Poule de Zottegem Poules

Poule de Zottegem

Gallus gallus domesticus

Fait Amusant

Zottegem's town square features a statue of Lamoral, Count of Egmont — the 16th-century Flemish nobleman executed by the Spanish for resisting Habsburg rule. The Poule de Zottegem is a more peaceful local export, but it shares the town's long tradition of quiet defiance against being absorbed into something larger.

A Belgian egg-laying breed from the town of Zottegem in East Flanders, developed in the late 19th century as a productive white-egg layer for the Flemish market. The Poule de Zottegem is a medium-sized, active bird with a single comb, clean legs, and predominantly black or cuckoo plumage. It was created by crossing local Flemish farm chickens with imported Italian Leghorns — a familiar pattern in late 19th-century European poultry development where Leghorn blood was used to boost egg production in many traditional breeds. Zottegem chickens were once common across East Flanders but declined when commercial hybrid layers dominated after 1950. Conservation breeding in Belgium has kept the breed alive, and it is recognised by the EE Europastandard as a distinct Belgian breed.

🏷️ Race

Poule de Zottegem

💭 Tempérament

Active, alert, good forager, hardy, self-sufficient

📏 Taille

Medium (2.3-2.7 kg)

Espérance de vie

5-8 years

🎨 Couleurs

Black, cuckoo, white — several colour varieties

🌍 Origine

Belgium — Zottegem, East Flanders; developed late 19th century

🏠 Habitat

Free-range or large run; active breed suited to open systems

🍽️ Alimentation

Layer pellets; excellent forager on pasture and farmland

🎯 Usage

Egg

🥚 Couleur des œufs

White

👑 Type de crête

Single

🏅 Classe EE

Large Fowl