Gallus gallus domesticus
✨ Fait Amusant
Tienen is Belgium's sugar capital, home to the country's largest sugar beet refinery. The Tiense Vechter was developed by workers at the sugar refinery who bred gamefowl as a sideline — the same hands that processed sugar beets by day handled champion fighting cocks by night.
A Belgian fighting breed from the city of Tienen (Tirlemont in French) in Flemish Brabant, one of the five distinct Belgian gamefowl breeds recognised by the EE. The Tiense Vechter is a large, powerful gamefowl with a triple comb, hard feathering, and a tall, imposing stance. It was developed in the 19th century for the Tienen cockpit, and it is distinguished from other Belgian gamefowl by its slightly more compact build and distinctive head shape. The Tiense Vechter shares ancestry with the other great Belgian fighting breeds — the Brügger Kämpfer, Lütticher Kämpfer, and Brugse Vechter — each standardised separately based on subtle regional differences in type and the fierce local pride of Flemish and Walloon cities. Cockfighting was banned in Belgium in 1929, and the Tiense Vechter has since been maintained purely as an exhibition and conservation breed. Recognised by the EE Europastandard and BDRG.
🏷️ Race
Tiense Vechter (Combattant de Tirlemont)
💭 Tempérament
Proud, territorial with cocks, alert, calm with keepers, intelligent
📏 Taille
Large (3.2-4.5 kg)
⏳ Espérance de vie
5-8 years
🎨 Couleurs
Black-red, silver duckwing, gold duckwing, blue-red — standard gamefowl patterns
🌍 Origine
Belgium — Tienen (Tirlemont), Flemish Brabant; developed 19th century
🏠 Habitat
Individual housing for cocks; separate runs required
🍽️ Alimentation
High-protein gamefowl pellets; moderate appetite for its size
🎯 Usage
Fighting
🥚 Couleur des œufs
White
👑 Type de crête
Triple
🏅 Classe EE
Large Fowl