Oxford Old English Game Poules

Oxford Old English Game

Gallus gallus domesticus

Fait Amusant

Old English Game has more standardised colour varieties in the PCGB standard than any other chicken breed — over 30 distinct recognised colours. The Oxford type alone accounts for most of this diversity, making it one of the most colour-polymorphic breeds in the animal kingdom.

The second of two distinct standardised types of Old English Game recognised by the Poultry Club of Great Britain, the Oxford type is characterised by a taller, more upright build, longer back, and more rangy appearance compared to the compact Carlisle type. Developed by fanciers in the Oxford area and the English Midlands during the 19th century, the Oxford type was selected for a more elegant, longer silhouette that some argue is closer to the original fighting type of Old English Game. It has a single comb, clean legs, hard feathering, and is bred in an enormous range of colour varieties — OEG is said to have more recognised colour varieties than any other breed in the PCGB standard. After cockfighting was banned in Britain, the Oxford type became a pure exhibition breed. The Oxford-Carlisle divide is one of the oldest and most enduring splits in British poultry history. Not yet recognised separately by the EE Europastandard.

🏷️ Race

Oxford Old English Game

💭 Tempérament

Proud, intelligent, active, aggressive with other cocks, calm with keepers

📏 Taille

Medium (2.3-3.2 kg)

Espérance de vie

5-8 years

🎨 Couleurs

Enormous range — black-red, duckwing, pile, birchen, spangle, cuckoo, white, and many dozens more

🌍 Origine

UK — Oxford and Midlands; developed 19th century, PCGB recognised as distinct type

🏠 Habitat

Individual or paired housing; cocks must be separated

🍽️ Alimentation

Gamefowl-type high-protein feed; athletic build with moderate needs

🎯 Usage

Fighting

🥚 Couleur des œufs

White

👑 Type de crête

Single