In this the third post about animals at the
Tower of London , we look at bears - or polar
bears to be precise.
One of the sculptures (made from chicken wire) at the Tower of London |
In 1252 King Henry III (1207 - 72) was
given a Norwegian bear by King Hakon V. This bear was described as
"pale" , which is significant because the black bear (albeit
sometimes light coloured) was common in England at the time. It seems
likely that this bear was significantly different in order to merit it being a
gift, and was probably a polar bear.
The bear arrived with a keeper, and once
again the Sheriffs of the City of London
were asked [told] to pay for the animals upkeep. The Sheriffs allotted around
tuppence a day, which considering the prevalent poverty of the day, must have
seemed galling to some. However, after a year, the sheriffs decided it was time
the bear caught it's own food in the Thames; a t that time the Thames
was a clean river, rich with salmon and fish.
"fat
and sweet salmon [are] dailie taken."
The White Tower at the Tower of London |
"Greetings.
We [the King]
command you that for the keeper of our white bear , recently arrived from
Norway… ye cause to be had one muzzle and one iron chain to hold the bear
without the water, one long strong cord, to hold the same bear fishing or
washing himself in the Thames."
The Tower of London with Tower Bridge (over the Thames) in the background. |
King Edward I (Henry III's son) took an
interest in his father's menagerie. He employed 4 keepers, each paid 3d each a
day, plus a 10d allowance towards animal food. Some thirty years after the
original bear, records exist of payment for a white bear called Lynn (she originated from a place of the same name) being
transported by boat (presumably up the Thames )
to the Tower.
A few centuries later, it seems curiosity
was superseded by cruelty. King James I of England (1603-25) made the bears,
lions and dogs fight each other. To this end he had a platform built from which
he could watch the so-called 'sport'. This was a vicious activity where the
bears were often chained and toothless, and had massive mastiff dogs set on
them. The 'sport' was in betting on which animal would inflict the most damage.
I just came upon your blog from a Facebook post. I think you and I must have a lot in common :). I adore cats, write Regency Romances, and have incorporated the Tower of London's zoo in my newest work in progress :) (And ALL of my books have a least one cat in them!)
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Ruth, we must truly be kindred spirits! How awesome to link up with you...now I'm off to check out your blog.
ReplyDeleteKindest regards,
Grace x
Grace, I agree with you. And I love your picture at the top of the page with the cat sitting right in the middle :)
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