Shamo chickens
Shamo is an overall designation for game fowl in Japan. There are seven recognised breeds of Shamo chicken in Japan, all of which are designated Natural Monuments of Japan. The Shamo breeds are thought to derive from fighting chickens of Malay type brought from Thailand in the early part of the seventeenth century.
History
The Shamo breeds are thought to derive from fighting chickens of Malay type brought from Thailand in the early part of the seventeenth century or early Edo period. The Japanese word Shamo derives from Siam, the former name of Thailand. The birds have been selectively bred for several hundred years for their fighting ability. Some were imported to Western countries in the 1970s; in the twenty-first century, the birds are reported from four countries outside Japan: Australia, Ireland, the United Kingdom and the United States.Breeds
The seven recognised Shamo breeds designated as Natural Monuments of Japan are:- Ehigo-Nankin-Shamo, a slightly taller and more slender variant of the Nankin-Shamo from Niigata
- O-Shamo
- Kinpa
- Ko-Shamo
- Nankin-Shamo
- Yakido or Ygido
- Yamato-Shamo or Yamato Gunkei