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History

A young King Charles II with his King Charles Spaniels
(Photo courtesy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavalier_King_Charles_Spaniel)
For many centuries, small breeds of spaniels have been
popular in the United Kingdom. Some centuries later, Toy Spaniels
became popular as pets, especially as pets of the royal family.
In fact, the King Charles Spaniel was so named because a Blenheim-coated
spaniel was the children's pet in the household of Charles I. Such
spaniels can be seen in many paintings of the 16th, 17th and 18th
centuries. These early spaniels had longer, pointier snouts and
thinner-boned limbs than today's.
Over time, the toy spaniels were replaced in popularity
by short-snouted, dome-headed dogs of Asian descent, such as the
Pug and Japanese Chin. The King Charles Spaniel was bred with these
dogs, resulting in the similar-shaped head of today's English Toy
Spaniel breed. The King Charles Spaniel remained popular at Blenheim
Palace, home to the Dukes of Marlborough, where the brown and white
version was the most popular - resulting in the name Blenheim for
that color combination.
In the 1920s, an American named Roswell Eldrige offered
twenty-five pounds as a prize for any King Charles Spaniel "of
the old-fashioned type" with a longer nose, flat skull, and
a lozenge (spot) in the middle of the crown of the head, sometimes
called "the kiss of Buddha," "Blenheim Spot,"
"lozenge" or "Kissing Spot". So, the breed was
developed by selective breeding of short-snouted Spaniels. The result
was a dog that resembled the boyhood pet of Charles II of England
("Cavalier King Charles"), hence the name of the breed.
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