Medieval HuntingSutton, 2003 - 216 pages Using a variety of sources (hunting treatises, assize books, manorial and ecclesiastical records, books of hours and literary collections) and pictures (which include the Emperor Maxmillian stag hunting, two ladies jousting, peasants rabbiting with ferrets and camouflage techniques such as disguising yourself as a woodcock), this book aims to bring to life the centrality of hunting to medieval societies, both as an economic necessity and as an expression of medieval humanity's sense of oneness with nature. Almond shows that all classes enjoyed hunting (in which he includes fishing, hawking and poaching) and women enjoyed it as well as men. |
From inside the book
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Page 34
... hawking , plus two panels of decorative work , almost certainly commissioned by Sir Edward Hynde , the owner between these dates and a known enthusiast for hawking and animal - baiting.33 In both the bear and boar hunting scenes ...
... hawking , plus two panels of decorative work , almost certainly commissioned by Sir Edward Hynde , the owner between these dates and a known enthusiast for hawking and animal - baiting.33 In both the bear and boar hunting scenes ...
Page 39
... Hawking was equally popular as an aristocratic pastime but less demanding and more leisurely without the same educational status , presumably because of its lack of personal danger or resemblance to warfare.54 Marcelle Thiébaux writes ...
... Hawking was equally popular as an aristocratic pastime but less demanding and more leisurely without the same educational status , presumably because of its lack of personal danger or resemblance to warfare.54 Marcelle Thiébaux writes ...
Page 159
... hawking was seen as a more proper activity for ladies of rank , lacking the fast pace and bloodier aspects of hunting but involving the aristocratic skills of horsemanship and the pursuit of game . Learning the skills of hawking was ...
... hawking was seen as a more proper activity for ladies of rank , lacking the fast pace and bloodier aspects of hunting but involving the aristocratic skills of horsemanship and the pursuit of game . Learning the skills of hawking was ...
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Common terms and phrases
animals aristocratic hunting Art of Hunting beast birds Birrell British Library Calendar carcass century chapter chase common commonalty hunting Dalby dress Egerton England English falcon falconry fallow deer female ferrets fifteenth-century Forest Laws Gaston Fébus gentle hunters German Gottfried von Strassburg greyhounds H & H hare hart horse horseback hounds hunt establishment hunt servants Hunters and Poachers hunting and hawking hunting books hunting manuals huntsman Ibid illustrations knight ladies late medieval later Middle Ages Livre de chasse London Luttrell Psalter manuscript Master of Game Maurice Keen Maximilian medieval hunting methods misericords nets Nicholas Orme nobility noble numbers particularly pastime peasant Pisanello poaching practice probably quarry species Queen Mary's Psalter rabbits rank red deer repr ritual Roy Modus royal Saint Albans social society sources sport stag hunt status tapestry Tilander Tretyse off Huntyng Tristan Twiti venery veneur venison warren wild boar wolf women