A BREED YOU'VE NEVER HEARD OF IS THE REASON WE FIGHT ANIMAL CRUELTY TODAY.

During the 16th century, Britain’s most valuable kitchen staff member was a dog. The Turnspit was bred to run in a wooden wheel that turned a roasting spit, cooking the meat evenly over an open fire, “in such a manner that no cook or servant could do it more cleverly,” according to royal physician and dog expert Johannes Caius, circa 1576, as quoted in Stanley Coren’s Pawprints of History.

Zoologist Carl Linnaeus named them Canis vertigus, Latin for “dizzy dog.” If there were a Latin term for “dog with various specific names,” it’d be theirs, too.


Source: The Kitchen Sisters
There’s still one Turnspit left, and her name is Whiskey. She’s on
display at the Abergavenny Museum in Wales, posing with some flowers
against a pretty blue backdrop. Longtime custodian of the museum Sally
Davis interprets the set up as signs that someone really did love her.
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