eye).

In 2017 a study of 232 Cane Corso dogs from 25 countries found an average life span of 9.3 years, varying with different coat colours. The longest-lived were black brindle (10.3 years), followed by: brindle (10.1 years); grey brindle (9.8 years); black, fawn and grey (all 9.0 years); and dogs of other colours (8.1 years). A study of dogs in the United Kingdom, published in 2024, found an average life span for the breed of 8.1 years overall.


Use

The Cane Corso is usually kept as a companion dog or guard dog; it may also be used to protect livestock. In the past it was used for hunting large game, and also to herd cattle.[8]

It is a working class. Dogs show tranquility in the presence of inoffensive strangers, indifference to gunfire, and aggressive defense of the owner against an attacker.

Copyright © 2025 TNT Cane Corso - All Rights Reserved.

Powered by

  • About Us
  • About the Breed
  • Dame's and Sire's
  • Puppies & Litter's
  • Puppy Application
  • Customer Reviews

This website uses cookies.

We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.

Accept