Birman
The Birman is a breed of domestic cat. This
breed has a pale cream coloured body and coloured points of Seal,
Blue, Chocolate, Lilac, Lynx or Red Factor colors on the legs,
tail and face. The body type varies from Persian-type to Siamese-type.
Birmans differ from conventional colour-point cats by their white
paws called gloves. The coat is
medium-length, not as long and thick as a Persian's, and does
not mat.
The Birman is said to have
originated in western Burma, and certainly cats with similar markings
are recorded in documents from ancient Thailand. One story claims
that a pair was given as a gift to an Englishman named Major Gordon
Russell and his friend August Pavie by the priests of the Khmer
people; another that the cats were acquired by an American named
Vanderbilt from a servant who had once been at the temple of Lao-Tsun
where the cats were kept as sacred animals. Two cats were shipped
to France in approximately 1919. The male died in transit, but
the female was pregnant and gave birth to a litter of kittens
in France. These formed the basis of a breeding program and the
breed was registered with the French Cat Registry in 1925. The
Birman breed was almost wiped out during World War II. Only two
cats were alive in Europe at the end of the war, and they had
to be heavily outcrossed and rebred to rebuild the breed. The
restored breed was recognised in Britain in 1965 and by the American
Cat Fanciers' Association in 1966.
In reality modern western
Birmans are a hybrid of Siamese and Persian breeds and may differ
considerable from Burma temple cats from which they originally
obtained their white gloves.