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Nun

Nun

The Nun is an old marked (toy) fancy pigeon, instantly recognizable by its predominantly snow-white body set against a solid colored head, a colored tail, and colored wing flights, topped by a rounded shell crest at the back of the head. Fanciers call the colored head the “veil,” and a bird is named for the color it carries: a black Nun, a red Nun, a yellow Nun, and so on. It is one of the older English fancy breeds, originally a flying tumbler that was later refined for the show pen, and it sits in the same broad family of marked, shell-crested European pigeons as the German Nun. This page covers what the Nun is, where it comes from, how its markings and crest are judged, the recognized colors, how to keep one well, and what to check before you buy, with the marketplace and breeder directory linked at the end.

Black English Nun pigeon in profile showing a white body, solid black hooded head, black tail, black wing flights, and a rounded shell crest at the back of the head

NUN PIGEON AT A GLANCE
Also called
English Nun; historically the Dutch Shell pigeon on the Continent
Type
Fancy / marked “toy” breed, kept for exhibition and as a pet, not for utility
Marking
White body with a colored head (the “veil”), colored bib, colored tail, and ten colored primary flights on each wing
Crest
Full shell crest (peak crest), high and erect, at the back of the head
Legs
Clean, free of feathers below the hock
Colors
Black, red, yellow, blue, brown (dun), silver, plus ash red, ash yellow, and khaki in some standards
Size
Small; show cocks about 9.5 inches to the top of the head and roughly 11 inches long when standing erect
Lifespan
Commonly around 10 to 15 years in good care, in line with other domestic pigeons
Governing clubs
National Pigeon Association (US standard); British Nun Club (UK); regional Nun clubs

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What is a Nun pigeon?

The Nun is a breed of fancy pigeon (Columba livia domestica) developed over many generations of selective breeding for a precise, high-contrast color pattern rather than for racing, flying, or meat. According to the breed’s published standards, the head, bib, tail, and the primary flight feathers are colored while the shell crest and the entire rest of the body and wings are pure white and free of stray colored (“foul”) feathers. The breed gets its name from the raised feathers that form a kind of hood over the back of the head and neck, said to resemble a nun’s habit.

That puts it in the category fanciers call “toy” or marked pigeons: ornamental breeds prized for plumage pattern, crest, and posture rather than for any working purpose. If you are weighing it against other ornamental pigeons, the broader Creatures pigeon species page is a good place to compare the Nun with crested, frilled, and color-marked breeds side by side.

One useful thing to settle up front: “Nun” most often means the English Nun in English-language fancier circles, but there is also a separate German Nun (Deutsches Nonnchen). The two share the same basic idea, a white bird with a colored cap, tail, and flights, but they are distinct breeds with their own standards. We come back to that relationship below.

Origin and history

The Nun is one of the older fancy breeds. It began life as a flying tumbler, a bird kept for its tumbling flight, and was only later selected and refined into the marked exhibition breed seen in show pens today. Marked, shell-crested white pigeons of this general kind have a long history in Europe; on the Continent the breed has been known as the Dutch Shell pigeon, and the closely related German Nun is documented from the early seventeenth century.

The modern, high-class English Nun, with its exacting demands on crest shape and clean markings, is largely the work of British fanciers who refined the breed through the nineteenth century into the form that breed clubs standardize today. The practical upshot for a buyer is simple: the Nun is a long-established, well-documented show breed with written standards and dedicated clubs, not a novelty or a recent cross. That history is part of why it remains a recognizable favorite among fanciers of color-marked pigeons.

Close-up of a black English Nun pigeon's head showing the solid black veil, the sharp boundary to the white neck, and the rounded shell crest of raised feathers at the back of the head

Markings, crest, and what the standard asks for

The whole point of a Nun is its marking, and the standards are specific about it. Get the pattern clear and the rest of the breed falls into place.

The veil and the markings

A correct Nun is pure white over the body and wings, with color confined to four places:

Everything else, the back, breast, belly, wing shields, and the shell crest itself, must be pure white and free of any odd colored feathers. That demand for clean, exact markings is what makes the Nun a challenge to breed to a high standard and why genuinely good specimens are prized.

The shell crest

Behind the head sits the breed’s other defining feature: a shell crest (also called a peak crest). The standard asks for it to be shell-shaped, high and erect, and as wide and thick as possible, sweeping up on both sides until it meets the head roughly in line with the eyes and beak. A full, even, well-curved shell is a major show point; a thin, lopsided, or uneven crest is a serious fault.

Build and legs

The Nun is a small, neat pigeon. Published show standards put cocks at about 9.5 inches measured to the top of the head (not the top of the shell) and roughly 11 inches in length when standing erect, with hens slightly smaller and a touch more compact. The legs are clean, meaning free of feathers below the hock, so there is no muff or boot to groom or judge.

Recognized colors

Because a Nun is named for its veil color, color is central to the breed. The recognized range is broad. The National Pigeon Association standard lists black, brown, red, yellow, blue, silver, khaki, ash red, and ash yellow, and “dun” is the fancier’s term for the dilute of black (a soft brownish gray) that you will also see described. In everyday conversation the most familiar Nuns are black, red, yellow, dun, and blue.

Whatever the color, the requirement is the same: a solid, even, richly pigmented veil, bib, tail, and flights, set against a clean white body with no foul feathers bleeding into the white or white flecking into the color. A deep, lustrous black or a clear, even red on a spotless white body is what separates a show-quality Nun from a pet-quality one.

Red English Nun pigeon standing in profile on a wooden surface, showing a white body with a red hooded head, red tail, and rounded shell crest

The Nun and its relatives (German Nun and the marked breeds)

It is worth placing the Nun in its family, because the names overlap and buyers get them confused.

The German Nun (Deutsches Nonnchen) is a separate breed, bred by German fanciers and documented from the early seventeenth century. It follows the same idea, a white bird with a colored cap on the head plus a colored tail and colored primary flights, the latter two said to look like a cross in flight, which is why it has historically also been called a Monk or Cross. Its colored areas appear in black, red, yellow, brown, blue, silver, and similar shades. The German Nun and the English Nun are cousins in concept, not the same breed, and they are judged to different standards.

More broadly, the Nun belongs to the world of marked or “magpie-marked” fancy pigeons, ornamental breeds defined by where the color sits on an otherwise white bird. If the head-and-flights pattern appeals to you, the wider Creatures pigeon species hub lets you compare it with other crested and color-marked breeds, and there are deeper pages on related fancy breeds such as the Damascus pigeon and the Chinese Owl if you want to see how different traditions shaped very different ornamental birds.

Temperament and keeping a Nun

As a small, long-domesticated fancy pigeon, the Nun is generally a calm, manageable bird that tames readily with gentle, regular handling, which is part of why marked toy breeds are popular with hobby keepers and exhibitors. As with any pigeon, individual temperament varies with how the bird was raised and how much quiet, consistent contact it gets. Treat that as the practical experience of keepers rather than a formally studied trait.

Housing

Nuns need a clean, dry, draft-free loft or aviary with secure protection from predators, perches, and nest boxes for pairs. Good ventilation without drafts, dry footing, and routine cleaning are the backbone of pigeon health. Because the Nun’s value is in spotless white plumage, a clean, dry loft matters even more than usual: a damp or dirty environment quickly stains and damages the white feathers that make the breed.

Feeding

Feed a quality pigeon grain or seed mix appropriate to pigeons, with constant access to clean fresh water. Pigeons that eat whole grain also need grit available, because they have no teeth and rely on grit in the gizzard to grind food. A mineral or pigeon-specific supplement supports birds in lay and in moult. Avoid sudden diet changes, and keep feed and water clean to prevent the digestive upsets that travel quickly through a loft.

Health and the moult

Routine pigeon health care applies: keep the loft clean and dry, provide bathing water, watch for the common pigeon ailments (respiratory issues, canker, coccidiosis, and external parasites), and work with an avian or pigeon-experienced veterinarian for diagnosis and any medication rather than guessing. The annual moult is when feather quality is rebuilt, so good nutrition and a low-stress environment through the moult directly affect how a Nun looks in the following show season. Defer all medical decisions to a veterinarian who can examine the bird.

Lifespan

A well-kept domestic pigeon commonly lives in the region of 10 to 15 years, and sometimes longer with consistent food, clean water, protection from predators, and veterinary care. There is no breed-specific lifespan study for the Nun, so treat that as the general domestic-pigeon expectation rather than a guarantee.

Cost and where to find one

The Nun is a fancier’s bird, bought and sold through the pigeon-fancy community, club shows, and breeders rather than through general pet retail, so prices vary widely with quality and are best understood as a range rather than a single number.

Ordinary pet-quality or young birds tend to be inexpensive, often in the range of a modest hobby purchase, while top show-quality birds with excellent crests, clean markings, and winning bloodlines command much more. There is no single reliable public list price for the breed, and we will not invent one; the honest answer is that a pet bird is usually affordable and a proven show bird is a premium, and the gap between them is large. Because Nuns are sold within the fancy rather than on every street corner, the most reliable way to find genuine, well-marked birds is through breeders and a marketplace built for animals.

You can browse current Nun pigeon listings on the Creatures marketplace and look for breeders and lofts in the Creatures breeder directory. If nothing is listed in your area right now, a saved listing alert (below) is the simplest way to be told when a Nun is posted.

Buying considerations

Whether you want a pet or a show prospect, judge the bird in front of you rather than the breed’s reputation.

Frequently asked questions

Why is it called a Nun pigeon?
The name comes from the raised hood of feathers, the shell crest, that covers the back of the head and neck, said to resemble a nun’s habit. The colored head is also called the “veil.”

What colors do Nun pigeons come in?
The recognized range includes black, brown, red, yellow, blue, silver, khaki, ash red, and ash yellow, with dun (the dilute of black) also seen. The bird is named for its head color, so a black-headed bird is a black Nun and a red-headed bird a red Nun.

How many flight feathers are colored on a Nun?
The standard calls for ten colored primary flight feathers on each wing, along with a colored head, bib, and tail, while the rest of the body and the shell crest stay pure white.

Is the Nun the same as the German Nun?
No. The English Nun and the German Nun (Deutsches Nonnchen) are separate breeds that share the same general look, a white bird with a colored cap, tail, and flights, but they have their own standards and histories. The German Nun is documented from the early seventeenth century.

Are Nun pigeons good pets?
For someone willing to provide a clean, dry, predator-safe loft or aviary, the Nun is a small, generally calm fancy pigeon that tames with gentle handling. It is kept for ornament and companionship rather than for any working use.

How long do Nun pigeons live?
Like other domestic pigeons, a well-cared-for Nun commonly lives around 10 to 15 years, sometimes longer with good food, clean water, predator protection, and veterinary care.

Do this next on Creatures

Whether you are identifying a Nun, hunting for a well-marked bird, or already keeping a loft, Creatures is the records, marketplace, and directory layer to do it in one place.

NUN PIGEON HUB

Find a bird. Browse Nun pigeons on the marketplace and search lofts and breeders in the Creatures directory. New to it? See saving searches and using your watchlist.

Get alerted. Nuns are sold within the fancy, so they come and go, set a free Nun pigeon listing alert and we will tell you when one is posted. No account needed to start.

Add your bird. Already keeping Nuns? Create a free animal profile in a few minutes. The walkthrough is in adding an animal to Creatures, and your animal’s profile page explains the tabs.

Track pairings and health. Keep breeding, color, moult, and health records on Creatures. The record sheet opens for any visitor to look around, and you will need a free account to save what you enter. See adding a record for the full how-to.

List your loft. Breeding Nuns to standard? Add your loft or breeder profile so buyers searching for well-marked birds can reach you, and read getting listed in the breeder directory.

Well-marked Nuns come and go within the fancy. Set a free listing alert and Creatures will tell you the moment one is posted, no account needed to start.

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