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  2. Old English Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_English_Game

    The Old English Game is a British breed of domestic chicken. It was probably originally bred for cockfighting. [4] Two different standards are recognised by the Poultry Club of Great Britain: Carlisle Old English Game and Oxford Old English Game. [6] There is also an Old English Game bantam. [6]

  3. Modern Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Game

    This was initially known as the Game, and in 1865 was included in nine colours in the Standard of Excellence in Exhibition Poultry, the first edition of the British Poultry Standard by William Bernhardt Tegetmeier; [10]: 20 a Game bantam was also listed. [10]: 47 From about 1870 it was known as the Exhibition Game or Exhibition Modern Game.

  4. Oxford Old English Game fowl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford_Old_English_Game_fowl

    The Oxford Old English Game is an ancient breed of chicken, originating from Britain. They were officially recognised when The Old English Game Club split, creating two breeds of Old English Game fowl. They are primarily farmed for meat but have been used for cock fighting and eggs on a domestic scale.

  5. Orpington chicken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orpington_chicken

    Orpington hens lay about 180 light brown eggs per year, with an average weight of 53 g; [8]: 158 [15]: 66 bantam hens lay about 110 eggs, with a weight of some 40 g. [16]: 67 It was said that at one time Orpingtons were capable of laying as many as 340 [5]: 115 eggs per year. The decline in production was due to breeders selecting for looks ...

  6. Sebright chicken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sebright_chicken

    The Sebright (IPA: / ˈ s iː b r aɪ t /) is a British breed of bantam chicken. It is a true bantam – a miniature bird with no corresponding large version – and is one of the oldest recorded British bantam breeds. [8] It is named after Sir John Saunders Sebright, who created it as an ornamental breed by selective breeding in the early ...

  7. Chicken breeds recognized by the American Poultry Association

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_breeds_recognized...

    A red pyle Dutch Bantam cock. This class contains all the bantam breeds with a single comb, excluding the game bantams: [1] [3] Ancona (single comb) Andalusian; Australorp; Campine; Catalana; Delaware; Dorking (single comb) Dutch; Holland; Japanese; Java; Jersey Giant; Lakenvelder; Lamona; Leghorn (single comb) Minorca (single comb) Naked-neck ...

  8. Malay Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malay_Game

    The black-breasted red Malay was included in the Standard of Perfection of the American Poultry Association from 1883, and the bantam in 1904; five other colours, both standard- and bantam-sized, were added in 1981. [4] Numbers of the breed in the USA are very low; in 2014 its conservation status there was listed as "critical" by the FAO. [13]

  9. Asil chicken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asil_chicken

    An Asil bantam was created in the late nineteenth century by the British breeder William Flamank Entwisle; [13]: 47 it became popular in Britain and in Holland, but later died out. [9] In the 1980s it was re-created in Belgium by Willy Coppens, using Shamo , Indian Game and Reza Asil; it is bred in Austria, Belgium, Germany, Holland, Hungary ...