Chartreux Cat
France's blue-gray national treasure — the "potato on toothpicks" with a woolly coat and an enigmatic smile, possibly bred by Carthusian monks. Those deep copper-orange eyes, that robust body on delicate legs. Complete guide: why this breed comes in ONLY ONE COLOR (blue-gray), how it's different from British Shorthair and Russian Blue, and the 500-year monastery legend.
📋 Breed Overview
📖 About the Chartreux — The Monks' Cat
The Chartreux is France's national cat breed. Legend says they were bred by Carthusian monks at the Grande Chartreuse monastery — prized for mousing and their quiet nature (the monks valued silence). They appear in French literature as early as 1558. The woolly, water-resistant double coat developed naturally in cold, damp climates. Chartreux come in ONLY one color: blue-gray (any shade from ash to slate). Any other color = not a purebred. Eyes are always deep copper or orange (not green, not blue). The body is robust and cobby — "potato on toothpicks." Not a British Shorthair variant — they're a completely separate, older breed. Generally healthy — patellar luxation is the main concern.