Medieval Hunting: Navigation Search
Medieval Hunting: Navigation Search
Medieval Hunting: Navigation Search
Contents
[hide]
• 1 History
○ 1.1 Terminology
• 2 Equipment
○ 2.1 The horse
○ 2.2 The hound
○ 2.3 The hawk
• 3 Quarry
○ 3.1 The Hart
○ 3.2 The boar
○ 3.3 The wolf
○ 3.4 Other quarry
• 4 Art and symbolism
• 5 Dangers of the hunt
• 6 Literature
• 7 See also
• 8 References
• 9 External links
[edit] History
Hieratic formalized recreational hunting has been taking place since Assyrian kings hunted lions
from chariots in a demonstration of their royal nature. In Roman law, property included the right
to hunt, a concept which continued under the Frankish Merovingian and Carolingian monarchs
who considered the entire kingdom to be their property, but who also controlled enormous royal
domains as hunting reserves (forestes). The biography of the Merovingian noble Saint Hubert
(died 727/728) recounts how hunting could become an obsession. Carolingian Charlemagne
loved to hunt and did so up until his death at age seventy-two.
With the breakup of the Carolingian Empire, local lords strove to maintain and monopolize the
reserves and the taking of big game in forest reserves, and small game in warrens. They were
most successful in England after the Norman Conquest, and in Gascony from the 12th century.
These large sanctuaries of woodland—the royal forest—where populations of game animals
were kept and watched over by gamekeepers. Here the peasantry could not hunt, poaching being
subject to severe punishment: the injustice of such "emparked" preserves was a common cause of
complaint in populist vernacular literature. The lower classes mostly had to content themselves
with snaring birds and smaller game outside of forest reserves and warrens.
By the 16th century, areas of land reserved for breeding and hunting of game were of three
kinds, according to their degree of enclosure and being subject to Forest Laws: Forests, large
unenclosed areas of wilderness, Chases, which normally belonged to nobles, rather than the
crown, and Parks, which were enclosed, and not subject to Forest Laws.[1]
[edit] Terminology
One of the striking things about Medieval Hunting is its devotion to terminology. All aspects of
the hunt - each different animal to be hunted, in each year of its development, each of its body
parts, each stage of the chase, each feature of the hounds' behaviour - had its separate term.
Knowledge of the terms of hunting was one of the accomplishments of knighthood. Medieval
books of hunting lay huge stress on the importance of correct terminology.[2][3] The invention of
the 'fair terrms' of hunting was attributed by Malory and others to the Arthurian knight Sir
Tristram,[4] who is seen both as the model of the noble huntsman, and the originator of its ritual:
As he (Sir Tristram) grew in power and strength he laboured in hunting and hawking - never a
gentleman that we ever heard of did more. And as the book says he devised good fanfares to
blow for beasts of venery, and beasts of the chase and all kinds of vermin, and all the terms we
still have in hawking and hunting. And therefore the book of venery, of hawking and hunting, is
called Sir Tristram's. Therefore all gentlemen who bear old (coats of) arms ought to honour Sir
Tristram for the goodly terms that gentlemen have and use, and shall until Doomsday, that
through them all men of respect may distinguish a gentleman from a yeoman and a yeoman from
a villein. (Modernised)
[edit] Equipment
[edit] Quarry
Most of the larger, wild mammals could be hunted. Different animals were valued for different
qualities; both in the hunt itself, and in the meat and the fur they produced.
[edit] The Hart
Deerhunting
The king of all the wild animals was the deer, and more precisely the hart, which is an adult male
of the red deer. The hart was classified by the number of tines on its antlers. An animal should
have at least ten tines to be considered worthy of hunting; this was referred to as a "hart of ten."
Deer could be hunted in two different ways: par force de chiens ("by force of dogs" or "by
strength"), and bow and stable.
Hunting par force was considered the noblest form of hunting. In this process the game was run
down and exhausted by the dogs before the kill was made. Par force hunting consisted of eight
parts: the quest, the assembly, the relays, the moving or un-harboring, the chase, the baying, the
unmaking and the curée.
• Quest: Before the hunt started, an expert huntsman, accompanied by a lymer, would seek
out the quarry. By the help of tracks, broken branches and droppings he would try to
locate the lay of the hart as accurately as possible, ideally he would see it.
Picture from Livre de la Chasse showing relays of running hounds set on the path of the hart
• Assembly: Then, early on the day of the hunt, the hunting party would meet, examine the
huntsman's information and the deer's droppings, and agree on how best to conduct the
hunt. This would be a social gathering also, with breakfast served.
• Relays: When the path of the hart had been predicted, relays of dogs were positioned
along it. This way, it was assured that the dogs were not worn out before the hart.
• Moving: Also called the fynding. Here a lymer was used to track down the hart.
• Chase: This was the hunt proper; here it was essential to keep the hounds on the track of
the selected quarry.
• Baying: When the hart could run no longer, it would turn and try to defend itself. It was
said to be "at bay." The hounds should now be kept from attacking, and the most
prominent man in the hunting party would make the kill, with a sword or spear.
• Unmaking: The deer was finally dissected in a careful, ritualistic manner.
• Curée: Lastly, the dogs had to be rewarded with pieces of the carcass, in a manner so that
they would associate their effort with the reward.
Hunting "by bow and stable" had less prestige, but could produce greater results. The quarry,
often a whole herd, would be driven by hounds to a predetermined place. Here archers would be
ready to kill the animals with bow and arrow. The subtlest form of hunting, and also the most
productive relative to the forces used, was described by the German knight Guicennas. This was
a party of two or three men on foot advancing slowly and quietly with partial concealment from
horses (literal 'stalking horses' - because deer are relatively unalarmed by quadrupeds), so as to
induce the the deer to move withou undue alarm into range of concealed archers. This required
patience, a low profile attitude, and a deep appreciation of animal psychology.
The hart was a highly respected animal, and had great symbolic and mythological significance. It
was often compared to Christ for its suffering; a well-known story tells of how St. Eustace was
converted to Christianity by seeing a crucifix between the antlers of a stag while hunting. Other
stories told of how the hart could become several hundred years old, and how a bone in the
middle of its heart prevented it from dying of fear.
[edit] The boar
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