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Le cristallin des céphalopodes est calcaire, solide; il consiste en deux épaisseurs concaves que sépare une fente où se trouve fixée la barrière ciliaire. Les deux globes qui sont aisément détachables l'un de l'autre reflètent la lumière. Ils présentent une opalescence où jouent des reflets irisés.
Dans certaines parties de l'Italie, les femmes utiliseraient ces lentilles pour
en faire des colliers. H. Lee en a vu de cette sorte à Gênes. Il en serait de même au Pérou selon le R.P. Hennah, et les habitants des îles Sandwich, au dire de M. Stutchbury, les vendaient aux Russes en les faisant passer pour des perles 8.

Le cristallin des céphalopodes est calcaire, solide; il consiste en deux épaisseurs concaves que sépare une fente où se trouve fixée la barrière ciliaire. Les deux globes qui sont aisément détachables l'un de l'autre reflètent la lumière. Ils présentent une opalescence où jouent des reflets irisés. Dans certaines parties de l'Italie, les femmes utiliseraient ces lentilles pour en faire des colliers. H. Lee en a vu de cette sorte à Gênes. Il en serait de même au Pérou selon le R.P. Hennah, et les habitants des îles Sandwich, au dire de M. Stutchbury, les vendaient aux Russes en les faisant passer pour des perles 8.

Enquête du jour : le cristallin du poulpe !
premère étape : Roger Caillois, 1979, citant -avec précautions- Henry Lee, 1875.
archive.org/details/lapieuvre0000rog... #animhist

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24 mars 1896 - Publication du plaidoyer « L’amour des bêtes » d’Émile Zola en Une du Figaro Ce plaidoyer est une déclaration d’amour aux animaux aussi bien qu’une réflexion sur les rapports, parfois tendres, souvent violents, que nous entretenons avec eux. Émile Zola y rappelle notre…

"Pourquoi les bêtes sont-elles toutes de ma famille, comme les hommes, autant que les hommes ?"
Emile Zola, 1896.
animaltimeline.fr/24-mars-1896-publication... #animhist

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AVERTISSEMENT DE L AUTEUR 
L'histoire de tous les oiseaux de France n est que le prétexte et le but apparent de ce livre. Le but réel et secret de l'auteur a été de tirer parti de l'étude approfondie qu'il a faite des mœurs et des institutions de ces créatures privilégiées pour en faire surgir les deux propositions révolutionnaires ci après. Le règne de l'homme créature inférieure est le règne de la force brutale de la contrainte de l'imposture et des vieux le règne de Satan. Il coïncide fatalement dans l'histoire de l'humanité avec la phase d'enfance âge des folles terreurs et des superstitions.
Le règne de la femme créature supérieure est le règne du droit et de la liberté le règne de la vérité et des jeunes le règne de Dieu dont les bons cœurs implorent la venue chaque jour. Il coïncide avec la phase d'apogée ou de plein développement de l'espèce humaine.

AVERTISSEMENT DE L AUTEUR L'histoire de tous les oiseaux de France n est que le prétexte et le but apparent de ce livre. Le but réel et secret de l'auteur a été de tirer parti de l'étude approfondie qu'il a faite des mœurs et des institutions de ces créatures privilégiées pour en faire surgir les deux propositions révolutionnaires ci après. Le règne de l'homme créature inférieure est le règne de la force brutale de la contrainte de l'imposture et des vieux le règne de Satan. Il coïncide fatalement dans l'histoire de l'humanité avec la phase d'enfance âge des folles terreurs et des superstitions. Le règne de la femme créature supérieure est le règne du droit et de la liberté le règne de la vérité et des jeunes le règne de Dieu dont les bons cœurs implorent la venue chaque jour. Il coïncide avec la phase d'apogée ou de plein développement de l'espèce humaine.

Alphonse Toussenel, "Le Monde des oiseaux, Ornithologie passionnelle",
Librairie phalanstérienne, 1853.
#histsci #animhist

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Affiches soviétiques contre la grande épidémie de typhus qui frappait la toute jeune URSS :
www.en-attendant-nadeau.fr/2020/05/03/hecatombe-typ...
« Après la défaite de l’Armée Blanche, un nouveau péril blanc menace la Russie : le pou […]

[Original post on social.sciences.re]

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RE: mastodon.social/@publicdomainrev/1160243...

#histzoo #histsci #animhist

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#animhist Rare ancient représentation of insect larva!
(15.000y old)
www.urmu.de/digitale-sammlung/objekt...
cc @arthistoryanimalia

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The Bird of Self-Knowledge. Der Vogel Selbsterkenntnis. – Album Amicorum: Early Modern Stammbuch Iconography & related

Pelican, know thyself.
albumamicorumear-e4qvahs764.live-website.com/the-bird-of-self-knowled... #animhist #emblems

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Plein de conférences à rattraper, forcément :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1jORZVxinHI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EIo0Q2s2rro
#animhist

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Des éléphants carthaginois en Espagne
www.nytimes.com/2026/02/13/science/hanni...
#animhist

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"Assiette en émail de la marque Labrador de la manufacture Creil-Montereau, décorée d’une parodie de peinture représentant Persée délivrant Andromède ; ici, Persée a les traits d’André Fasquelle, sa lance est un vaccinostyle et sa monture ailée est une vache. [BANM, inv. ART 503] © Bibliothèque de l’Académie nationale de médecine"

"Assiette en émail de la marque Labrador de la manufacture Creil-Montereau, décorée d’une parodie de peinture représentant Persée délivrant Andromède ; ici, Persée a les traits d’André Fasquelle, sa lance est un vaccinostyle et sa monture ailée est une vache. [BANM, inv. ART 503] © Bibliothèque de l’Académie nationale de médecine"

André Fasquelle en Persée attaquand la variole au vaccinostyle [BANM, inv. ART 503].
#histmed #artsci #animhist
bibliotheque.academie-medecine.fr/fonds-fasquelle/

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Animal avec une queue longue et bifide

Animal avec une queue longue et bifide

Animal globalement canin mais avec une queue "de poisson", triangulaire qui se sépare en deux.

Animal globalement canin mais avec une queue "de poisson", triangulaire qui se sépare en deux.

Dessiner un castor ? C'est facile, il a une queue écailleuse, comme un poisson.
Enlumineur :
https://bestiary.ca/beasts/beastgallery152.htm
#artsci #animhist

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#Animhist https://piaille.fr/@Barocambole/115984583144184204

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Ostrich wool and fraudulent practices Fraud was a major concern for merchants and private buyers alike throughout the mediaeval and early modern eras. With no overarching national or international bodies to check on the conformity of products to expected standards, it fell to local authorities to police such matters. Maintaining the accepted weights and measures was of particular importance and these were often made available to all by providing gauges often carved in stone. These indicated size or volume and to facilitate use, these standards were often placed in or next to churches that were close to marketplaces and fairs. Late-mediaeval hollowed out stone for measuring volume in front of the church of Saint-Cirq-Lapopie and the fifteenth-century standard for mâconnais tiles in the church of Notre-Dame of Cluny. However, such measures were often insufficient. In the Renaissance, fraud took on many guises and could be difficult to identify. There are well-documented instances that involved the falsification of papers, replicating coins with base metals, or imitating the producer’s mark in order to sell at a higher price.1 Fraudsters in such cases were playing for particularly high stakes. The punishment for such crimes was generally death.2 More often than not, however, fraudulent practices were of a less spectacular nature. Everyday commerce in the sixteenth century was littered with cases of sellers offering wares that were either inferior in quality or intentionally misrepresented.3 Unscrupulous merchants sought to maximise their profits with, then as today, buyers always on the lookout for good deals. This gave swindlers a chance to con naïve customers with attractive, but flawed, products. The anthropomorphised figure of Fraud holding fishing rods that entice men to make mistakes, as the fool beneath her hands over his wealth. Detail of an engraving by Dirck Volckertsz. Coornhert after a design by Willem Thibaut (Antwerp: Hieronymus Cock, second half of 16th c.) Rijksmuseum, RP-P-BI-6555X. This was true when goods were sold retail, but it was also the case when they were sold wholesale. In a commercial system that depended heavily on intermediaries to ship goods across countries and continents, there was a whole string of people trying to benefit from the sale of the same merchandise as it moved from its place of production to its point of retail.4 An instance of wholesale fraud detected in Rouen in the second half of the sixteenth century shows us how these were detected, confirmed and reported. In the late Autumn of 1571, a local merchant, Jean Lequesne, became convinced that he had been sold some poor-quality goods. Lequesne was described as an ‘espicier’, literally a spice-seller, though in practice they often had a wider brief – Cotgrave in his 1611 dictionary also translates the term as ‘grocer’ or ‘drug-seller’.5 Certainly, it was a well-respected trade. He had, he thought, been sold a bad consignment of what was characterised as ‘ostrich wool’. Engraving of an ostrich and putti by the anonymous ‘Master of the Die’, after Raphael, (Rome: Antoine Lafréry, mid 16th century), British Museum, V,5.164. Ostriches were well-known in Renaissance Europe. Their natural habitat in Africa was described by travellers and, more importantly for most people, their eggs and feathers were collected as precious items by the richest members of society and had been for centuries.6 In the mid-fourteenth century, no lesser figure than Edward Plantagenet, the Black prince, had chosen ‘sable, three ostrich feathers with scrolls argent’ as a heraldic device for his ‘shield for peace’ which was included on his tomb in Canterbury Cathedral. The feathers followed trans-Saharan camel routes through Africa before being shipped over to Europe, becoming increasingly plentiful in the sixteenth century.7 Contemporaries were well-aware, therefore, that ostriches were unable to furnish what would rightly be considered wool. In reality, it was meant to be ostrich down taken from the neck, belly, and under the wings of the bird, if the article of the _Encyclopédie_ is to be believed. It would have been a subsidiary product of lesser value than the eggs and feathers that were destined for a more luxury use – even if increasing supply made them available at lower prices during the early modern period. Hat with ostrich feathers, detail of an engraving by Lucas van Leyden, ca 1520, Rijksmuseum, RP-P-OB-1773 That Lequesne was involved in the commerce of ostrich wool is interesting: it suggests that the intermediary merchants could have been the same as those who imported the spices that where his stock-in-trade. That he thought that he might have been duped into acquiring low quality goods suggests that he dealt in them enough to detect problems. He confronted his provider, another Rouen merchant named Pierre Jouenne. As their disagreement continued after some initial exchanges, Jouenne called on some colleagues to settle the debate: two hatmakers were asked to check independently the quality of the wool. Their involvement in this case was related to one of the main uses of such material. To make the felt of hats, hatmakers around Rouen were known to use ostrich wool right into the eighteenth century, though they seem to have often substituted goat or camel hair, or employed weaving techniques to imitate ostrich.8 This variety has led to some scholarly debate, with some authors suggesting that ostrich wool was in fact never worked into the fabric of hats.9 But our document does suggest they were using it: they were called in as expert witnesses over and above merchants of other trades. Local knowledge in hat-making was particular strong, as is suggested by the proximity of town of Caudebec-en-Caux, a few miles west down the Seine, which was so famous for its output that felt hats became known as ‘Caudebecs’. Stain-glass window representing a procession in Caudebec, ca 1520, attributed to Arnold van Nijmegen, Church of Notre-Dame de Caudebec-en-Caux. In any case, the hatters went to Lequesne’s home where they were led into a ground floor room where he kept a half-bale of ostrich wool that he had acquired from Jouenne. After checking the quality of its contents, the concluded that it did not meet expected standards, described as neither ‘loyal nor merchant’ to use contemporary wording. They explained that a number of the strands were foul and rotten and no longer usable. They further identified the presence of what they termed ‘moyelle’, probably a form of the word ‘moelle’, that referred to pith found in the core of some plants with hollow stalks. This had been mixed into the duvet, filling out the ostrich wool with cheap produce to con the unwary buyer. Once this verdict pronounced, they were then led to another house, this time on the street of Beautiful Women (‘rue des belles femmes’) in an adjacent parish, to inspect a similar half-bale from the same consignment sold by Jouenne. There, they reached the same conclusions: the goods were in poor condition and strands of cheap wool had been interspersed to increase both weight and volume. In other words, in both cases, the merchant had been swindled and had unknowingly bought sullied products. ‘La rue au [sic] belles femmes’ in Jacques Le Lieur’s _Le cours de la Fontaine de Yonville_ , (1526), digitised for Rotomagus. One of the goals of the inspection of these bales was to pacify the situation and, having declared their findings, they sought a solution to compensate the injured party. They estimated that the financial prejudice represented the considerable sum of 25 _livres tournois_ for the first half bale – at a rate of 5 _livres_ per hundred local pounds-mass (the equivalent of around 51,65 kg), whilst for the second half bale, that was in an even poorer state, this compensation rose to 6 _livres_ per hundred pounds-mass. In other words, the process resulted in a substantial refund, a settlement that satisfied Lequesne. Jouenne, on the other hand, found himself seriously out of pocket. Such a large repayment must have wiped out any profit he might have made from selling on the half-bales. It was Jouenne and not Lequesne who requested that the notaries register officially the result of the inspection. This allowed him in turn to pursue the wholesaler who had provided the goods in the first place. The name of the culprit? He is identified as ‘Adrien Bourmense’, a merchant from the Low Countries. This is undoubtedly a Gallicised form of the Dutch name Adriaan Bormans, a name which appears to be connected to Amsterdam.10 Signatures of Jouenne, the wholesale merchant, as well as Le Maistre and de Planes, the hatters. Such international connections were far beyond the jurisdiction of Normandy’s courts, highlighting a heavy reliance on trust in the development of trade networks. While Jouenne may have sought (and perhaps even secured) compensation from Bormans, the case illustrates that, in the Renaissance, importing high-value goods like ostrich wool involved taking considerable risks. The original document, dated 12 November 1571, is to be found in the Archives Départementales de la Seine-Maritime in Rouen under pressmark 2E1/893. Here is a transcription of the document: _« Nous Guillaume de Plasnes et Mathieu Le Maistre, aucuns maistres du mestier de chapellier en ceste ville de Rouen, certiffions à tous qu’il apartiendra que ce jourdhuy lundy xii me jour de novembre mil v c soixante et unze à la requeste et presence de sire Pierres Jouenne, marchant demeurant audit Rouen, nous sommes transportez en la maison de Jehan Lequesne, marchant espicier demeurant en ceste dite ville pour veoir et visiter certaine balle de layne d’autruche quy estoit discordable entre eulx pour raison que ledit Lequesne disoyt n’est loyalle ne marchande._ _Et estans en une salle basse de ladite maison nous a esté monstrée une demye balle de layne d’autruche que ledit Jouenne avoit vendue audit Lequesne et dont ledit Le Quesne et Jouenne sont demeurez d’accord et ayant quelle layne veu et visité avons trouvé qu’elle n’estoit conforme l’une à l’aultre et y en avoit de viciage et pourrye et en grand nombre de locquestz quy seroient laynes qui avoient esté ramassez ensemble_ _Et par semblable y avoit de la moyelle meslée parmy ladite layne, en quoy y auroit grand interest et neanmoins pour metre d’accord lesdites parties avons lymitté et moderé ledit interest de ladite layne à la somme de vingt cinq livres tournois quy seront cent solz ou envyron pour chacun cent d’autant que ladite balle peult poyser cinq cens ou envyron._ _Et oultre ledit Jouenne nous a faict transporter en une salle assize en la rue des Belles femmes parroisse Saint Andrieu auquel dict avoir veu une aultre demye balle de layne d’autruche que ledit Jouenne disoyt luy avoir esté envoyé de part un nommé Adrien Bourmense, marchant flamen, laquelle avons trouvé fort vicieuse et qu’il y avoit de la layne qui n’est bonne ne loyalle ains meslée en partye de pourye et aultre partye en locquestz et fort grosse layne et à noz advis et consciences qu’il y a dommaige et intherest de six livres et plus pour chacun cent poysant de ladite layne pour le present_. _Et tout ce que dessus certiffions estre vray dont ledit Jouenne nous a requis la presente que avons signée de noz saings cy mis l’an et jour dessusdits. »_ * * * 1. See, for instance, the exhibition ‘Faux et faussaires du Moyen âge à nos jours’, currently at the Archives Nationales in Paris and the accompanying catalogue. [↩] 2. See, in particular, the different cases discussed in Olivier Poncet (ed.), _Juger le faux : Moyen âge, Temps modernes_ (Paris, École nationale des chartes, 2011). [↩] 3. See the essays in Philip Lavender and Matilda Amundsen Bergström (eds), _Faking It! The Performance of Forgery in Late Medieval and Early Modern Culture _(Leiden: Brill, 2023). [↩] 4. This system is described for the sale of books in Malcolm Walsby, _Le commerce du livre imprimé dans la France de la Renaissance_ (Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2025) pp. 99-138. [↩] 5. Randle Cotgrave, _A Dictionarie of the French and English tongues_ (London: Adam Islip, 1611) STC 5830, Lliijr. [↩] 6. For a short history of ostrich feathers in Europe, see Una Roman D’Elia, _Raphael’s Ostrich_ (University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2015), pp. 13-33. [↩] 7. See Ulinka Rublack, ‘Befeathering the European: The Matter of Feathers in the Material Renaissance’, _The American Historical Review_ , CXXVI (2021), pp. 19-53, especially pp. 24-26 & 42-43. [↩] 8. Rublack, _op. cit._ , p. 34. [↩] 9. In Jean-Antoine Nollet, _L’art de faire les chapeaux_ (Paris: s.n., 1765), the author suggests that was goat (p. 5), though the early work by Jacques Savary des Bruslons, _Dictionnaire universel du commerce_ (Paris: Jacques Estienne, 1723), asserts it was ostrich (vol. 1, col. 203) – something repeated in the _Encyclopédie_. Georges Dubosc in a short article ‘Les ‘Caudebecs’ de Caudebec’, _Journal de Rouen_ (3 juillet 1922) pp. 1-5 said that he identified camel hairs (see Zanola, Maria Teresa ‘Le feutre, du Caudebec au Borsalino: hommage au Chapeau’, in Marco Modenesi, Maria Benedetta Collini, and Francesca Paraboschi (eds), _« La grâce de montrer son âme dans le vêtement » Scrivere di tessuti, abiti, accessori. Studi in onore di Liana Nissim_ (Milano: Ledizioni: 2015), pp. 433-447. [↩] 10. See, for instance, the marriage of an Adriaan Bormans on 25 October 1608 recorded in the Amsterdam City Archives. [↩] * * * OpenEdition suggests that you cite this post as follows: Malcolm Walsby (January 22, 2026). Ostrich wool and fraudulent practices. _Renaissances: archives and discoveries_. Retrieved January 23, 2026 from https://doi.org/10.58079/15jqm * * * * * * * *

A surprising Renaissance commodity: Ostrich wool!
https://renarchives.hypotheses.org/4502
#animhist

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#LostInTranslation #animhist

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Suave Morbida (@maitre-poulard.bsky.social) Les poux maintenant. Comment faire pour que les petites filles prennent l'habitude de se démêler les cheveux 🧵2/5

@podittmar #animhist
fed.brid.gy/r/https://bsky.app/profi...

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Couverture avec un joli portrait de cheval alezan avec une longue liste blanche sur le front

Couverture avec un joli portrait de cheval alezan avec une longue liste blanche sur le front

Ajouté à la pile à lire :
Made to Order: The Designing of Animals, de Margaret E. Derry (2022.
#animhist #histsci #histtech cc @podittmar

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Modern Times The sea urchin Coelopleurus exquisitus was discovered on eBay. Marine biologist Simon Coppard was directed to a listing on the site in 2004 and realized that the species had not previously been described. When it was properly named and introduced in Zootaxa two years later, the value of specimens on eBay shot up from $8 to $138. In 2008 a fossilized aphid on eBay was similarly found to be unidentified. Eventually it was named Mindarus harringtoni, after the buyer.

"The sea urchin Coelopleurus exquisitus was discovered on eBay."
https://www.futilitycloset.com/2026/01/13/modern-times/ #histnat #animhist

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Séminaire « Poétiques du vivant »
2026
6 séances de deux heures, entre janvier et juin
Jeudi 17h-19h
1. Florent Kohler, jeudi 15 janvier
« Les sociétés animales. »
2. Pascal Carlier, jeudi 05 février
« Éthologie. »
3. Michel Kreutzer, jeudi 05 mars
« Messages poétiques échangés par les animaux. »
4. Jean-François Poisson-Gueffier, jeudi 02 avril
« Littérature et éthologie. »
5. Bertrand Prévost, jeudi 15 mai
« L’élégance animale. »
6. Fabienne Gallaire, jeudi 04 juin
« Sciences et arts. »
Renseignements et inscription :
myriam.whitelegoff@univ-artois.fr

Séminaire « Poétiques du vivant » 2026 6 séances de deux heures, entre janvier et juin Jeudi 17h-19h 1. Florent Kohler, jeudi 15 janvier « Les sociétés animales. » 2. Pascal Carlier, jeudi 05 février « Éthologie. » 3. Michel Kreutzer, jeudi 05 mars « Messages poétiques échangés par les animaux. » 4. Jean-François Poisson-Gueffier, jeudi 02 avril « Littérature et éthologie. » 5. Bertrand Prévost, jeudi 15 mai « L’élégance animale. » 6. Fabienne Gallaire, jeudi 04 juin « Sciences et arts. » Renseignements et inscription : myriam.whitelegoff@univ-artois.fr

Myriam White-LeGoff a concocté un beau séminaire en ligne sur les Poétiques du vivant, donc j'ai l'honneur de faire la clôture le jeudi 4 juin 2026.
N'hésitez pas à écouter !
#animhist #zoopoétique #culturevisuelle #animalstudies

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Who Knew Cockroaches Could Be . . . Cute? Holding a roach in your hand may change your perspective on “the world’s most despicable bug.”

Cuteness is in the eye of the beholder...
www.texasmonthly.com/travel/who-knew-cockroac...

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Entre filet  : le cimetière des chiens d'Asnieres labelisé Patrimoine d'intérêt régional

Entre filet : le cimetière des chiens d'Asnieres labelisé Patrimoine d'intérêt régional

@podittmar
Dans le mag de la région Idf, numéro d'automne :

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couverture avec des  espèces disparues :
perroquets, thylacine, quagga, grand pingouin, oiseaux en vol, fleur de chardon

couverture avec des espèces disparues : perroquets, thylacine, quagga, grand pingouin, oiseaux en vol, fleur de chardon

L’extinction d'espèce
Histoire d'un concept & enjeux éthiques
Julien Delord
#toreadlist #PàL #histsci #histnat #animhist
https://books.openedition.org/mnhn/2482

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Au pays des vaches rectangulaires : le portrait animal dans l'Angleterre du XIXe siècle.
https://youtu.be/AcNkJNXBhUg
#animhist #histart #histnat

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The Dog's Gaze Long before the phrase ‘man’s best friend’ became common parlance, dogs were already standing beside us in art as in life. In The Dog’s Gaze, the historian Thomas W. Laqueur invites us to explore why they feature more than any other animal in the ways in which we picture ourselves and our stories. Dogs have been ubiquitous in the worldmaking of visual artists as far back as the Palaeolithic age. Looking across the western tradition, from Giotto to Goya and Rubens to Rego, Laqueur shows what their presence – as hunting partners, beloved friends and even conduits to the afterlife – reveals about our own ways of seeing and how we want to be remembered. Far from being mere motifs, dogs are an integral and intentional element of the images in which they appear: they provide narrative coherence; they look out and bear witness, often on the artist’s behalf; they illuminate our understanding of morality and melancholy and some, like us, become celebrities. Indeed, as the author shows, dogs in art are our social doppelgängers, our companions in looking and being. Richly illustrated and lovingly written, The Dog’s Gaze is a unique visual history that examines the shared social history of our two species and offers fresh insights into the human condition through the eyes of our canine companions.

What do dogs do in art?
Another book added to my TRP :)
#animhist #artsci #visualculture #CulturalHistory #animalsinArt cc @podittmar
www.penguin.co.uk/books/453159/the-dogs-ga...

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Why scientists are also watching animal YouTube videos Those viral moments of unusual animal behaviour provide valuable insight for researchers as well.

Quand les vidéos mignonnes d'animaux deviennent une source pour les éthologues :
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-61609679
#animhist

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Why is the porcupine part of the Sidney family crest? Penshurst, Kent Arms of Viscount De L’Isle- image kindly supplied by the Penshurst Place Estate Visitors to Penshurst Place can’t fail to notice the Sidney family’s connection to the porcupine. After all, the new café carries the name of ‘The Porcupine Pantry’, there’s a large metal sculpture in the garden and this little chap sits outside the private entrance to the Sidney family chapel but the reason behind the connection is more obscure. Sidney porcupine outside family chapel – ©Rachael Hale (History Magpie) 2014 Long before they became the owners of Penshurst Place, the Sidney family were closely connected to royalty and it was the second William Sidney who claimed the porcupine emblem for his family crest. Having distinguished himself both as a naval Captain and the Commander of the right wing of the British Army at the battle of Flodden, Sir William gained the favourable attention of the King Henry VIII. The elevated status brought by his knighthood in March 1514, gave him the privileges and responsibility of a courtier and when Princess Mary, King Henry VIII’s sister, travelled to marry Louis XII of France, Sir William was sent with the royal party. In the trusted position of ‘jousting ambassador’, Sir William travelled alongside his cousin, Charles Brandon, whose future would shortly be changed forever, and Sir Henry Guildford. The Sidney Porcupine designed and created by Robert Rattray – ©Rachael Hale (History Magpie) 2014 Less than three months after the wedding, while the jousting team were still in France, King Louis XII died at the age of fifty two and the widowed Princess Mary married Charles Brandon in secret. King Henry VIII was furious but despite Sir William’s close proximity to the events surrounding the new royal couple, he remained in favour and was later sent back to France to officially announce Princess Mary’s second marriage. It can’t have been an easy task and the Sidney family believe it was following the first eventful trip that Sir William added King Louis XII’s personal emblem – the porcupine – to the family crest. But why would he have wanted to? The porcupine isn’t exactly a large intimidating beast is it? It’s a vegetarian, tree climbing, nest builder and not, one would assume, a first choice of emblem. Look a little closer into its traits, however, and you discover that, when under attack, this unusual animal reverses into its enemy in an attempt to impale it with its long, detachable quills. So, despite first impressions, the porcupine is actually a formidable foe which shows courage and tenacity in times of adversity. Now that is something to admire. **I am extremely grateful to Philip Sidney, 2nd Viscount De L’Isle MBE and Her Majesty’s Lord Lieutenant of Kent for granting me permission to reproduce his family crest within this post and for clarifying the source of the emblem’s addition.** **I would also like to thank Abbie Voice, the estate’s Marketing Executive, and Lord De L’Isle’s personal secretary for their assistance with this blog.** Image of Penshurst Place South view of house (c) Peter Smith Jigsaw Penshurst Place in Kent has been described as “the grandest and most perfectly preserved example of a fortified manor house in all England” and is well worth a visit. Young families are well catered for with a variety of events, great children’s playground and lots of space to let off steam. Some parts of the garden are wheelchair and buggy friendly in all weathers and I can personally vouch for the cakes. For further visitor information please visit their website at www.penshurstplace.com ### Share this: * Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X * Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook * Like Loading... ### _Related_

Ah tiens, le porc-épic de Louis XII a une postérité outre-Manche, .
magpiebackup.home.blog/2014/04/02/why-is-the-po...
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Anthropological studies of folk taxonomies provide a solution for these cases where a scientific species cannot be unequivocally identified because they help shift the focus to higher-order ranks such as the generic species which can be identified by focusing on the silhouette and noticing any merged features. Finally, familiarity with the local artistic language and typologies of animal images is necessary to distinguish ornamental or stylised features from  species-specific elements. Since identification is usually the first step in the interpretation of animal imagery which is often closely  linked to the type of animal shown, accuracy in identification is a vital condition for reaching a better understanding of iconography.

Anthropological studies of folk taxonomies provide a solution for these cases where a scientific species cannot be unequivocally identified because they help shift the focus to higher-order ranks such as the generic species which can be identified by focusing on the silhouette and noticing any merged features. Finally, familiarity with the local artistic language and typologies of animal images is necessary to distinguish ornamental or stylised features from species-specific elements. Since identification is usually the first step in the interpretation of animal imagery which is often closely linked to the type of animal shown, accuracy in identification is a vital condition for reaching a better understanding of iconography.

See also Julia Binnberg, Animal identification in iconography: an interdisciplinary approach combining zoology, anthropology and archaeology.
(although I'm chafing at the "generic species" coinage.) […]

[Original post on social.sciences.re]

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Langurs in the Aegean Bronze Age? A Review of a Recent Debate on Archaeoprimatology and Animal Identification in Ancient Iconography | Journal of Greek Archaeology

The question of animal identification in ancient images is hotter than you think!
archaeopresspublishing.com/ojs/index.php/JGA/articl...
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### Subscribe to our newsletter **Daily** The latest stories every weekday **Weekly** Editors' picks and top stories **Opportunities** Monthly list for artists and art workers Sign in with Google Or Sign up Sign in to an existing account Privacy Policy Success! Your account was created and you’re signed in. Please visit My Account to verify and manage your account. An account was already registered with this email. Please check your inbox for an authentication link. **We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism.** If you value our coverage and want to support more of it, please join us as a member. Three Hares on a wooden church boss in South Tawton, Devon (© Chris Chapman) An enigmatic trio of rabbits running in a circle appears on centuries of art, from medieval churches in England to Buddhist caves in China. While each bunny seems to have two ears, the symbol is actually a visual puzzle: a total of three ears connects them in their endless loop. Some believe the rabbits symbolize eternity; others think they stand for fertility. Still others consider them a representation of the connection between the heavens and the Earth. The original meaning of the three hares motif remains obscure, but its cross-cultural significance inspired three researchers to spend over two decades traveling the world to unravel some of its arcane history. Cover of ‘The Three Hares’ (courtesy Skerryvore Productions) (click to enlarge) Released as a limited-edition book by Skerryvore Productions,_The Three Hares: A Curiosity Worth Regarding_ was created by archaeologist Tom Greeves, art historian Sue Andrew, and photographer Chris Chapman. All three are based in Devon, England, where there are 17 churches with three hares on their oak bosses (roundels often found on the ceiling). The book evolved from the group’s _Three Hares Project_ , and includes thorough essays by Andrew and Greeves alongside Chapman’s images, chronicling their trek to trace the evolution of the symbol. **Get the latest art news, reviews and opinions from Hyperallergic.** * Daily * Weekly * Opportunities Sign up “Our constantly expanding journey embraces Judaic, Buddhist and Islamic hares from western Europe to China, or vice versa, touching Himalayan Ladakh and the Swat valley in Pakistan,” Greeves writes in an introduction. “We believe that the Mongol Empire and precious silk played a crucial part in transmission of the motif over vast distances in medieval times, traveling on the many strands of the Silk Road.” In Corbenay, France, they viewed a beautiful example of the three hares carved in white stone in the cellar of a 98-year-old woman named Madame Bardoz, whose home was built on the ruins of a medieval church. In Stuttgart, Germany, another manifested on a painted wooden ceiling in an 18th-century synagogue. The researchers were told the hares indicated the Holy Trinity while in Switzerland and the meeting of heaven and Earth while in China, where the rabbits are depicted in the Buddhist cave temples of Mogao. Stained glass in Long Melford, England (© Chris Chapman) Not everyone they met was thrilled by the chase. Greeves describes a monk at a Benedictine abbey in St-Benoît-sur-Loire, France, who, upon being shown an image of the three hares and asked if he knew of any, was “surprisingly forthright in his dismissal of such a suggestion, saying, ‘Non, ce n’est pas chrétien!’ (No, it is not Christian!)’” There may very well be something pagan, or alchemical, about the three hares, which have the same cyclical energy as the ouroboros (snake eating its own tail), a symbol that dates back to ancient Egyptian funerary texts. Andrew writes about the complex interpretations of the hares in one of her essays: > As a symbol, the hare in the medieval period might be regarded in either a positive or negative light. More often than not, the hare was regarded pejoratively, belonging to ‘the lascivious hunt of Venus, the hunt of lust, rather than to the virtuous hunt’. Nevertheless, the assumption of the Ancients that the hare could procreate without a mate led to the belief that it could give birth without losing its virginity. While the hare might be associated with lust, it could also represent chastity and virgin birth. She adds that if “we seek a precise meaning for the Three Hares, at the expense of understanding what they do, we might just miss their real significance, for running in their never-ending circle they may have stirred memories and powered prayer in ways we are only just beginning to understand.” Tile from the nave of Chester Cathedral (© Chris Chapman) Plate decorated with the Three Hares in the Musée Alsacien de Strasbourg (photo by Ji-Elle/Wikimedia) Three Hares on a fence in Paderborn, Germany (photo by Harmish Khambhaita/Flickr) Three Hares in a road in Kirchhundem, Germany (photo by Stefan Flöper/Wikimedia) Detail of the Three Hares Gate in Ibbenbüren-Schierloh, Germany (photo by J.-H. Janßen/Wikimedia) Detail of the Three Hares Stone in Ibbenbüren-Schierloh, Germany (photo by J.-H. Janßen/Wikimedia) Manhole cover with Three Hares in Paderborn, Germany (photo by Asio Otus/Wikimedia) Three Hares in the Paderborn Cathedral, Germany (photo by Nawi112/Wikimedia) Three Hares on a tomb in the Jewish Cemetery of Sataniv, Ukraine (photo by Mykola Swarnyk/Wikimedia) The Three Hares: A Curiosity Worth Regarding _is published by Skerryvore Productions._ Please consider supporting _Hyperallergic_ ’s journalism during a time when independent, critical reporting is increasingly scarce. We are not beholden to large corporations or billionaires. **Our journalism is funded by readers like you** , ensuring integrity and independence in our coverage. We strive to offer trustworthy perspectives on everything from art history to contemporary art. We spotlight artist-led social movements, uncover overlooked stories, and challenge established norms to make art more inclusive and accessible. With your support, we can continue to provide global coverage without the elitism often found in art journalism. **If you can, pleasejoin us as a member today.** Millions rely on _Hyperallergic_ for free, reliable information. By becoming a member, you help keep our journalism independent and accessible to all. Thank you for reading. Become a member * Share using Native toolsShareCopied to clipboard * Click to share on Mail (Opens in new window)Mail * Click to share on Bluesky (Opens in new window)Bluesky

The fascinating three hares motif.
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hyperallergic.com/311482/the-mystery-of-th...

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The Trojan Horse and Other Stories: Ten Ancient Creatures That Make Us Human
Added to my #ToReadList www.cambridge.org/fr/universitypress/subje...
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A nicely explained video on the many pre-contact dog breeds and what became of them.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=osMu6i2txFA

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