What Falconry
Is and Is Not
Falconry is the sport of hunting with a trained bird
of prey, usually a hawk or falcon. It is also the art of training the
bird to hunt in cooperation with a human falconer. Falconry is also
known as hawking. The two terms are synonymous and either is appropriate
regardless of whether a falcon, a hawk or an eagle is being flown. Falconry
is often touted as the oldest sport still being practiced. It isn’t.
Coursing, the sport of running down game with sharp-eyed hounds, deserves
that honor.
Still, hawking dates back
perhaps 3000 years, which makes it far more venerable than say, football.
And falconry is unique in being the only sport in world history to have
a wild animal as the central participant. While an experienced falconer
can help his or her raptor hunt successfully, the falconer is essentially
a spectator on the edges of the action. The real players are raptors.
That has always been a great part of the sport’s appeal –
the chance to establish a bond with a wild bird of prey so that it can
be handled and observed at close range. In fact, no less an expert on
the subject than Tom Cade, ornithologist and falconer, calls falconry
“basically a special form of bird-watching.” The art of
falconry provides the techniques for forming that bond.
The relationship between a
falconer and a raptor is very different from the relationship between
a person and a pet. For starters, a falconry bird is never a pet. It
is painstakingly trained for a purpose – to catch prey in partnership
with a person. Unlike a dog, a trained raptor does not perform for the
falconer because it wishes to please. Nor can it be forced to obey out
of fear, as a horse might be. A falconry bird responds to the falconer
not out of affection or fear but because it has been trained to associate
the falconer with food. A raptor’s behavioral patterns are governed
in large part by its appetite. By controlling the bird’s appetite,
by teaching it to regard the falconer as its only source of food,
the falconer can control and even modify the bird’s behavior.
The falconer’s first
challenge is to overcome the raptor’s natural wariness of people.
This is done by carrying the bird on the glove for hours at a time,
as well as by feeding it on the glove. The falconer’s patient
handling as he or she carries the bird instills trust. Feeding on the
glove teaches the bird to associate the falconer - and the glove –
with food.
Once the bird has accepted
the falconer as the food-supplier, training can proceed to the next
step. Using food rewards – usually tidbits of chicken or quail
– the falconer induces the tethered bird to fly a short distance
to him or her. Gradually the distance is increased. Finally, when the
tethered raptor has learned to fly to the falconer without hesitation,
the bird can be taken out into the field and flown free. It doesn’t
need to be taught to hunt. It does that by instinct. However, hunting
skillfully is learned by experience, and the falconer helps the novice
raptor gain the necessary experience. The bird learns to watch the falconer,
who will “put up” game by driving it out into the open.
Often the falconer will use a hunting dog to help in this task.
The falconer watches the raptor
just as carefully. Once the bird has made a kill it will not carry it
back to the falconer, as is widely believed. So it is vital that the
falconer is on the spot when the quarry is brought down. If the falconer
is nowhere in sight, the raptor will proceed to eat its fill from its
downed prey. The bird will then be “fed up” and two things,
both of them unfortunate for the falconer, will have just happened.
The now-full bird will have no interest in returning to the falconer,
who can no longer motivate it with food. Just as bad, the bird has now
learned that it can provide itself with food, that it doesn’t
have to depend upon the falconer. If these things happen, the falconer
has lost control of the bird.
If all goes well and the falconer
is nearby when the bird makes its kill, he or she gives the raptor a
reward of food and removes the kill. The reward will be a small amount
– a tidbit – so the bird will remain hungry and eager to
hunt again. This strategy also reinforces the idea that the falconer
is the bird’s sole source of food. Only when the bird is returned
to its home base will it be allowed a real meal.
Before the falconer hunts
with his bird again he or she will weigh it carefully. If the bird exceeds
its flying weight (the weight at which it is hungry enough to hunt and
strong enough to do it efficiently) the experienced falconer will not
hunt with it. Raptors hunt only when hungry because the effort and risk
of making a kill are great. A “fed-up” raptor, one that
is not motivated by food, will not be interested in hunting or in returning
to the falconer for food.
Raptors Used In Falconry
There are some 280 species of diurnal birds of prey,
ranging in size from massive eagles down to minute falconets the size
of a songbird. They hunt almost exclusively by sight, and the eyesight
of an eagle may be the sharpest in the world. Within this huge and varied
group, only a handful of species make good falconry birds. Some species
are too small to capture anything larger than a mouse. Some are too
nervous to be handled easily, while others are too sluggish to be interesting.
Falconers don’t just want to hunt with a bird. They want to witness
an interesting hunt. Birds that provide a worthwhile spectacle combined
with the desirable size and temperament break down into three groups:
Falcons, hawks and eagles. As will be seen, owls once played an unexpected
role in falconry. It should be noted that falconers traditionally use
the word “hawk” in a generic way for any falconry bird smaller
than an eagle. Thus a falconer may speak of her peregrine falcon as
her “hunting hawk.” The reverse is not true – hawks
are never called falcons. I have no good explanation for the practice.
Falcons
The word falconry is derived from this group’s
name. Falcons have long been considered the most desirable of the falconry
birds because of their speed, dash and trainability. The fastest animal
on this planet is the peregrine falcon in a headlong dive called a “stoop,”
and this species has enjoyed a long history of being flown by aristocrats.
Falcons are also called “longwings”
by falconers. All longwings have long, relatively narrow wings that
are triangular in shape, wide near the body and pointed at the tip.
Seven species were widely used in medieval falconry: The gyrfalcon (Falco
rusticolus); the peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus);
the saker falcon (Falco cherrug); the lanner falcon (Falco
biarmicus); the lugger falcon (Falco jugger); the
hobby (Falco subbuteo); and the merlin (Falco columbarius).
The Eurasian kestrel (Falco tinnunculus), a small falcon
the size of a blue jay, was occasionally used by the common people.
Its diminutive size meant it was limited to small, uninteresting prey
like insects and mice, so nobility scorned it. They especially prized
the gyrfalcon, largest of the falcons, and the peregrine, the swiftest.
The merlin, no larger than a pigeon, was considered an appropriate noblewoman’s
falcon, while the fast but delicate hobby was allotted to the page.
Nowadays modern falconers
can choose the prairie falcon (Falco mexicanus) from North
America; the American kestrel (Falco sparverius); and
hybrids of the different falcon species produced in captivity.
Hawks
The desirable hawks are divided into two groups by
falconers: Accipiters and buteos. The accipiters or “shortwings”
are forest hawks adapted for darting flight in wooded areas. In the
Middle Ages European falconers used two: The goshawk (Accipiter
gentilis) and the Eurasian sparrowhawk (Accipiter nisus).
The goshawk was dubbed “the cook’s bird” by medieval
falconers for its reliability in taking game. Today’s falconers
use two other accipiters: The sharp-shinned hawk (Accipiter striatus)
and the Cooper’s hawk (Accipiter cooperii), both
from North America. Accipiters are not easy to handle. They are high-strung
(a friend calls them “nerve endings with legs”) and apt
to throw distressing, often lethal fits. These are birds for experienced
falconers. In European falconry, a falconer who specialized in working
with goshawks was known as an “austringer.”
Medieval falconers only knew
of one buteo, and they weren’t impressed by it. The common buzzard
(Buteo buteo) is a soaring hawk, a bird of open spaces,
and it’s powerful enough to tackle prey as big as a rabbit or
squirrel. But falconers thought the buzzard lacked dash – it often
resorts to scavenging a meal – and they dismissed it as a falconry
bird.
Modern falconers, however,
can use two large and powerful buteos, both from North America. The
red-tailed hawk (Buteo jamaicensis)
is a big, powerful and (relatively) easy-going hawk. Since it is a widely
distributed, common species, in the U.S. it is considered a good apprentice
falconer’s bird. An even larger bird is the ferruginous hawk (Buteo
regalis), but this somewhat temperamental species is more difficult
to work with than the red-tailed hawk and has a much more restricted
distribution. Consequently it is much less used in falconry than the
almost ubiquitous red-tail.
Today’s falconer has
one more hawk available to him or her, and it’s regarded by many
as the ideal hawking bird. The Harris’ hawk (Parabuteo unicinctus)
from the southwestern deserts of the U.S. is laid-back (for a raptor)
and very versatile. This agile hawk can tackle anything from a quail
to a rabbit or squirrel. Just as important from a falconer’s standpoint
is a quality that makes the Harris’ hawk unique. In the wild this
species hunts cooperatively in small family groups. This isn’t
true of any other species used in hawking, and the trait is immensely
useful to the falconer. This bird needs no specialized training to work
in partnership with a person or with other Harris’ hawks. The
British School of Falconry in Manchester, Vermont, uses Harris’
hawks to train beginners.
Eagles
Because of their great size and power, eagles are
not now and never were used by many falconers. As a group eagles are
moody and inclined to be lazy. Moreover, their ability to fast for long
periods makes their weight hard to control. In medieval times the golden
eagle (Aquila chrysaetos) was designated a king or emperor’s
bird, but of course the king or emperor wouldn’t actually handle
this massive raptor. He would pay a court falconer to do that. In practice,
it appears that few court falconers really did fly golden eagles. These
majestic birds of prey, which resemble a living sculpture, were more
apt to be seen as symbols of royalty than as working falconry birds.
Appropriately so. Golden eagles can bring down prey weighing one hundred
pounds, and this fast and aggressive species can be viewed as the ultimate
hunting bird.
Close relatives of the golden
eagle occasionally used by falconers yesterday and today are the imperial
eagle (Aquila heliaca), the tawny eagle (Aquila
rapax rapax) and the steppe eagle (Aquila rapax
nipalensis). Although all three are smaller than the golden eagle,
they are still eagles and are for experienced falconers only.
Owls
Owls are not considered good candidates for falconry
birds because they are adapted for hunting in darkness, when the falconer
is unable to see the hunt. Two species, the American great horned owl
(Bubo virginianus) and the Eurasian eagle owl (Bubo
bubo) have been trained by modern-day falconers to take gamebirds
and rabbits and squirrels, but in general owls are hard to train.
However, owls were used in
Europe for a falconry-related purpose. Falconers were well aware that
owls are hated and feared by other birds because by night these nocturnal
hunters prey upon those other birds. By day, any owl sighted is mobbed
by other species, either to drive it away or to kill it. European falconers
profited by this behavior by catching owls and staking them out in the
open during migration. Raptors passing overhead would spot the helpless
owl and alight to harass it. Concealed falconers were waiting to trap
young, easily trained raptors for the upcoming hunting season. So while
owls were not flown as falconry birds, they were used in the sport as
decoys. The practice was discontinued in Europe long ago; it was never
used by American falconers.
Falconry Equipment
Think of all the equipment used in football. In that
sport, the players are people and the specialized equipment is used
on or by them. Falconry is different. The important player in this sport
is a raptor, so most of hawking’s specialized equipment (called
“furniture”) is, literally, for the birds. The most important
pieces, all of them devised centuries ago, are:
Jess
– All trained raptors wear jesses, which are leather straps attached
to the birds’ legs. This is the best way for a falconer to handle
a hunting bird.
Bell –
Bells are attached to a trained raptor’s legs above the jesses.
The specially-made pair of bells will each ring with a different tone,
to carry a long distance. Their sound alerts the falconer to his or
her bird’s position if the bird has made a kill in thick cover.
The bells ring as the raptor shifts its feet to hold the prey. Modern-day
falconers still use bells, but rely on radio telemetry to track their
birds from miles away.
Hood
– A leather hood is placed
over a trained raptor’s head to cover its eyes and keep it calm.
Traditionally falcons are hooded, because they are more high-strung
than hawks. Medieval falconers, men and women, used hooded falcons as
props. Since the hooded birds, a symbol of the aristocracy, would stand
virtually motionless on the falconer’s glove, they could be carried
anywhere. Hooded falcons accompanied their noble owners to court, into
banqueting halls, even into church.
Glove
– The falconer carries a trained raptor on a leather glove or
gauntlet. The thickness of the leather and the length of the glove vary
according to the size of the raptor. A glove made to accommodate the
huge feet of a golden eagle extends to the falconer’s elbow, while
a gauntlet for a peregrine falcon will be half that length. Traditionally,
the glove is worn on the left hand, so the falconer’s (usually)
more dexterous right hand is left free. In earlier centuries, the right
hand would be needed to wield a sword or control a horse.
Lure
– The lure is an artificial quarry used for training and exercising
a falconry bird. It is made to look like the prey a raptor is being
trained to hunt. Falcons are trained with lures that resemble birds,
while a lure shaped vaguely like a rabbit is used with hawks and eagles.
Meat is attached to the lure, which is swung on a line. The motion attracts
the raptor’s attention.
Falconry’s Origins and
Early History
C. 1000 BC to 1066 AD
Falconry originated in Asia. Of that there’s
no doubt, but when and precisely where are harder to pin down. Probably
it was invented independently in more than one place, and probably it
developed over time, in fits and starts. One point of origin may have
been China; another almost certainly was the Middle East. Wherever hawking
began, its inventors were surely people who had plenty of experience
in domesticating animals, from dogs, cattle and horses down to sheep,
goats and pigs, as well as chickens and pigeons.
The Chinese people were great
innovators who were responsible for many technological firsts. They
were willing to experiment with new species of animals – they
domesticated the great cormorant (Phalacrocorax carbo)
for fishing – so they may have been the first falconers. In Fair
Game author Eric Hobusch states: “The earliest sources
concerning falconry go back to a Chinese king, ruler of the Kingdom
of Ch’ou, who organized falconry at the Lake of Tung-t’ing
in the Province of Hunan between 689 and 675 BC.”
A slightly earlier date –
somewhere around the 9th century BC – has been given for a neo-Hittite
bas-relief that is now in the Louvre. The stone fragment depicts an
ornately dressed boy standing on a woman’s knees while holding
the leash of a raptor sitting on a wall perch. Paraphrasing an expert
from the British Museum, J.E.M. Mellor in Notes on Falconry
describes this carving: “a young Princeling is represented at
the debut of his education as a gentleman, the falcon indicating sport
and the stylus, in his right hand, and the book of wax tablets, on the
wall, ‘letters.’” The woman would be the prince’s
mother or nanny.
Hawking must have begun earlier
than these two dates. It certainly must have taken several centuries
of trial and error before early falconers worked out the best techniques
for training raptors and were able to pass them along to apprentices,
allowing for falconry to become an organized sport. So it’s safe
to say that hawking dates back at least 3000 years.
Whoever the earliest falconers
were, the ancient Chinese probably spread the sport through their extensive
trade routes. The Chinese were centuries ahead of Western technology
in the production of everything from cast iron and steel for weapons
to luxury goods like textiles, carved jade and ivory, and exquisite
porcelain. These desirable items were moved in vast caravans as far
west as the Mediterranean. The trade routes came to be known as “Silk
Roads” for their best-known merchandise. Trained raptors and Asian
falconers were considered valuable commodities, so they too moved westward,
carrying falconry into Europe.
Between China and the Black Sea stretches a vast grassland
known as the steppes. This area of Central Asia was once home to several
tribes of nomadic horsemen. They lived by herding horses, cattle and
yaks, and sheep and goats. One group, which migrated into what is now
southern Russia in the 8th and 7th centuries BC, is known to history
as the Scythians. While they had no written language, the Scythians
have left us a great deal of information in their tombs, called kurgans.
The aristocratic class, known as Royal Scyths, were buried with rich
collections of grave goods. Excavations have revealed that several kurgans
contain raptor bones and metal bells, indicating that these warlike
horsemen had become falconers.
So had the Mongols. Like the
Scythians, the Mongols were nomadic horsemen. They originated on the
Mongolian Plateau and were a constant threat to the Chinese. The Mongols
were probably the first to hunt foxes and wolves with golden eagles.
This widely distributed species varies in size depending upon geographical
region, and the largest variety, called the Berkut, is what the Mongols
trained. They carried the immense birds on horseback, cradling their
left arms on a wooden support. To this day a few falconers in Central
Asia hunt with golden eagles in this traditional way.
Genghis Khan (b. around 1162;
d.1227) extended Mongol rule westward to Russia and eastward to northern
China. Genghis considered hunting of all kinds as “the training
ground for war” and organized regiments of hunters. Falconry was
overseen by the Ministry of War, and Genghis’s bodyguard was made
up of falconers. The messengers that connected his far-flung empire
bore the symbol of a gold falcon.
His grandson Kublai Khan (b.
1215; d. 1294) conquered China and relocated the Mongol capital to Beijing.
Like Genghis, this khan believed in hunting on a grand scale. Marco
Polo, who worked for Kublai and was a wondering observer at his court,
wrote that the Mongol emperor of China hunted from a pavilion lined
with beaten gold and borne by four elephants (apparently trained to
walk in synchronization). On a hunting expedition Polo records that
Kublai “takes with him full 10,000 falconers and some 500 gerfalcons,
besides peregrines, sakers, and other hawks in great numbers, and goshawks
able to fly at the water-fowl….”
The Mongols helped to spread
falconry westward. The Persians probably learned it from them, and they
in their turn probably taught it to the Arabs. By the time the Prophet
Muhammad was writing down the Koran in the 7th century AD, hawking was
well established in Arabia. As Islam was carried into Europe by its
adherents falconry went with it.
But there were places it didn’t
go. Greece did not embrace hawking, probably because its mountainous
terrain wasn’t suited to a sport that is traditionally practiced
on horseback over wide sweeps of level grassland. So although Greek
coins from the 4th century BC show Alexander the Great with a raptor
on his fist, there is no evidence that he actually practiced falconry.
The Persians, whom he conquered, did practice the sport. Perhaps this
pose was part of Alexander’s political strategy to adopt Persian
customs.
Probably because hawking was
absent from Greece, it was slow to reach the Romans, heirs to much of
Greek culture. The Romans picked it up late in their history from the
Gauls, and just a handful of aristocrats seem to have become falconers.
Falconry was never practiced
by Native Americans, possibly because they lacked horses until the arrival
of the Europeans. Nor did hawking move into the African continent beyond
Morocco. Contrary to what some older reference books state, there is
no evidence that the ancient Egyptians ever practiced the sport.
Hawking had arrived in Europe
by the 4th century AD. An early description comes from Bordeaux; the
laws of Burgundy a century later mention the sport. By the 600s falconry
had reached England. There is a carving of a falconer carrying a hawk
on his glove on the Bewcastle Cross in Cumberland, installed during
that century. An archbishop named Boniface is on record as sending two
falcons and a hawk to Ethelbald, king of Mercia, in the 8th century.
This same Boniface was entreated by Ethelbert II, Saxon king of Kent,
for “two falcons of such skill and courage as readily to fly at
and seize cranes and bring them to the ground.” Alfred the Great
(b. 849; d. 901), King of Wessex, was a falconer as well as a scholar.
Before we move on to the late
medieval period, with its images of jousts, knights in armor and ladies
in pointy hats, it’s worth pausing for a moment to ask a pertinent
question: Why in the world was falconry invented? By the time of the
sport’s beginnings, some 3000 years ago, humans had devised numerous
effective ways to capture game, from birdlime, slings, snares and nets
to spears and bows and arrows. It’s often stated that falconry
began as a way to obtain food, but I doubt that. There were any number
of easier, faster ways to get meat without dealing with a temperamental
raptor that wouldn’t be capable of bringing down really large
prey and that would have to be fed whether or not it made a kill.
Several writers have pointed
out that falconry was the only means available to people in the pre-gun
era for capturing birds in flight. This is true, but how important was
this game source? Surely a deer or a bear taken with a longbow or spear
would be far more useful quarry, providing a useful hide as well as
meat.
I think it’s far more
likely that falconry grew, slowly and in an unplanned way, out of the
ancient animistic beliefs of Asia. Animism, which stretches back thousands
of years into Paleolithic times, is the belief that things in nature,
from rocks to trees to animals, have a spirit. One way to possess the
spirit of an admired animal was to wear something from that animal –
a tooth, perhaps, or a claw or feather. Predators, including birds of
prey, were particularly respected by ancient people who depended upon
hunting for their survival. So how would ancient Asians obtain raptor
feathers to wear? Raptors are masterful fliers and wouldn’t be
easy to shoot with primitive weapons. People could have picked up scattered
feathers during the summer molt, but in all probability they kept birds
of prey in captivity. Pueblo Indians into historic times kept golden
eagles in wooden cages to harvest their feathers.
Ancient Asians might also
have observed fledgling raptors as they left their nests. Young raptors,
just before they can fly, leave the nest and climb about to exercise
their flight muscles. These trusting young birds lack the wariness of
their parents and will allow humans to approach. Intrigued tribespeople
may well have fed these young raptors, which would gradually come to
see humans as their family. As the juveniles began to hunt for themselves,
they would return to home base at the village. Slowly ancient people
will have evolved the idea of accompanying the raptor as it hunted.
Over time they would have developed the techniques and equipment that
would allow them to handle and control the bird.
Why bother? Because there
are certain animals – I think raptors are among them – that
people respond to passionately. Horses and dogs are also in this category.
Falconry developed in part because people wanted a means to get close
to animals they regarded with admiration and esthetic pleasure.
Another reason is that training
a raptor is not easy and not for everyone. That gives it status as a
rare accomplishment. So from its inception falconry was an elitist sport.
Back before there was a monetary system and societal classes, falconers
would be people who had an unusual and therefore valuable gift for handling
predatory birds. As society became structured and people had specific
jobs, falconers would be hired by the wealthy to perform a valued service.
The stage was now set for falconry’s heyday as one of the most
popular aristocratic sports in England and on the Continent.
Falconry at its Peak –
1066 through the 1600s
Two years before he invaded England, William the Conquerer
hosted his rival Harold Godwinson at his court in Normandy, and the
two men went hawking together. The Bayeux Tapestry shows them on horseback,
falcons on their gloved fists. On October 14, 1066, the two met again,
this time across a battlefield. By the end of the day the Battle of
Hastings was over, Harold was dead, and England had a new ruler, a new
court language (French), a new court, and, over time, new customs and
laws. All would affect falconry.
William wasted no time in
exerting his authority. By the time of his death in 1087 more than 90%
of England was held by the new Norman aristocracy. Fortified castles
– a new concept in England – appeared at strategic locations,
built by Norman lords with the backing of the king. These castles weren’t
just fortified residences – they were symbols of the new order.
Each castle was a declaration in stone of individual power and prestige.
But in this society, now organized along feudal lines, all power flowed
from the king. So each castle was an echo of the royal court, with an
entourage of courtiers and a large household staff to serve them. Among
the household offices was that of falconer (the surname “Faulkner”
indicates that an ancestor held this position). The falconer held a
prestigious position among the establishment’s retainers. Like
everyone else who mattered in this new society, the falconer spoke Norman
French. The language of falconry, still in use today, is therefore French-based.
Words like “eyas,” “lure,” “mews,”
even “falcon” itself are derived from French. The imprint
of the Norman Conquest can be seen in virtually every aspect of English
life, including falconry.
Lesser
nobility who couldn’t afford castles built manor houses. Like
the castles, these great houses would model their organization on that
of the king’s household. So each residence, small or large, wealthy
or just-getting-by, would have a mews to house the falconry birds and
one or more falconers. Among the lord’s attendants at every residence
would be young squires, noblemen’s sons intent on learning the
knightly skills of riding, fighting, hunting (large game like wild boar
and deer) and hawking. They would be instructed in these different skills
by experts. Falconry techniques would be taught by the professional
falconer, who would also train the birds and care for them in the mews.
So falconry, thanks to the
new Norman aristocrats and the feudal system they imposed on England,
had become a pastime of the nobility. It had also become a symbol of
nobility. A hooded falcon was now just as much an accoutrement of an
aristocrat as a well-bred horse or a sword.
Falconry became so firmly
entrenched in society that by the 1100s even the merchant class of London
was aping the nobility and flying “ignoble” hawks -shortwings
like the sparowhawk and the goshawk. The “noble” hawks –
the longwinged, desirable falcons – were the traditional prerogative
of the privileged class because of their flying style and hunting prowess,
as well as their beauty. The merlin, a small but determined hunter,
was considered appropriate for noblewomen. This falcon was used to hunt
skylarks in a dramatic aerial duel that saw the skylark “ringing
up” vertically, while the heavier but stronger merlin tried to
overtake it.
Large falcons like the gyrfalcon
and the peregrine falcon were particularly prized because they could
tackle large birds like the gray heron (Ardea cinerea)
and the crane (Grus grus) with dash and style. The white
gyrfalcon from Greenland was so prized for its beauty that the Viking
settlers there established a profitable trade in the birds. But this
northern falcon was hard for medieval falconers to maintain in good
health. The peregrine falcon, on the other hand, was widely distributed
and easier to obtain. It could hunt in any climate and could catch anything
from a rook (a relative of the American crow) to a heron. It was unyielding
to prey but gentle with the falconer. It was this species’ flight
style, though, that won it so many admirers. A hunting peregrine takes
a high pitch and then plunges straight down onto its prey. This headfirst
dive is called a "stoop,” and a stooping peregrine is the
fastest animal on the planet, reaching a top speed of around 200 mph.
During the late medieval period, the peregrine falcon was the most extensively
used of the falconry birds.
William the Conquerer’s
great-grandson, Henry II (b. 1133; d. 1189), was an enthusiastic falconer.
He and his nobles were in the habit of bringing their hooded falcons
to the table at mealtime. When special meat pies containing small live
birds were opened, the hoods were removed and the falcons were set on
them. Henry even discovered a new source of hunting birds. While journeying
to Ireland he stopped at Ramsey Island off the coast of Wales. The peregrine
falcons that nested there were spectacular fliers, and Henry’s
admiration for these island peregrines ensured their popularity with
his court.
Henry’s military leader,
William Marshall, was sent to Normandy as a boy to learn knightly skills
from a man famed as “the father of knights.” Hawking, as
a hallmark of nobility, would be one of the skills he would be expected
to master.
Henry’s son, Richard
I or Richard the Lionheart, was a renowned participant in the Third
Crusade (1189-92). The crusades were Christian campaigns to free Muslim-held
territory, particularly the Holy Land. Like other crusaders, Richard
was exposed to new raptor species as well as new falconry techniques
and equipment during his sojourn in the East. There were several major
crusades beginning in 1095 and petering out in 1221, and as the surviving
crusaders trickled back home to Europe they brought with them Eastern
hawking equipment such as the hood. They also returned with some Eastern
falconry terms still in use, such as “yarak.” Other conduits
for Asian falconers and birds were nobles traveling to the Holy Land
on pilgrimage, and merchants shuttling luxury goods between Europe and
the Orient.
Another monarch who participated
in the crusades and returned to Europe with Eastern ideas and goods,
including falconry birds, was Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor from
1220 to 1250. This gifted scholar was also an ardent falconer, and he
penned a book entitled De Arte Venandi Cum
Avibus (The Art of Hunting with Birds) that contains not only
a great deal of practical information on falconry, but original observations
on raptor behavior, anatomy and migration.
One of Frederick’s contemporaries
described this multifaceted ruler as “stupor mundi” (the
amazement of the world) and indeed his scientific achievements continue
to amaze. His masterwork, now published under the title The Art
of Falconry, is still consulted by falconers. Frederick
might be regarded as one of the first true scientists, one who drew
conclusions based not on inaccurate tradition but on his own acute observations.
Since trained falcons were
the prerogative of the nobility they were considered an appropriate
exchange for aristocratic prisoners. During warfare, including the crusades,
nobles were often captured alive and held for ransom. Carl VI of France
offered a Saracen ruler twelve gyrfalcons and a jeweled gauntlet in
return for the son of one of his nobles.
Trained falcons were also
a royal gift. The falconry school founded by the Grand Master of the
Order of Teutonic Knights in what was then Marienburg in Germany (now
Malbork in Poland) seems to have been an important source of falconry
birds. Recipients included kings, emperors and even the pope.
Trained raptors were well
traveled in those days. Since a hooded falcon would stand motionless
on a gauntlet and moreover identified its owner as patrician, aristocrats
were apt to carry their falcons with them on their daily rounds. Falcons,
to the dismay of churchmen, were brought to church. They went to banquets
and even into bedchambers. Hunting birds also went to war. During the
drawn-out rivalry between England and France known as the Hundred Years’
War, the English king Edward III crossed the Channel with over 1000
ships in 1359. Included in his entourage were 30 falconers to look after
the king’s birds.
Falconry was a favorite aristocratic
pastime outside of Europe as well. In Japan, hawking schools were run
by noble families who had been falconers for generations. The Japanese
specialized in hunting with goshawks and hawk eagles (Spizaetus
nipalensis) because of the mountainous terrain of their country.
They developed a vast literature on hunting with these birds; one of
the books was the contribution of the emperor. Russia produced its own
books on the subject, as did Germany and France.
One English work deserves
special mention because it is so widely misunderstood. The Boke
of St. Albans was written by Dame Juliana Berners,
Abbess of Sopwell, and first printed in 1486. The book contains discussions
of “Hawking, Hunting and Cote Armour.” The two pages set
out here (in the original’s Middle English) (For larger
image please click below) are from the section on hawking,
and they are frequently described as laws governing what type of hunting
bird was allotted to each noble rank. Such
laws never existed. There certainly were laws prohibiting peasants from
possessing the large species of falcons, and the penalties for breaking
the laws ranged from fines to imprisonment. However, the nobility’s
choice of falconry bird was regulated not by laws but by tradition and
peer pressure.
The real importance of the
Abbess’ work lies in its recognition that English society had
become thoroughly hierarchical. The disaster of the Black Death (bubonic
plague), which struck Europe in 1347, had killed roughly one-third of
the population by 1400. Society had been rearranged as a result. By
the time The Boke of St. Albans was
written, the British peerage was far more subdivided than it used to
be. Below royalty there were now dukes, marquesses, earls, viscounts
and barons. The gentry or non-nobles were further broken down into knights,
esquires and gentlemen. Dame Juliana’s matchup of falconry birds
with appropriate rank should not be taken literally or as legally binding.
It is simply a commonsense acknowledgment that society had become strictly
ranked.
So who traditionally hunts with what, according to the good abbess?
From highest to lowest, the ranks and their rightful birds are: Emperor
– golden eagle; king – gyrfalcon; prince – peregrine
falcon; particularly the “falcon gentle” or female peregrine
(larger and therefore more desirable than the male); duke – peregrine
falcon; earl – peregrine falcon; baron – male peregrine
falcon; knight – saker falcon; squire – lanner falcon; noblewoman
– merlin; page - hobby; yeoman (member of the landed gentry) –
female goshawk; poor man – male goshawk; priest – female
Eurasian sparowhawk; holywater clerk (clergy below the rank of priest)
– male Eurasian sparrowhawk. Other references add the lowest stratum
of society – the “knave” or male servant. He was accorded
a bird that, in falconry terms, barely counted – the tiny Eurasian
kestrel.
Modern readers of The
Boke of St. Albans need not worry over the
fate of say, a baron who had the effrontery to forget his station and
fly a female peregrine falcon rather than a male peregrine falcon. The
point to remember is that a baron probably wouldn’t consider hunting
with a bird traditionally used by a higher rank. Think of the designations
set forth by Dame Juliana as rules of etiquette closely followed by
people who valued the status quo.
Falconry continued its reign
as a favorite of nobility throughout the 1500s and well into the 1600s.
The falconry school of the Grand Master of the Order of Teutonic Knights
sent out no fewer than 1818 trained falcons as official gifts between
1533 and 1569. Henry VIII of England (b. 1491; d. 1547) and his French
rival Francis I (b. 1494; d. 1547) were both ardent falconers. In his
athletic youth Henry followed the flight of his falcons so enthusiastically
that he once ended headfirst in the mud while trying to vault over a
ditch in the heat of the chase.
Francis, for his part, hunted
with style. The French king’s 300 falcons were looked after by
a large staff of 50 masters of falconry. They in their turn were under
the jurisdiction of the Grand Fauconnier, who held an exalted position.
He alone could sell falcons in France, and he took a cut from the price
of every transaction.
Henry’s daughter Elizabeth
(b. 1533; d. 1603) loved hunting and hawking, and one source claims
that she had a woman, Mary of Canterbury, as her Grand Master of Falconry.
The queen’s royal rival. Mary Queen of Scots, was eventually executed
by Elizabeth. During Mary’s long captivity she whiled away some
hours by flying a merlin. Elizabeth’s heir, James I, was a falconry
enthusiast. Shakespeare, who was writing his plays during this period,
used extensive falconry imagery.
Nothing lasts forever. Falconry
had enjoyed a centuries-long run as a popular aristocratic sport. But
it had a serious weakness. Its fortunes were bound to those of the nobility.
As the aristocrats of England and the Continent were overthrown by societal
changes, their favorite sports began to disappear or be displaced by
new ones, better suited to the times.
Decline – 1700s through
the 1800s
England’s Henry VIII may have been a passionate
falconer in his youth, but as middle age, weight and ill health overtook
him he became more interested in horse racing. And in developing the
English racehorse, which in time became the fastest horse in the world,
the Thoroughbred. The royal mews at Charing Cross, where his falcons
were once housed, were demolished and material from the old building
was used in the construction of the king’s new interest –
his impressive palace of Whitehall. Although the next few English sovereigns
continued the sport, falconry’s days were numbered.
An unmistakable sign that
the English monarchy and its traditions no longer held unquestioning
sway over its subjects came in 1649, when James I’s son Charles
I was beheaded. The turmoil of the Civil War, which saw the nobility
on the losing side, and the aftermath of the Puritan Commonwealth spelled
doom for aristocrats. At the same time falconry’s noble practitioners
were dying in civil unrest in England and on the Continent, guns were
becoming widely available. Guns required no specialized training (A
saying of the time pointed out: “It is easier to train a gun than
a hawk.”), nor did they demand a noble genealogy. Moreover, guns
could be hung on the wall and picked up at the whim of the hunter, something
that is hardly possible with a raptor. The great English estates, many
of them owned by a new group of peers created after the English monarchy
was restored in 1660, became hunting preserves. Now raptors, once protected
for the pleasure of the nobility, were seen as competitors for small
game that human hunters wished to kill themselves. Gamekeepers made
it their business to eradicate any bird of prey they found, and in time,
ironically, raptor shooting became a popular sport in England, on the
Continent and in the U.S.
Meanwhile English farmers
were plowing up heath land and enclosing it with hedgerows, so riding
for miles in pursuit of a falcon became impossible in most places. Desirable
quarry, such as the gray heron, was becoming scarce, so in 1839 British
falconers formed a hawking club in the Netherlands with King William
II as their patron. In 1853 patronage was removed, and falconry’s
fate rested in the hands of a few die-hards. Like the old order, falconry
had just about passed away.
Modern
Falconry – 1900s to Present Day
Hawking never died out completely. As the 20th century
dawned the sport had perhaps a few thousand adherents worldwide. Many
were in Asia and the Middle East, where the old traditions were kept
alive. These people continued to follow an anachronistic pastime not
because it was fashionable or glamorous but because they were passionate
about birds of prey. On the Continent and in England the traditional
falconry clubs still met, but many of their members were merely interested
observers. Few people, it seemed, had the time, interest and money required
to actually fly birds.
Hawking had never caught on in the Americas, but a
spark was about to be ignited. In 1920 the December issue of the National
Geographic Magazine contained an article entitled “Falconry,
the Sport of Kings,” by Louis Agassiz Fuertes. This seminal piece
was illustrated with Fuertes’ dramatic paintings, and it left
a lasting impression on several young people. Frank and John Craighead
were among them, and they became influential falconers as well as renowned
biologists. (Their sister, Jean Craighead George, wrote My Side
of the Mountain, the classic story of a boy who
trains a peregrine falcon.)
Between the world wars there
were several noted American falconers, but it wasn’t until after
World War II that the sport’s enthusiasts began to organize and
share their knowledge. Which was ironic, because at the same time raptors
were beginning to die in unprecedented numbers.
The war’s end saw synthetic
chemical poisons come into widespread use. One was DDT, an insecticide
designed to wipe out insect pests that spread disease and decimated
agricultural crops. DDT and another widely-used insecticide called dieldrin
turned out to be effective killers in ways no one had predicted. They
caused reproductive failure in many raptor species, particularly birds
like the peregrine falcon that were at the top of the food chain. By
1972 the peregrine falcon was gone as a breeding bird in the U.S. east
of the Mississippi.
The plight of this magnificent
species in particular brought about a sea change in the way the general
public perceived raptors. Until the 1960s birds of prey were regarded
with indifference at best and with a shotgun at worst. That attitude
began to change as scientists, bird-watchers and falconers documented
precipitous declines in raptor populations. In 1973 the use of DDT was
banned in the U.S., and the Endangered Species Act gave extra protection
and government assistance to species like the peregrine that were in
danger of disappearing altogether.
The fortunes of the peregrine
falcon and of falconry became entwined. Using falconers’ peregrines
as foundation stock, two scientists began an intensive captive-breeding
program in the U.S. Tom Cade and Heinz Meng, both falconers themselves,
had learned how to do something medieval falconers could not. Working
separately, the two men worked out how to induce peregrines to breed
in captivity. The techniques they developed have been used successfully
with many other endangered raptors as well, from the huge California
condor down to the tiny Mauritius and Seychelles kestrels. Supported
by a network of falconers who contributed birds, expertise and time,
Cade and Meng did more – they began to release captive-bred peregrines
back into the species’ former haunts. The program, which to date
has bred and released thousands of peregrines, is a success. The peregrine
falcon has now been delisted by the government, meaning that it is no
longer in danger of extinction.
Now that raptors could be
bred in captivity, falconers for the first time in the history of hawking
had access to falconry birds without having to depend upon wild populations.
This fact, more than anything else, has resulted in falconry’s
renaissance. The majority of birds flown by falconers now are captive-bred,
and new hybrids with new flying styles are available.
In the United States now there
are under 10,000 licensed falconers. Their advisory and record-keeping
body is the well-organized North American Falconers Association. Present-day
falconers track their birds using radio telemetry. They have access
to modern medications for old diseases like frounce and coccidiosis,
as well as to advice from other falconers via the Internet. Falconry
today is a blend of ancient traditions and modern techniques, but one
thing has not changed in 3000 years – a true falconer in any century
is a person who cares passionately about birds of prey.
Laws Governing Raptors and
Modern Falconry
Modern-day falconers have far more species available
to them than medieval falconers did. They also have the option of buying
captive-bred birds. That means that today’s falconer doesn’t
have to wait for months for a gyrfalcon to arrive from Greenland on
shipboard – if indeed it survives the voyage. Now falconers can
call a breeder and order the best bird they can afford. Or legally possess,
because modern falconers must adhere to strict laws, both state and
federal, that govern the sport. All raptors are protected by law in
the U.S. (even the birds’ feathers are protected). That means
that a falconer MUST BE LICENSED. The U.S. employs an apprenticeship
system for the obtaining of permits. An apprentice falconer must learn
hands-on with an experienced falconer, and may not have his or her own
bird until passing an exam that indicates that the apprentice knows
how to care for a captive raptor as well as hunt with it.
Once the beginning falconer
has passed the state-administered test and obtained the apprentice permit,
he or she may possess either an American kestrel or a red-tailed hawk.
These are common, easily handled species, and with a special permit
the apprentice may use a specialized form of trapping to obtain the
bird. Young birds on their first migration, called "“passagers,"
are considered best, and apprentices are not allowed to take a nestling
bird, which is known as an “eyas.” Only experienced falconers,
who have worked with raptors for many years and passed advanced tests,
are allowed to work with the more difficult species, such as goshawks
and peregrine falcons. And only master falconers, who are at the top
of modern falconry’s ranking system, are allowed to fly golden
eagles.
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