Old English Red
Old English Red is best treated as a historical or local red-rabbit label rather than a widely standardized modern breed name. It appears near older red, golden, and fawn domestic-rabbit traditions, where color was often recorded before today's tidy separation of show breeds and named varieties. The useful meaning is a solid, warm red rabbit of old British fancy or farm association, not every rabbit that happens to carry a reddish coat.
Anyone encountering the name should ask what standard, region, or breeder tradition is being used. A careful account separates Old English Red from New Zealand Red, Thrianta, Sachsengold, and orange varieties, all of which can look similar to a casual buyer. Practical stewardship is mostly about preserving provenance: photographs, weights, parentage, and the breeder's explanation matter more than a loose color claim on its own.
Colors: Agouti, Albino, Black, Blue, Broken, Charlie, Chestnut, Chinchilla, Chocolate, Cream, Fawn, Harlequin, Himalayan, Lilac, Lynx, Magpie, Marten, Opal, Orange, Otter, Pointed White, Red, Sable, Seal, Squirrel, Tortoise, Tri-Color, Vienna Marked, White