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Cowbell

A cowbell (or cow bell) is a bell worn around the neck of free-roaming livestock so herders can keep track of an animal via the sound of the bell when the animal is grazing out of view in hilly landscapes or vast plains.[1] Although they are typically referred to as "cow bells" due to their extensive use with cattle, the bells are used on a wide variety of animals.

A Brown Swiss cow grazing with a cowbell
Bells on a herd of cows grazing on Monte Baldo, Italy
Goat with cowbell
Various types of cowbells from Karnataka, India
Various types of cowbells from the Swiss Alps
The cowbells are different depending on the species, sex and age of animals. These are used in the Pyrenees area.

Characteristics and uses

 
Ancient Southwest Asian cowbells.
 
Cowbell made in wood from Indonesia.

The bell and clapper are commonly crafted from iron, bronze, brass, copper, or wood. The collar used to hold the bell is traditionally made with leather and wood fibers. The craftsmanship of cow bells varies by geographic location and culture. Most cow bells are made of thin, flat pieces of plated sheet metal. Plating causes the sheet metal to have a surface which can be decorated or left plain. The ornaments on the cow bell and the collar are usually decorative although some cultures believe that certain ornaments provide or enhance magical protections such as the power to prevent or cure fever and other illnesses.[citation needed] Different bells can have specific sounds to identify important characteristics of the animals, such as age, sex, and species. Some cultures have even developed names to differentiate between bells and their tones; for example, in Spanish, "truco" refers to stud males, "esquila" to female goats or ewes, and "esquileta" for pregnant females and immature animals. Each of these bells possess unique sounds, shapes, and sizes.

Bells are used to keep track of grazing animal herds such as goats, reindeer, sheep and cows. They are mainly used in Europe, Mediterranean areas and Latin America, but are also used worldwide by those who practice transhumance, including nomadic pastoral tribes in Africa and Asia. Some people put bells on their livestock because they believe the foreign sound of the bell scares off predators,[2] however, some studies have shown that the sound of the bell has the opposite effect and leads predators to livestock because predators develop a learned association between the sound of the bell and the presence of a prey animal.[3]

Cowbells are often rung by human spectators at Alpine skiing events, and also, particularly in the US, at cyclo-cross races. They are usually held in the hand rather than worn around the neck.[4][5]

History

 
Copper hawk bell, from the Pre-Columbian Mississippian culture in Tennessee (US).

Archaeological evidence of bells dates back to more than 5000 years ago, from the 3rd millennium BC in Neolithic China.[6] During this era, there is evidence of early forms of pottery cowbells, which were likely used to track goats, sheep, and cattle.[7] The pottery bells were later replaced by metal bells. In West Asia, the first bells appeared in 1000 BC.[6] The earliest metal bells, one found in the Taosi site, and four in the Erlitou site, are dated to about 2000 BC.[8]

Bells for shepherding were expanded from the fertile crescent to Celtic, Carthaginian, Greek and Roman cultures. The earliest depictions of bells used for livestock in Britain appear on Pictish carved stones of the 7th to 9th centuries AD at Eassie, Angus[9] and Fowlis Wester, Perthshire.[10] Small iron bells of 8th or 9th century date, argued to be for cow or sheep, have been excavated from upland farm settlements at Crummack Dale and Gauber High Pasture in the Yorkshire Dales.[11] An early depiction of a bellwether, the leading sheep of a flock, on whose neck a bell is hung, is in the Carolingian Stuttgart Psalter of the ninth century.[12]

In Europe, the earliest written evidence of bells used for livestock dates to the late 14th to early 15th century. Grimm's Deutsches Wörterbuch s.v. "Kuhschelle" points to a 1410 mention in a Frankfurt archive; the OED lists 1440 as the earliest attestation of a 'bell-wether'. The OED also attributes the phrase "to bear the bell" in the sense "to take the first place" as originally referring to the leading cow or sheep of a drove or flock to Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde, 1374. In 15th-century Germany, a cow bell was worn only by the best and leading piece of livestock.[citation needed] The wider distribution of the bell worn by livestock was a gradual process of the Early Modern period. In France in the mid-16th century, Francois Rabelais makes this practice explicit in his Gargantua and Pantagruel, stating that

such was the custom, to appear on the field wearing jingling garment, as the high priest wears when entering the sacristy; since the tournaments, that is, the contest of nobility, have been abolished, carters have taken the bells and hung them on their hacks.

— cited after Grimm, s.v. "Schelle"[full citation needed]

The importance of the cow bell is highlighted in Swiss folklore, which reflects a period when a great Trychel, or large cow bell, was a rare and much-coveted item. The legend of the Simmental tells how a young cowherd strays inside a mountain, and is offered by a beautiful woman the choice between a treasure of gold coins, a golden Trychel, or the fairy herself. He chooses the Trychel.[13]

As opposed to regular cast-metal bells, 'trychlen' are made of hammered sheet metal. This results in a clanking, less crisp sound, but at the same time results in a bell that is lighter and thus easier to carry.

Modern-day manufacturing of cow bells continues today in Korea, Indonesia, and India, many created as village handicrafts. Despite a May 2012 fire that destroyed its factory, the Bevin Brothers Manufacturing Company continues to make cow bell bells in East Hampton, CT, as it has since its founding in 1832; it is the only remaining U.S. company making just bells.[14]

Examples of cow bells in ceremonial traditions

In Western Europe, when the snow has melted in the spring, villages send the cows to the high alpine meadows to graze. This event, called Alpaufzug, is celebrated in each village with a procession through the village to the high pastures. The cows are decorated with floral wreaths woven through the horns. The best milk-producing cow in the village leads the procession and wears the largest bell. The bells are made in various sizes, and are awarded to the cows according to their milk production that year.[15]

In the fall, the event is repeated, but is called an "Alpabzug", as the animals return from the high meadow. The best cows (each referred to as a 'Kranzkuh', "crown[ed] cow", after the ornamental headwear with which it is adorned) from each herd again lead the procession. The traditional festival is called Viehscheid in Southern Germany, and has other names in the Alpine regions.[16]

Animal welfare concerns

Cow bells can be as loud as 113 decibels, and it has been suggested that this may cause pain or deafness in animals wearing them.[17] A study[18] published in 2015 found that wearing a bell over three days caused cows to spend less time feeding, ruminating, and lying down. Animal rights campaigners, including the German Animal Welfare Society, have called for a ban on using cow bells.[19]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ "Calls for a cowbell ban in Switzerland". FoxNews.com. Fox News Network, LLC. 24 March 2015. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  2. ^ "Wildlife Services: Helping Producers Manage Predation" (PDF). /agrilifecdn.tamu.edu. United States Department of Agriculture. October 2002. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  3. ^ Loveridge, Andrew J.; Kuiper, Timothy; Parry, Roger H.; Sibanda, Lovemore; Hunt, Jane Hunt; Stapelkamp, Brent; Sebele, Lovelater; Macdonald, David W. (24 January 2017). "Bells, bomas and beefsteak: complex patterns of human-predator conflict at the wildlife-agropastoral interface in Zimbabwe". PeerJ. 5: e2898. doi:10.7717/peerj.2898. PMC 5267574. PMID 28149682.
  4. ^ Lukas, Oliver (19 December 2012). "The art of noise in sport: How the cowbell came of age". CNN.
  5. ^ Merrett, Jim (20 October 2013). "10 Things You Need To Know About Cyclocross". Esquire.
  6. ^ a b Lothar Von Falkenhausen (1993). Suspended Music: Chime Bells in the Culture of Bronze Age China. University of California Press. p. 132. ISBN 978-0-520-07378-4. Retrieved February 8, 2013. China produced the earliest bells anywhere in the world. The earliest metal bells may have been derived from pottery prototypes, which date back to the late stage of the Yang-Shao culture (early third millennium BC)
  7. ^ Huang, Houming. "Prehistoric Music Culture of China", in Cultural Relics of Central China, 2002, No. 3:18–27. ISSN 1003-1731. pp. 20–27. Link (subscription required)
  8. ^ Falkenhausen (1994), 132, Appendix I 329, 342.[incomplete short citation]
  9. ^ "Eassie"., Canmore ID 32092, retrieved 24 July, 2020.
  10. ^ "Fowlis Wester".'View of lower detail of reverse of Fowlis Wester Pictish cross slab', catalogue number SC 1458573, Canmore ID 26193, retrieved 24 July, 2020.
  11. ^ Ingleborough Archaeology Group 2015. The Crummack Dale Project: Excavation of three early medieval steadings and a lime kiln. Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority Report Number SYD 14070: pp. 81-82. Retrieved July 24, 2020 Available as PDF
  12. ^ "folio 164v". Württembergische Landesbibliothek Cod.bibl.fol.23. Retrieved 24 July, 2020.
  13. ^ Lienert, Meinrad (1915). Die güldene Kuhschelle [The Golden Kuhschelle]. Schweizer Sagen und Heldengeschichten (in German). Stuttgart. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  14. ^ "Bevin Brothers Manufacturing Company".
  15. ^ Spicer, Dorothy Gladys (1958). Twelve Festivals of Switzerland. Festivals of Western Europe. The H. W. Wilson Company. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  16. ^ Larkin, Leah (August 25, 2005). . Stars and Stripes. Archived from the original on August 4, 2011. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
  17. ^ Sam Frizell (September 25, 2014). "No More Cowbell! Bovines May Be Hurt By Heavy, Noisy Bells, Study Finds". time.com. Time USA, LLC. Retrieved November 14, 2020.
  18. ^ Johns, Julia; Patt, Antonia; Hillmann, Edna (2015). "Do bells affect behaviour and heart rate variability in grazing dairy cows?". PLOS ONE. 10 (6): e0131632. Bibcode:2015PLoSO..1031632J. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0131632. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 4482024. PMID 26110277.
  19. ^ Justin Huggler (25 August 2015). "German animal rights activists call for Bavarian cowbells to be silenced". telegraph.co.uk. Telegraph Media Group Ltd. Retrieved November 14, 2020.

Further reading

  • Robert Schwaller, Treicheln, Schellen, Glocken (1996; 2005 addendum).

External links

  • Cowbells in Polish collections

cowbell, this, article, about, agricultural, tool, musical, instrument, instrument, other, uses, disambiguation, cowbell, bell, bell, worn, around, neck, free, roaming, livestock, herders, keep, track, animal, sound, bell, when, animal, grazing, view, hilly, l. This article is about the agricultural tool For the musical instrument see Cowbell instrument For other uses see Cowbell disambiguation A cowbell or cow bell is a bell worn around the neck of free roaming livestock so herders can keep track of an animal via the sound of the bell when the animal is grazing out of view in hilly landscapes or vast plains 1 Although they are typically referred to as cow bells due to their extensive use with cattle the bells are used on a wide variety of animals source source source source source source source source source source source source A Brown Swiss cow grazing with a cowbell source source Bells on a herd of cows grazing on Monte Baldo Italy Goat with cowbell source source Various types of cowbells from Karnataka India source source Various types of cowbells from the Swiss Alps The cowbells are different depending on the species sex and age of animals These are used in the Pyrenees area Contents 1 Characteristics and uses 2 History 2 1 Examples of cow bells in ceremonial traditions 3 Animal welfare concerns 4 Gallery 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksCharacteristics and uses Edit Ancient Southwest Asian cowbells Cowbell made in wood from Indonesia The bell and clapper are commonly crafted from iron bronze brass copper or wood The collar used to hold the bell is traditionally made with leather and wood fibers The craftsmanship of cow bells varies by geographic location and culture Most cow bells are made of thin flat pieces of plated sheet metal Plating causes the sheet metal to have a surface which can be decorated or left plain The ornaments on the cow bell and the collar are usually decorative although some cultures believe that certain ornaments provide or enhance magical protections such as the power to prevent or cure fever and other illnesses citation needed Different bells can have specific sounds to identify important characteristics of the animals such as age sex and species Some cultures have even developed names to differentiate between bells and their tones for example in Spanish truco refers to stud males esquila to female goats or ewes and esquileta for pregnant females and immature animals Each of these bells possess unique sounds shapes and sizes Bells are used to keep track of grazing animal herds such as goats reindeer sheep and cows They are mainly used in Europe Mediterranean areas and Latin America but are also used worldwide by those who practice transhumance including nomadic pastoral tribes in Africa and Asia Some people put bells on their livestock because they believe the foreign sound of the bell scares off predators 2 however some studies have shown that the sound of the bell has the opposite effect and leads predators to livestock because predators develop a learned association between the sound of the bell and the presence of a prey animal 3 Cowbells are often rung by human spectators at Alpine skiing events and also particularly in the US at cyclo cross races They are usually held in the hand rather than worn around the neck 4 5 History Edit Copper hawk bell from the Pre Columbian Mississippian culture in Tennessee US Archaeological evidence of bells dates back to more than 5000 years ago from the 3rd millennium BC in Neolithic China 6 During this era there is evidence of early forms of pottery cowbells which were likely used to track goats sheep and cattle 7 The pottery bells were later replaced by metal bells In West Asia the first bells appeared in 1000 BC 6 The earliest metal bells one found in the Taosi site and four in the Erlitou site are dated to about 2000 BC 8 Bells for shepherding were expanded from the fertile crescent to Celtic Carthaginian Greek and Roman cultures The earliest depictions of bells used for livestock in Britain appear on Pictish carved stones of the 7th to 9th centuries AD at Eassie Angus 9 and Fowlis Wester Perthshire 10 Small iron bells of 8th or 9th century date argued to be for cow or sheep have been excavated from upland farm settlements at Crummack Dale and Gauber High Pasture in the Yorkshire Dales 11 An early depiction of a bellwether the leading sheep of a flock on whose neck a bell is hung is in the Carolingian Stuttgart Psalter of the ninth century 12 In Europe the earliest written evidence of bells used for livestock dates to the late 14th to early 15th century Grimm s Deutsches Worterbuch s v Kuhschelle points to a 1410 mention in a Frankfurt archive the OED lists 1440 as the earliest attestation of a bell wether The OED also attributes the phrase to bear the bell in the sense to take the first place as originally referring to the leading cow or sheep of a drove or flock to Chaucer s Troilus and Criseyde 1374 In 15th century Germany a cow bell was worn only by the best and leading piece of livestock citation needed The wider distribution of the bell worn by livestock was a gradual process of the Early Modern period In France in the mid 16th century Francois Rabelais makes this practice explicit in his Gargantua and Pantagruel stating that such was the custom to appear on the field wearing jingling garment as the high priest wears when entering the sacristy since the tournaments that is the contest of nobility have been abolished carters have taken the bells and hung them on their hacks cited after Grimm s v Schelle full citation needed The importance of the cow bell is highlighted in Swiss folklore which reflects a period when a great Trychel or large cow bell was a rare and much coveted item The legend of the Simmental tells how a young cowherd strays inside a mountain and is offered by a beautiful woman the choice between a treasure of gold coins a golden Trychel or the fairy herself He chooses the Trychel 13 As opposed to regular cast metal bells trychlen are made of hammered sheet metal This results in a clanking less crisp sound but at the same time results in a bell that is lighter and thus easier to carry Modern day manufacturing of cow bells continues today in Korea Indonesia and India many created as village handicrafts Despite a May 2012 fire that destroyed its factory the Bevin Brothers Manufacturing Company continues to make cow bell bells in East Hampton CT as it has since its founding in 1832 it is the only remaining U S company making just bells 14 Examples of cow bells in ceremonial traditions Edit In Western Europe when the snow has melted in the spring villages send the cows to the high alpine meadows to graze This event called Alpaufzug is celebrated in each village with a procession through the village to the high pastures The cows are decorated with floral wreaths woven through the horns The best milk producing cow in the village leads the procession and wears the largest bell The bells are made in various sizes and are awarded to the cows according to their milk production that year 15 In the fall the event is repeated but is called an Alpabzug as the animals return from the high meadow The best cows each referred to as a Kranzkuh crown ed cow after the ornamental headwear with which it is adorned from each herd again lead the procession The traditional festival is called Viehscheid in Southern Germany and has other names in the Alpine regions 16 Animal welfare concerns EditCow bells can be as loud as 113 decibels and it has been suggested that this may cause pain or deafness in animals wearing them 17 A study 18 published in 2015 found that wearing a bell over three days caused cows to spend less time feeding ruminating and lying down Animal rights campaigners including the German Animal Welfare Society have called for a ban on using cow bells 19 Gallery Edit Bells for animals Kashgar markets Ancient Madoera festival Madoera Madura Sawah Tengah Java Oriental Indonesia Brass cowbells from Tamil culture in Southern India Greek animal bells Italian animal bells Ancient Roman cowbell in a Bavarian museum Weissenburg Bayern A wood collar for cowbell Another wood collar for cowbell with carved symbols Iron cowbell view 1 Iron cowbell view 2 A Simmentaler Fleckvieh cow wearing a trychel cowbell Procession of La Vijanera fiesta Cantabria Plowing a rice field with oxen about 1910 1920 in Sawa Indonesia An improvised cowbell used for sheep or goats The bell was found in 1988 in a field near Tuqu Tekoa in the Judean hills the West Bank The bell s body is made of aluminum probably a broken kitchen utensil while the clapper is a brass cartridge case Swiss souvenir cow bellsReferences Edit Calls for a cowbell ban in Switzerland FoxNews com Fox News Network LLC 24 March 2015 Retrieved December 4 2019 Wildlife Services Helping Producers Manage Predation PDF agrilifecdn tamu edu United States Department of Agriculture October 2002 Retrieved December 4 2019 Loveridge Andrew J Kuiper Timothy Parry Roger H Sibanda Lovemore Hunt Jane Hunt Stapelkamp Brent Sebele Lovelater Macdonald David W 24 January 2017 Bells bomas and beefsteak complex patterns of human predator conflict at the wildlife agropastoral interface in Zimbabwe PeerJ 5 e2898 doi 10 7717 peerj 2898 PMC 5267574 PMID 28149682 Lukas Oliver 19 December 2012 The art of noise in sport How the cowbell came of age CNN Merrett Jim 20 October 2013 10 Things You Need To Know About Cyclocross Esquire a b Lothar Von Falkenhausen 1993 Suspended Music Chime Bells in the Culture of Bronze Age China University of California Press p 132 ISBN 978 0 520 07378 4 Retrieved February 8 2013 China produced the earliest bells anywhere in the world The earliest metal bells may have been derived from pottery prototypes which date back to the late stage of the Yang Shao culture early third millennium BC Huang Houming Prehistoric Music Culture of China in Cultural Relics of Central China 2002 No 3 18 27 ISSN 1003 1731 pp 20 27 Link subscription required Falkenhausen 1994 132 Appendix I 329 342 incomplete short citation Eassie Canmore ID 32092 retrieved 24 July 2020 Fowlis Wester View of lower detail of reverse of Fowlis Wester Pictish cross slab catalogue number SC 1458573 Canmore ID 26193 retrieved 24 July 2020 Ingleborough Archaeology Group 2015 The Crummack Dale Project Excavation of three early medieval steadings and a lime kiln Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority Report Number SYD 14070 pp 81 82 Retrieved July 24 2020 Available as PDF folio 164v Wurttembergische Landesbibliothek Cod bibl fol 23 Retrieved 24 July 2020 Lienert Meinrad 1915 Die guldene Kuhschelle The Golden Kuhschelle Schweizer Sagen und Heldengeschichten in German Stuttgart Retrieved 2014 03 06 Bevin Brothers Manufacturing Company Spicer Dorothy Gladys 1958 Twelve Festivals of Switzerland Festivals of Western Europe The H W Wilson Company Retrieved 2014 03 06 Larkin Leah August 25 2005 Alps When the cows come home it s party time Stars and Stripes Archived from the original on August 4 2011 Retrieved October 29 2011 Sam Frizell September 25 2014 No More Cowbell Bovines May Be Hurt By Heavy Noisy Bells Study Finds time com Time USA LLC Retrieved November 14 2020 Johns Julia Patt Antonia Hillmann Edna 2015 Do bells affect behaviour and heart rate variability in grazing dairy cows PLOS ONE 10 6 e0131632 Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1031632J doi 10 1371 journal pone 0131632 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 4482024 PMID 26110277 Justin Huggler 25 August 2015 German animal rights activists call for Bavarian cowbells to be silenced telegraph co uk Telegraph Media Group Ltd Retrieved November 14 2020 Further reading EditRobert Schwaller Treicheln Schellen Glocken 1996 2005 addendum External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cow bells Cowbells in Polish collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cowbell amp oldid 1106426910, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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