Bassette Liégeoise Gallinas

Bassette Liégeoise

Gallus gallus domesticus

Dato Curioso

The Bassette Liégeoise's short-legged dwarfism is caused by a dominant lethal gene — the same mutation used in the Belgian Blue cattle bred just kilometres away. Walloon animal breeders have independently exploited this gene in two completely different species: cattle and chickens. No other region in the world has done this twice.

A rare Belgian true bantam from the Liège region of Wallonia, the Bassette Liégeoise is a unique true bantam with a dwarf-like build — very short legs, a broad, low-slung body, and a single comb. It is one of the stockiest, most compact Belgian bantam breeds, and its appearance is dramatically different from the lighter, taller Belgian breeds like the d'Anvers. The Bassette was developed by Walloon poultry fanciers in the early 20th century, likely drawing on the same creeper gene that produces short-legged breeds like the Krüper and Scots Dumpy. The breed is kept purely as an ornamental and exhibition bird, valued for its unusual proportions and rare status. Like all Belgian true bantams, the Bassette Liégeoise is small in numbers but deeply cherished by its keepers. Recognised by the EE Europastandard as a distinct Belgian true bantam breed.

🏷️ Raza

Bassette Liégeoise

💭 Temperamento

Calm, quiet, very manageable, good in small spaces, gentle

📏 Tamaño

Small (0.7-0.9 kg)

Esperanza de vida

5-8 years

🎨 Colores

Cuckoo, black, white, blue — several colour varieties

🌍 Origen

Belgium — Liège region, Wallonia; developed early 20th century

🏠 Hábitat

Small garden or run; ground-level housing recommended due to short legs

🍽️ Dieta

Small amounts of standard poultry feed; minimal forager due to short-stance

🎯 Propósito

Ornamental

🥚 Color del huevo

Cream

👑 Tipo de cresta

Single

🏅 Clase EE

True Bantam