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Bull-baiting

Bull-baiting is a blood sport involving putting a bull against dogs with the aim of attacking and subduing the bull by biting and holding onto its nose or neck, which often resulted in the death of the bull. [1]

Bull-baiting in the 19th century, painted by Samuel Henry Alken.
Detail from “Bull-baiting” by Julius Caesar Ibbetson, circa 1817.

History

England

 
Bull- and bear-baiting arenas shown on the woodcut map of London of c.–1561 (the dogs are shown coming out of pens to each side)

Crowds in London during the Royal Entry of James VI and I in March 1604 were entertained by bull-baiting.[2] During the time of Queen Anne, bull-baiting was practiced in London at Hockley-in-the-Hole, twice a week – and was also reasonably common in provincial towns, for instance at Birmingham's Bull Ring. At Tutbury, a bull was tied to an iron stake so that it could move within a radius of about 30 feet. The object of the sport was for the dogs to immobilize the bull.

Before the event started, the bull's nose was blown full of pepper to enrage it before the baiting. The bull was often placed in a hole in the ground. A variant of bull-baiting was "pinning the bull", where specially-trained dogs would set upon the bull one at a time, a successful attack resulting in the dog fastening his teeth strongly in the bull's snout. The extinct Old English Bulldog was specially bred for this sport.

 
Etching by Francis Barlow

Bull-baiting was not only practiced as a form of recreation; there was a long-held belief that baiting improved the meat quality and tenderness when consumed.[3] By the early nineteenth century, the sport began to die out, both because the baiting caused a public nuisance and because of new concerns about animal cruelty.[4]

The Bull Baiting at Wokingham was advertised in the newspaper in 1774.

BULL BAITING. On Wednesday next, being St. Thomas's Day, Two Bulls will be baited in the Market-Place, Wokingham, which will be run for, a very handsome MOROCCO COLLAR, stitched with Silver, and a Silver Plate for a Label, of a Guinea and Half Value. Each Dog is to be let three Times at the first Bull, four Times at the second, and only one Dog run at a Time. The Owner of each Dog that runs, pays One Shilling for Entrance. Proper Judges will be appointed before running to determine who may be the Winner, A good Ordinary at the King's Inn, between the Times of Baiting the Bulls.

[5] Bull baiting advertised in 1780 appears to indicate that it was organized by a local hostelry.

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, THAT an exceeding good BULL will be baited on Wednesday the 27th day of December 1780, near the DOG and STAR at Alresford,[a] Hants, when and where a dinner will be given gratis to every person that shall produce a good bull-dog; likewise a Silver Collar of twenty-four shillings value, to the owner of the dog that shall pin the bull oftenest and fairest, and seven shillings and sixpence to the owner of the second best dog. But if none shall pin him, seven and sixpence will be given to the owner of the best, and five shillings to the owner of the second dog. N.B. No dog will be allowed to run unless produced at the place before ten o'clock in the forenoon.

[6]

A Bill for the suppression of the practice was introduced into the House of Commons in 1800 by Sir William Pulteney. The Bill was defeated by a one-vote margin. A second Bill was introduced in 1802 by John Dent, but was defeated by thirteen votes. Bull baiting was still taking place, a newspaper reported in 1818 that a bull being taken from the stake to a stable had killed a man at Bilston Wake.[7] Bulls were excluded from the protections afforded to other cattle in the Cruel Treatment of Cattle Act 1822. Bull-baiting was not finally outlawed until parliament passed the Cruelty to Animals Act of 1835, which forbade the keeping of any house, pit, or other places for baiting or fighting any bull, bear, dog, or other animals.

Ireland

Bull-baiting (Irish: tarbh-ghríosú)[8] was widespread in Ireland in the 17th–19th centuries.

In Dublin, bull-baiting took place near the Cornmarket and in Smithfield.[9] On St Stephen's Day 1789, a riot followed a bull-bait: soldiers fired on the crowd and four were killed.[10]

In Wexford, the activity arrived in 1621, brought by the Guild of Butchers. Bulls were baited twice a year and their hides presented to the Mayor. The area where bull-baiting took place is still called the Bullring.[11]

In Kilkenny it took place at the site called The Ring, first in 1609, and commonly on the feast-day of John the Baptist (December 27). The last recorded bull-bait was in 1837, after they had become illegal under an 1835 Act.[12][13][14]

Bull-baiting also took place in Waterford,[15] Naas, Drogheda, Tuam, Carrickfergus, Belfast and Athlone.[16]

North America

 
A bull and bear fighting in New Orleans, 1853.

In the 19th century, and during Spanish Colonial Rule, bulls used to be pitted against bears in California and Mexico. Kingsley (1920) said that the bulls that fought the bears, at least while California was part of the United States, were not domesticated Hereford bulls, but Spanish Fighting Bulls, whose weight, agility, speed, sharp horns, and hot temper were said to be dangerous to both bears and humans, and Wistar (1937) said that those bulls were fearless.[1][17][18] In a case of the bull winning, victory could come early, when the bull used its strength to gore the bear to death with its horns, or toss the bear into the air.[17]

Dogs in bull baiting

 
Bull-baiting with dogs, 19th century

Bull-baiting dogs, including Old English Bulldogs, Bullenbeissers, Spanish Bulldogs, Ca de Bous and bull and terriers, were bred to bait animals, mainly bulls and bears.[19] During bull-baiting, the dog would attempt to flatten itself to the ground, creeping as close to the bull as possible, then darting out and attempting to bite the bull in the nose or head area.[20] The bull would often be tethered by a collar and rope, which were staked into the ground. As the dog darted at the bull, the bull would attempt to catch the dog with his head and horns, and throw the dog into the air.

In 1835, the Cruelty to Animals Act was passed in Parliament that outlawed "Blood Sport" in the United Kingdom.[21] The bulldog's work was suddenly over and the bulldog rapidly started dying out. Around 1865, dog fanciers began developing dog clubs which eventually culminated into conformation shows. Many fanciers utilized various remnants of the dog utilized for "Blood Sport" to resurrect the "Bull" dog and ultimately developed today's modern English bulldog.

In literature

Washington Irving, in his 1837 book, The Adventures of Captain Bonneville, wrote that a bear was baited, and likewise, a wild, fierce bull, before they were brought by vaqueros to an arena in a small amphitheatre in Monterey, California, to fight each other. He called the fight "a favorite, though barbarous sport." In this case, he said that the bear used its sharp claws against the nose of the bull, before catching its tongue, after being repeatedly gored by the bull. Then the bull overturned it "with a desperate effort", and then "dispatched" it rather easily.[1]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Either New Alresford, a town, or Old Alresford, a village; it is unclear which.

References

  1. ^ a b c Irving, Washington (1837), "Gay life at Monterey – Mexican horsemen – A bold dragoon – Use of the lasso – Vaqueros – Noosing a bear – Fight between a bull and a bear – Departure from Monterey – Indian horse stealers – Outrages committed by the travelers – Indignation of Captain Bonneville", The Adventures of Captain Bonneville, U.S.A., in the Rocky Mountains and the far West, retrieved 2009-08-11
  2. ^ Horatio Brown, Calendar State Papers Venice, 1603-1606 (London, 1900), pp. 139-140 no. 201.
  3. ^ Bushaway, Bob (1993), "Bulls, Ballads, Minstrels and Manors: Some Observations on the Defense of Customs in Eighteenth-Century England", in Buckland, Theresa; Wood, Juliette (eds.), Aspects of British Calendar Customs, Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, pp. 76–77, ISBN 1-850-75243-5
  4. ^ Griffin, Emma (May 2002). "Sports and Celebrations in English Market Towns, 1660–1750". Historical Research. 75 (188): 200. doi:10.1111/1468-2281.00147.
  5. ^ "Bull Baiting". Reading Mercury. 19 December 1774. p. 2.
  6. ^ "____". Hampshire Chronicle. 25 December 1780. p. 3.
  7. ^ "Bull Baiting". Northampton Mercury. 8 August 1818. p. 1.
  8. ^ "English–Irish Dictionary (de Bhaldraithe): bull-baiting". teanglann.ie.
  9. ^ Fennessy, Paul. "So what was sport in Ireland like in the 1600s?".
  10. ^ "Bull-baiting in eighteenth century Dublin". 18 May 2016.
  11. ^ "The Bullring, Wexford".
  12. ^ Rouse, Paul (8 October 2015). Sport and Ireland: A History. OUP Oxford. ISBN 9780191063022 – via Google Books.
  13. ^ Fletcher, Alan John (27 August 2017). Drama and the Performing Arts in Pre-Cromwellian Ireland: A Repertory of Sources and Documents from the Earliest Times Until C. 1642. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 9780859915731 – via Google Books.
  14. ^ roisin (5 August 2008). "Peter Brennan, ANCA, Pioneer Potter in Kilkenny".
  15. ^ "Sketches of Ireland sixty years ago". Jam. MacGlashan. 27 August 2017 – via Google Books.
  16. ^ Rouse, Paul (8 October 2015). Sport and Ireland: A History. OUP Oxford. ISBN 9780191063022 – via Google Books.
  17. ^ a b Tracy Irwin Storer; Lloyd Pacheco Tevis (1996). California Grizzly. University of California Press. pp. 42–187. ISBN 978-0-520-20520-8. Retrieved 2016-03-23.
  18. ^ Brown, David E. (1996). The Grizzly in the Southwest: Documentary of an Extinction. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 9780806128801. Retrieved 2016-03-25.
  19. ^ *Jenkins, Robert; Ken Mollett (1997). The Story of the Real Bulldog. Neptune, NJ: TFH Publications. ISBN 0-7938-0491-4.
  20. ^ Encyclopedia of Traditional British Rural Sports. Routledge (UK). 2005. ISBN 0-415-35224-X.
  21. ^ Fogle, Bruce; Tracy Morgan (2000). The new encyclopedia of the dog. New York: Dorling Kindersley. p. 381. ISBN 0-7894-6130-7.

Further reading

  • Encyclopedia of Traditional British Rural Sports. Routledge (UK). 2005. ISBN 0-415-35224-X.
  • Griffin, Emma (2005). England's Revelry: A History of Popular Sports and Pastimes. Oxford University Press.

External links

  • The Trial of 2 Centuries: Animal v. Animal Sport: Bull-Baiting
  • (in Eastern Essex, UK) (archived)

bull, baiting, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, march, 2013,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bull baiting news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bull baiting is a blood sport involving putting a bull against dogs with the aim of attacking and subduing the bull by biting and holding onto its nose or neck which often resulted in the death of the bull 1 Bull baiting in the 19th century painted by Samuel Henry Alken Detail from Bull baiting by Julius Caesar Ibbetson circa 1817 Contents 1 History 1 1 England 1 2 Ireland 1 3 North America 1 4 Dogs in bull baiting 2 In literature 3 See also 4 Footnotes 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory EditEngland Edit Bull and bear baiting arenas shown on the woodcut map of London of c 1561 the dogs are shown coming out of pens to each side Crowds in London during the Royal Entry of James VI and I in March 1604 were entertained by bull baiting 2 During the time of Queen Anne bull baiting was practiced in London at Hockley in the Hole twice a week and was also reasonably common in provincial towns for instance at Birmingham s Bull Ring At Tutbury a bull was tied to an iron stake so that it could move within a radius of about 30 feet The object of the sport was for the dogs to immobilize the bull Before the event started the bull s nose was blown full of pepper to enrage it before the baiting The bull was often placed in a hole in the ground A variant of bull baiting was pinning the bull where specially trained dogs would set upon the bull one at a time a successful attack resulting in the dog fastening his teeth strongly in the bull s snout The extinct Old English Bulldog was specially bred for this sport Etching by Francis Barlow Bull baiting was not only practiced as a form of recreation there was a long held belief that baiting improved the meat quality and tenderness when consumed 3 By the early nineteenth century the sport began to die out both because the baiting caused a public nuisance and because of new concerns about animal cruelty 4 The Bull Baiting at Wokingham was advertised in the newspaper in 1774 BULL BAITING On Wednesday next being St Thomas s Day Two Bulls will be baited in the Market Place Wokingham which will be run for a very handsome MOROCCO COLLAR stitched with Silver and a Silver Plate for a Label of a Guinea and Half Value Each Dog is to be let three Times at the first Bull four Times at the second and only one Dog run at a Time The Owner of each Dog that runs pays One Shilling for Entrance Proper Judges will be appointed before running to determine who may be the Winner A good Ordinary at the King s Inn between the Times of Baiting the Bulls 5 Bull baiting advertised in 1780 appears to indicate that it was organized by a local hostelry NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT an exceeding good BULL will be baited on Wednesday the 27th day of December 1780 near the DOG and STAR at Alresford a Hants when and where a dinner will be given gratis to every person that shall produce a good bull dog likewise a Silver Collar of twenty four shillings value to the owner of the dog that shall pin the bull oftenest and fairest and seven shillings and sixpence to the owner of the second best dog But if none shall pin him seven and sixpence will be given to the owner of the best and five shillings to the owner of the second dog N B No dog will be allowed to run unless produced at the place before ten o clock in the forenoon 6 A Bill for the suppression of the practice was introduced into the House of Commons in 1800 by Sir William Pulteney The Bill was defeated by a one vote margin A second Bill was introduced in 1802 by John Dent but was defeated by thirteen votes Bull baiting was still taking place a newspaper reported in 1818 that a bull being taken from the stake to a stable had killed a man at Bilston Wake 7 Bulls were excluded from the protections afforded to other cattle in the Cruel Treatment of Cattle Act 1822 Bull baiting was not finally outlawed until parliament passed the Cruelty to Animals Act of 1835 which forbade the keeping of any house pit or other places for baiting or fighting any bull bear dog or other animals Ireland Edit Bull baiting Irish tarbh ghriosu 8 was widespread in Ireland in the 17th 19th centuries In Dublin bull baiting took place near the Cornmarket and in Smithfield 9 On St Stephen s Day 1789 a riot followed a bull bait soldiers fired on the crowd and four were killed 10 In Wexford the activity arrived in 1621 brought by the Guild of Butchers Bulls were baited twice a year and their hides presented to the Mayor The area where bull baiting took place is still called the Bullring 11 In Kilkenny it took place at the site called The Ring first in 1609 and commonly on the feast day of John the Baptist December 27 The last recorded bull bait was in 1837 after they had become illegal under an 1835 Act 12 13 14 Bull baiting also took place in Waterford 15 Naas Drogheda Tuam Carrickfergus Belfast and Athlone 16 North America Edit See also Bear baiting North America A bull and bear fighting in New Orleans 1853 In the 19th century and during Spanish Colonial Rule bulls used to be pitted against bears in California and Mexico Kingsley 1920 said that the bulls that fought the bears at least while California was part of the United States were not domesticated Hereford bulls but Spanish Fighting Bulls whose weight agility speed sharp horns and hot temper were said to be dangerous to both bears and humans and Wistar 1937 said that those bulls were fearless 1 17 18 In a case of the bull winning victory could come early when the bull used its strength to gore the bear to death with its horns or toss the bear into the air 17 Dogs in bull baiting Edit Bull baiting with dogs 19th century Bull baiting dogs including Old English Bulldogs Bullenbeissers Spanish Bulldogs Ca de Bous and bull and terriers were bred to bait animals mainly bulls and bears 19 During bull baiting the dog would attempt to flatten itself to the ground creeping as close to the bull as possible then darting out and attempting to bite the bull in the nose or head area 20 The bull would often be tethered by a collar and rope which were staked into the ground As the dog darted at the bull the bull would attempt to catch the dog with his head and horns and throw the dog into the air In 1835 the Cruelty to Animals Act was passed in Parliament that outlawed Blood Sport in the United Kingdom 21 The bulldog s work was suddenly over and the bulldog rapidly started dying out Around 1865 dog fanciers began developing dog clubs which eventually culminated into conformation shows Many fanciers utilized various remnants of the dog utilized for Blood Sport to resurrect the Bull dog and ultimately developed today s modern English bulldog In literature EditWashington Irving in his 1837 book The Adventures of Captain Bonneville wrote that a bear was baited and likewise a wild fierce bull before they were brought by vaqueros to an arena in a small amphitheatre in Monterey California to fight each other He called the fight a favorite though barbarous sport In this case he said that the bear used its sharp claws against the nose of the bull before catching its tongue after being repeatedly gored by the bull Then the bull overturned it with a desperate effort and then dispatched it rather easily 1 See also Edit Animals portalBeargarden List of dog fighting breeds Bull running Bullfighting Stamford bull runFootnotes Edit Either New Alresford a town or Old Alresford a village it is unclear which References Edit a b c Irving Washington 1837 Gay life at Monterey Mexican horsemen A bold dragoon Use of the lasso Vaqueros Noosing a bear Fight between a bull and a bear Departure from Monterey Indian horse stealers Outrages committed by the travelers Indignation of Captain Bonneville The Adventures of Captain Bonneville U S A in the Rocky Mountains and the far West retrieved 2009 08 11 Horatio Brown Calendar State Papers Venice 1603 1606 London 1900 pp 139 140 no 201 Bushaway Bob 1993 Bulls Ballads Minstrels and Manors Some Observations on the Defense of Customs in Eighteenth Century England in Buckland Theresa Wood Juliette eds Aspects of British Calendar Customs Sheffield Sheffield Academic Press pp 76 77 ISBN 1 850 75243 5 Griffin Emma May 2002 Sports and Celebrations in English Market Towns 1660 1750 Historical Research 75 188 200 doi 10 1111 1468 2281 00147 Bull Baiting Reading Mercury 19 December 1774 p 2 Hampshire Chronicle 25 December 1780 p 3 Bull Baiting Northampton Mercury 8 August 1818 p 1 English Irish Dictionary de Bhaldraithe bull baiting teanglann ie Fennessy Paul So what was sport in Ireland like in the 1600s Bull baiting in eighteenth century Dublin 18 May 2016 The Bullring Wexford Rouse Paul 8 October 2015 Sport and Ireland A History OUP Oxford ISBN 9780191063022 via Google Books Fletcher Alan John 27 August 2017 Drama and the Performing Arts in Pre Cromwellian Ireland A Repertory of Sources and Documents from the Earliest Times Until C 1642 Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 9780859915731 via Google Books roisin 5 August 2008 Peter Brennan ANCA Pioneer Potter in Kilkenny Sketches of Ireland sixty years ago Jam MacGlashan 27 August 2017 via Google Books Rouse Paul 8 October 2015 Sport and Ireland A History OUP Oxford ISBN 9780191063022 via Google Books a b Tracy Irwin Storer Lloyd Pacheco Tevis 1996 California Grizzly University of California Press pp 42 187 ISBN 978 0 520 20520 8 Retrieved 2016 03 23 Brown David E 1996 The Grizzly in the Southwest Documentary of an Extinction University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 9780806128801 Retrieved 2016 03 25 Jenkins Robert Ken Mollett 1997 The Story of the Real Bulldog Neptune NJ TFH Publications ISBN 0 7938 0491 4 Encyclopedia of Traditional British Rural Sports Routledge UK 2005 ISBN 0 415 35224 X Fogle Bruce Tracy Morgan 2000 The new encyclopedia of the dog New York Dorling Kindersley p 381 ISBN 0 7894 6130 7 Further reading Edit Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about Bull baiting Encyclopedia of Traditional British Rural Sports Routledge UK 2005 ISBN 0 415 35224 X Griffin Emma 2005 England s Revelry A History of Popular Sports and Pastimes Oxford University Press External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bull baiting The Trial of 2 Centuries Animal v Animal Sport Bull Baiting Bull Baiting and Cock Fighting in Eastern Essex UK archived Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bull baiting amp oldid 1150900477, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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