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Falconry

Falconry is the hunting of wild animals in their natural state and habitat by means of a trained bird of prey. Small animals are hunted; squirrels and rabbits often fall prey to these birds. Two traditional terms are used to describe a person involved in falconry: a "falconer" flies a falcon; an "austringer" (Old French origin) flies a hawk (Accipiter, some buteos and similar) or an eagle (Aquila or similar). In modern falconry, the red-tailed hawk (Buteo jamaicensis), Harris's hawk (Parabuteo unicinctus), and the peregrine falcon (Falco perigrinus) are some of the more commonly used birds of prey. The practice of hunting with a conditioned falconry bird is also called "hawking" or "gamehawking", although the words hawking and hawker have become used so much to refer to petty traveling traders, that the terms "falconer" and "falconry" now apply to most use of trained birds of prey to catch game. Many contemporary practitioners still use these words in their original meaning, however.

Falconry, a living human heritage
CountryAustria, Belgium, Croatia, Czechia, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Republic of Korea, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Morocco, Netherlands, Pakistan, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Slovakia, Spain and Syrian Arab Republic, United Arab Emirates
DomainsKnowledge and practices
Reference1708
Inscription history
Inscription2021 (16th session)
ListRepresentative
Flying a saker falcon

In early English falconry literature, the word "falcon" referred to a female peregrine falcon only, while the word "hawk" or "hawke" referred to a female hawk. A male hawk or falcon was referred to as a "tiercel" (sometimes spelled "tercel"), as it was roughly one-third less than the female in size.[1][2] This traditional Arabian sport grew throughout Europe. Falconry is also an icon of Arabian culture.

Birds used in contemporary falconry

Several raptors are used in falconry. They are typically classed as:

Owls are also used, although they are far less common.

In determining whether a species can or should be used for falconry, the species' behavior in a captive environment, its responsiveness to training, and its typical prey and hunting habits are considered. To some degree, a species' reputation will determine whether it is used, although this factor is somewhat harder to objectively gauge.

Species for beginners

In North America, the capable red-tailed hawk is commonly flown by beginner falconers during their apprenticeship.[3][4] Opinions differ on the usefulness of the kestrel for beginners due to its inherent fragility. In the UK, beginner falconers are often permitted to acquire a larger variety of birds, but Harris's hawk and the red-tailed hawk remain the most commonly used for beginners and experienced falconers alike.[5] Red-tailed hawks are held in high regard in the UK due to the ease of breeding them in captivity, their inherent hardiness, and their capability hunting the rabbits and hares commonly found throughout the countryside in the UK. Many falconers in the UK and North America switch to accipiters or large falcons following their introduction with easier birds. In the US, accipiters, several types of buteos, and large falcons are only allowed to be owned by falconers who hold a general license. The three kinds of falconry licenses in the United States, typically, are the apprentice class, general class, and master class.

Soaring hawks and the common buzzard (Buteo)

 
A falconer's red-tailed hawk (Buteo jamaicensis)

The genus Buteo, known as "hawks" in North America and not to be confused with vultures, has worldwide distribution, but is particularly well represented in North America. The red-tailed hawk, ferruginous hawk, and rarely, the red-shouldered hawk are all examples of species from this genus that are used in falconry today. The red-tailed hawk is hardy and versatile, taking rabbits, hares, and squirrels; given the right conditions, it can catch the occasional duck or pheasant. The red-tailed hawk is also considered a good bird for beginners. The Eurasian or common buzzard is also used, although this species requires more perseverance if rabbits are to be hunted.

Harris's hawk (Parabuteo unicinctus)

 
Harris's hawk used in falconry
 
Falconer with a Harris's hawk

Parabuteo unicinctus is one of two representatives of the Parabuteo genus worldwide. The other is the white-rumped hawk (P. leucorrhous). Arguably the best rabbit or hare raptor available anywhere, Harris's hawk is also adept at catching birds. Often captive-bred, Harris's hawk is remarkably popular because of its temperament and ability. It is found in the wild living in groups or packs, and hunts cooperatively, with a social hierarchy similar to wolves. This highly social behavior is not observed in any other bird-of-prey species, and is very adaptable to falconry. This genus is native to the Americas from southern Texas and Arizona to South America. Harris's hawk is often used in the modern technique of car hawking (or drive-by falconry), where the raptor is launched from the window of a moving car at suitable prey.

True hawks (Accipiter)

The genus Accipiter is also found worldwide. Hawk expert Mike McDermott once said, "The attack of the accipiters is extremely swift, rapid, and violent in every way." They are well known in falconry use both in Europe and North America. The northern goshawk has been trained for falconry for hundreds of years, taking a variety of birds and mammals. Other popular Accipiter species used in falconry include Cooper's hawk and the sharp-shinned hawk in North America and the European sparrowhawk in Europe and Eurasia.

Harriers (Circus)

New Zealand is likely to be one of the few countries to use a harrier species for falconry; there, falconers successfully hunt with the Australasian harrier (Circus approximans).[6]

 
A lanner falcon with its lure

Falcons (Falco)

The genus Falco is found worldwide and has occupied a central niche in ancient and modern falconry. Most falcon species used in falconry are specialized predators, most adapted to capturing bird prey such as the peregrine falcon and merlin. A notable exception is the use of desert falcons such the saker falcon in ancient and modern falconry in Asia and Western Asia, where hares were and are commonly taken. In North America, the prairie falcon and the gyrfalcon can capture small mammal prey such as rabbits and hares (as well as the standard gamebirds and waterfowl) in falconry, but this is rarely practiced. Young falconry apprentices in the United States often begin practicing the art with American kestrels, the smallest of the falcons in North America; debate remains on this, as they are small, fragile birds, and can die easily if neglected.[7] Small species, such as kestrels, merlins and hobbys are most often flown on small birds such as starlings or sparrows, but can also be used for recreational bug hawking – that is, hunting large flying insects such as dragonflies, grasshoppers, and moths.

Owls (Strigidae)

 
A barn owl landing on a falconer's hand

Owls (family Strigidae) are not closely related to hawks or falcons. Little is written in classic falconry that discusses the use of owls in falconry. However, at least two species have successfully been used, the Eurasian eagle-owl and the great horned owl. Successful training of owls is much different from the training of hawks and falcons, as they are hearing- rather than sight-oriented. (Owls can only see black and white, and are long-sighted.) This often leads falconers to believe that they are less intelligent, as they are distracted easily by new or unnatural noises, and they do not respond as readily to food cues. However, if trained successfully, owls show intelligence on the same level as those of hawks and falcons.

Booted eagles (Aquila)

 
A Mongolian man inspects his golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos) before competing in an eagle hunting contest in northern Mongolia

The Aquila (all have "booted" or feathered tarsi) genus has a nearly worldwide distribution. The more powerful types are used in falconry; for example golden eagles have reportedly been used to hunt wolves[8] in Kazakhstan, and are now most widely used by the Altaic Kazakh eagle hunters in the western Mongolian province of Bayan-Ölgii to hunt foxes,[9][10][11][12][13] and other large prey, as they are in neighbouring Kyrgyzstan.[14] Most are primarily ground-oriented, but occasionally take birds. Eagles are not used as widely in falconry as other birds of prey, due to the lack of versatility in the larger species (they primarily hunt over large, open ground), the greater potential danger to other people if hunted in a widely populated area, and the difficulty of training and managing an eagle. A little over 300 active falconers are using eagles in Central Asia, with 250 in western Mongolia, 50 in Kazakhstan, and smaller numbers in Kyrgyzstan and western China.[12]

Sea eagles (Haliaëtus)

Most species of genus Haliaëtus catch and eat fish, some almost exclusively, but in countries where they are not protected, some have been effectively used in hunting for ground quarry.[citation needed]

Husbandry, training, and equipment

See Hack (falconry) and Falconry training and technique. They can be trained by nurturing a deep bond between the falconer and Falcon.They should cover the falcon’s head with a leather band if not hunting.

Falconry around the world

 
A brown falcon used for falconry in Tasmania

Falconry is currently practiced in many countries around the world. The falconer's traditional choice of bird is the northern goshawk and peregrine falcon. In contemporary falconry in both North America and the UK, they remain popular, although Harris' hawks and red-tailed hawks are likely more widely used. The northern goshawk and the golden eagle are more commonly used in Eastern Europe than elsewhere. In the west asia, the saker falcon is the most traditional species flown against the houbara bustard, sandgrouse, stone-curlew, other birds, and hares. Peregrines and other captive-bred imported falcons are also commonplace. Falconry remains an important part of the Arab heritage and culture. The UAE reportedly spends over US$27 million annually towards the protection and conservation of wild falcons, and has set up several state-of-the-art falcon hospitals in Abu Dhabi and Dubai.[15] The Abu Dhabi Falcon Hospital is the largest falcon hospital in the whole world. Two breeding farms are in the Emirates, as well as those in Qatar and Saudi Arabia. Every year, falcon beauty contests and demonstrations take place at the ADIHEX exhibition in Abu Dhabi.

 
A saker falcon used for falconry in Qatar
 
 
Falconer from Al Ain, Abu Dhabi[16]

Eurasian sparrowhawks were formerly used to take a range of small birds, but are really too delicate for serious falconry, and have fallen out of favour now that American species are available.

In North America and the UK, falcons usually fly only after birds. Large falcons are typically trained to fly in the "waiting-on" style, where the falcon climbs and circles above the falconer and/or dog and the quarry is flushed when the falcon is in the desired commanding position. Classical game hawking in the UK had a brace of peregrine falcons flown against the red grouse, or merlins in "ringing" flights after skylarks. Rooks and crows are classic game for the larger falcons, and the magpie, making up in cunning what it lacks in flying ability, is another common target. Short-wings can be flown in both open and wooded country against a variety of bird and small mammal prey. Most hunting with large falcons requires large, open tracts where the falcon is afforded opportunity to strike or seize its quarry before it reaches cover. Most of Europe practices similar styles of falconry, but with differing degrees of regulation.

Medieval falconers often rode horses, but this is now rare with the exception of contemporary Kazakh and Mongolian falconry. In Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Mongolia, the golden eagle is traditionally flown (often from horseback), hunting game as large as foxes and wolves.[17]

In Japan, the northern goshawk has been used for centuries. Japan continues to honor its strong historical links with falconry (takagari), while adopting some modern techniques and technologies.

In Australia, although falconry is not specifically illegal, it is illegal to keep any type of bird of prey in captivity without the appropriate permits. The only exemption is when the birds are kept for purposes of rehabilitation (for which a licence must still be held), and in such circumstances it may be possible for a competent falconer to teach a bird to hunt and kill wild quarry, as part of its regime of rehabilitation to good health and a fit state to be released into the wild.

In New Zealand, falconry was formally legalised for one species only, the swamp/Australasian harrier (Circus approximans) in 2011. This was only possible with over 25 years of effort from both Wingspan National Bird of Prey Center[18] and the Raptor Association of New Zealand.[19] Falconry can only be practiced by people who have been issued a falconry permit by the Department of Conservation. Tangent aspects, such as bird abatement and raptor rehabilitation, also employ falconry techniques to accomplish their goals.

Falconry today

 
Falconry

Falcons can live into their midteens, with larger hawks living longer and eagles likely to see out middle-aged owners. Through the captive breeding of rescued birds, the last 30 years have had a great rebirth of the sport, with a host of innovations; falconry's popularity, through lure flying displays at country houses and game fairs, has probably never been higher in the past 300 years. Ornithologist Tim Gallagher, editor of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's Living Bird magazine, documented his experiences with modern falconry in a 2008 book, Falcon Fever.[a]

Making use of the natural relationship between raptors and their prey, falconry is now used to control pest birds and animals in urban areas, landfills, commercial buildings, hotels, and airports.[21]

Falconry centres or bird-of-prey centres house these raptors. They are responsible for many aspects of bird-of-prey conservation (through keeping the birds for education and breeding). Many conduct regular flying demonstrations and educational talks, and are popular with visitors worldwide.

Such centres may also provide falconry courses, hawk walks, displays, and other experiences with these raptors.

Clubs and organizations

In the UK, the British Falconers' Club (BFC) is the oldest and largest of the falconry clubs. BFC was founded in 1927 by the surviving members of the Old Hawking Club, itself founded in 1864. Working closely with the Hawk Board, an advisory body representing the interests of UK bird of prey keepers, the BFC is in the forefront of raptor conservation, falconer education, and sustainable falconry. Established in 1927, the BFC now has a membership over 1,200 falconers. It began as a small and elite club, but it is now a sizeable democratic organisation that has members from all walks of life, flying hawks, falcons, and eagles at legal quarry throughout the British Isles.

The North American Falconers Association[22] (NAFA), founded in 1961, is the premier club for falconry in the US, Canada, and Mexico, and has members worldwide. NAFA is the primary club in the United States and has a membership from around the world. Most USA states have their own falconry clubs. Although these clubs are primarily social, they also serve to represent falconers within their states in regards to that state's wildlife regulations.

The International Association for Falconry and Conservation of Birds of Prey,[23] founded in 1968, currently represents 156 falconry clubs and conservation organisations from 87 countries worldwide, totalling over 75,000 members.

The Saudi Falcons Club preserves the historical heritage associated with the falconry culture, and spreads awareness and provides training to protect falcons and flourish falconry.[tone]

Captive breeding and conservation

The successful and now widespread captive breeding of birds of prey began as a response to dwindling wild populations due to persistent toxins such as PCBs and DDT, systematic persecution as undesirable predators, habitat loss, and the resulting limited availability of popular species for falconry, particularly the peregrine falcon. The first known raptors to breed in captivity belonged to a German falconer named Renz Waller. In 1942–43, he produced two young peregrines in Düsseldorf in Germany.

 
Falconry equipment

The first successful captive breeding of peregrine falcons in North America occurred in the early 1970s by the Peregrine Fund, professor and falconer Heinz Meng, and other private falconer/breeders such as David Jamieson and Les Boyd who bred the first peregrines by means of artificial insemination. In Great Britain, falconer Phillip Glasier of the Falconry Centre in Newent, Gloucestershire, was successful in obtaining young from more than 20 species of captive raptors. A cooperative effort began between various government agencies, non-government organizations, and falconers to supplement various wild raptor populations in peril. This effort was strongest in North America where significant private donations along with funding allocations through the Endangered Species Act of 1972 provided the means to continue the release of captive-bred peregrines, golden eagles, bald eagles, aplomado falcons and others. By the mid-1980s, falconers had become self-sufficient as regards sources of birds to train and fly, in addition to the immensely important conservation benefits conferred by captive breeding.

Between 1972 and 2001, nearly all peregrines used for falconry in the U.S. were captive-bred from the progeny of falcons taken before the U. S. Endangered Species Act was passed, and from those few infusions of wild genes available from Canada and special circumstances. Peregrine falcons were removed from the United States' endangered species list on August 25, 1999.[24] Finally, after years of close work with the US Fish and Wildlife Service, a limited take of wild peregrines was allowed in 2001, the first wild peregrines taken specifically for falconry in over 30 years.

Some controversy has existed over the origins of captive-breeding stock used by the Peregrine Fund in the recovery of peregrine falcons throughout the contiguous United States. Several peregrine subspecies were included in the breeding stock, including birds of Eurasian origin. Due to the extirpation of the eastern subspecies (Falco peregrinus anatum), its near extirpation in the Midwest, and the limited gene pool within North American breeding stock, the inclusion of non-native subspecies was justified to optimize the genetic diversity found within the species as a whole.[25] Such strategies are common in endangered species reintroduction scenarios, where dramatic population declines result in a genetic bottleneck and the loss of genetic diversity.

Laws regulating the hunting, import and export of wild falcons vary across Asia, and effective enforcement of current national and international regulations is lacking in some regions. It is possible that the spread of captive-bred falcons in falcon markets in the Arabian Peninsula has mitigated this demand for wild falcons.

Hybrid falcons

The species within the genus Falco are closely related, and some pairings produce viable offspring. The heavy northern gyrfalcon and Asiatic saker are especially closely related, and whether the Altai falcon is a subspecies of the saker or descendants of naturally occurring hybrids is not known. Peregrine and prairie falcons have been observed breeding in the wild and have produced offspring.[26] These pairings are thought to be rare, but extra-pair copulations between closely related species may occur more frequently and/or account for most natural occurring hybridization. Some male first-generation hybrids may have viable sperm, whereas very few first-generation female hybrids lay fertile eggs. Thus, naturally occurring hybridization is thought to be somewhat insignificant to gene flow in raptor species.

The first hybrid falcons produced in captivity occurred in western Ireland when veteran falconer Ronald Stevens and John Morris put a male saker and a female peregrine into the same moulting mews for the spring and early summer, and the two mated and produced offspring.

Captive-bred hybrid falcons have been available since the late 1970s, and enjoyed a meteoric rise in popularity in North America and the UK in the 1990s. Hybrids were initially "created" to combine the horizontal speed and size of the gyrfalcon with the good disposition and aerial ability of the peregrine. Hybrid falcons first gained large popularity throughout the Arabian Peninsula, feeding a demand for particularly large and aggressive female falcons capable and willing to take on the very large houbara bustard, the classic falconry quarry in the deserts of the West Asia. These falcons were also very popular with Arab falconers, as they tended to withstand a respiratory disease (aspergillosis from the mold genus Aspergillus) in stressful desert conditions better than other pure species from the Northern Hemisphere.

Artificial selection and domestication

Some believe that no species of raptor have been in captivity long enough to have undergone successful selective breeding for desired traits. Captive breeding of raptors over several generations tends to result, either deliberately, or inevitably as a result of captivity, in selection for certain traits, including:

  • Ability to survive in captivity
  • Ability to breed in captivity
  • Suitability (in most cases) for interactions with humans for falconry: Birds that demonstrated an unwillingness to hunt with men were most often discarded, rather than being placed in breeding projects
  • With gyrfalcons in areas away from their natural Arctic tundra habitat, better disease resistance
  • With gyrfalcons, feather color[27]

Escaped falconry birds

 
The Shaw Monument, a falconry observation tower in Scotland.

Falconers' birds are inevitably lost on occasion, though most are found again. The main reason birds can be found again is because, during free flights, birds usually wear radio transmitters or bells. The transmitters are in the middle of the tail, on the back, or attached to the bird's legs.

Records of species becoming established in Britain after escaping or being released include:

  • Escaped Harris hawks reportedly bred in the wild in Britain.
  • The return of the goshawk as a breeding bird to Britain since 1945 is due in large part to falconers' escapes; the earlier British population was wiped out by gamekeepers and egg collectors in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
  • A pair of European eagle owls bred in the wild in Yorkshire for several years, feeding largely or entirely on rabbits. The pair are most likely captive escapees. If this will lead to a population becoming established is not yet known.

In 1986, a lost captive-bred female prairie falcon (which had been cross-fostered by an adult peregrine in captivity) mated with a wild male peregrine in Utah. The prairie falcon was trapped and the eggs removed, incubated, and hatched, and the hybrid offspring were given to falconers. The wild peregrine paired with another peregrine the next year.

Falconry in Hawaii is prohibited largely due to the fears of escaped non-native birds of prey becoming established on the island chain and aggravating an already rampant problem of invasive species impacts on native wildlife and plant communities.

Regulations

In Great Britain

In sharp contrast to the US, falconry in Great Britain is permitted without a special license, but a restriction exists of using only captive-bred birds. In the lengthy, record-breaking debates in Westminster during the passage of the 1981 Wildlife and Countryside Bill, efforts were made by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and other lobby groups to have falconry outlawed, but these were successfully resisted. After a centuries-old but informal existence in Britain, the sport of falconry was finally given formal legal status in Great Britain by the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, which allowed it to continue, provided all captive raptors native to the UK were officially ringed and government-registered. DNA testing was also available to verify birds' origins. Since 1982, the British government's licensing requirements have been overseen by the Chief Wildlife Act Inspector for Great Britain, who is assisted by a panel of unpaid assistant inspectors.

 
A white gyrfalcon

British falconers are entirely reliant upon captive-bred birds for their sport. The taking of raptors from the wild for falconry, although permitted by law under government licence, has not been allowed in recent decades.

Anyone is permitted to possess legally registered or captive-bred raptors, although falconers are anxious to point out this is not synonymous with falconry, which specifically entails the hunting of live quarry with a trained bird. A raptor kept merely as a pet or possession, although the law may allow it, is not considered to be a falconer's bird. Birds may be used for breeding or kept after their hunting days are over, but falconers believe it is preferable that young, fit birds are flown at quarry.

In the United States

In the United States, falconry is legal in all states except Hawaii, and in the District of Columbia. A falconer must have a state permit to practice the sport. (Requirements for a federal permit were changed in 2008 and the program discontinued effective January 1, 2014.)[28] Acquiring a falconry license in the United States requires an aspiring falconer to pass a written test, have equipment and facilities inspected, and serve a minimum of two years as an apprentice under a licensed falconer, during which time, the apprentice falconer may only possess one raptor. Three classes of the falconry license have a permit issued jointly by the falconer's state of residence and the federal government. The aforementioned apprentice license matriculates to a general class license, which allows the falconer to up to three raptors at one time. (Some jurisdictions may further limit this.) After a minimum of five years at general level, falconers may apply for a master class license, which allows them to keep up to five wild raptors for falconry and an unlimited number of captive-produced raptors. (All must be used for falconry.) Certain highly experienced master falconers may also apply to possess golden eagles for falconry.

Within the United States, a state's regulations are limited by federal law and treaties protecting raptors. Most states afford falconers an extended hunting season relative to seasons for archery and firearms, but species to be hunted, bag limits, and possession limits remain the same for both. No extended seasons for falconry exist for the hunting of migratory birds such as waterfowl and doves.

Federal regulation of falconry in North America is enforced under the statutes of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 (MBTA), originally designed to address the rampant commercial market hunting of migratory waterfowl during the early 20th century. Birds of prey suffered extreme persecution from the early 20th century through the 1960s, where thousands of birds were shot at conspicuous migration sites, and many state wildlife agencies issued bounties for carcasses.[29] Due to widespread persecution and further impacts to raptor populations from DDT and other toxins, the act was amended in 1972 to include birds of prey. (Eagles are also protected under the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act of 1959.) Under the MBTA, taking migratory birds, their eggs, feathers, or nests is illegal. Take is defined in the MBTA to "include by any means or in any manner, any attempt at hunting, pursuing, wounding, killing, possessing, or transporting any migratory bird, nest, egg, or part thereof".[30] Falconers are allowed to trap and otherwise possess certain birds of prey and their feathers with special permits issued by the Migratory Bird Office of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and by state wildlife agencies (issuers of trapping permits).

The Convention on International Trade on Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna (CITES) restricts the import and export of most native birds species and are listed in the CITES Appendices I, II, and III.

The Wild Bird Conservation Act, legislation put into effect circa 1993, regulates importation of any CITES-listed birds into the United States.

Some controversy exists over the issue of falconer's ownership of captive-bred birds of prey. Falconry permits are issued by states in a manner that entrusts falconers to "take" (trap) and possess permitted birds and use them only for permitted activities, but does not transfer legal ownership. No legal distinction is made between native wild-trapped vs. captive-bred birds of the same species. This legal position is designed to discourage the commercial exploitation of native wildlife.

History

 
Detail of two falconers from De arte venandi cum avibus, 1240s
 
Indian king, Maharaja Suraj Mal of Bharatpur with a hawk
 
Mughal emperor Akbar with a hawk
 
The medieval poet Konrad von Altstetten shown with his falcon, in the embrace of his lover. From the Codex Manesse.

Evidence suggests that the art of falconry may have begun in Mesopotamia, with the earliest accounts dating to around 2,000 BC. Also, some raptor representations are in the northern Altai, western Mongolia.[2][31] The falcon was a symbolic bird of ancient Mongol tribes.[32] Some disagreement exists about whether such early accounts document the practice of falconry (from the Epic of Gilgamesh and others) or are misinterpreted depictions of humans with birds of prey.[33][page needed][34][page needed] During the Turkic Period of Central Asia (seventh century AD), concrete figures of falconers on horseback were described on the rocks in Kyrgyz.[31] Falconry was probably introduced to Europe around AD 400, when the Huns and Alans invaded from the east.[citation needed] Frederick II of Hohenstaufen (1194–1250) is generally acknowledged as the most significant wellspring of traditional falconry knowledge. He is believed to have obtained firsthand knowledge of Arabic falconry during wars in the region (between June 1228 and June 1229). He obtained a copy of Moamyn's manual on falconry and had it translated into Latin by Theodore of Antioch. Frederick II himself made corrections to the translation in 1241, resulting in De Scientia Venandi per Aves.[35] King Frederick II is most recognized for his falconry treatise, De arte venandi cum avibus (The Art of Hunting with Birds). Written himself toward the end of his life, it is widely accepted as the first comprehensive book of falconry, but also notable in its contributions to ornithology and zoology. De arte venandi cum avibus incorporated a diversity of scholarly traditions from east to west, and is one of the earliest challenges to Aristotle's explanations of nature.[36][page needed]

 
Three panels depicting hawking in England from various time periods, as reprinted in Joseph Strutt's 1801 book, The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England from the Earliest Period: The middle panel is from a Saxon manuscript dated to the late 10th century – early 11th century, as of 1801 held in the "Cotton Library", showing a Saxon nobleman and his falconer. The top and bottom panels are drawings from a manuscript held, as of 1801, in the Royal Library, dating from the early 14th century, showing parties of both sexes hawking by the waterside; the falconer is frightening the fowl to make them rise and the hawk is in the act of seizing upon one of them.[37]
 
Mughal emperor Jahangir in the desert hunting deer with a falcon., Brooklyn Museum, c. 1600.
 
Icelandic gyrfalcon, 1759, Livrustkammaren

Historically, falconry was a popular sport and status symbol among the nobles of medieval Europe,[38] and Asia. Many historical illustrations left in Rashid al Din's "Compendium chronicles" book described falconry of the middle centuries with Mongol images. Falconry was largely restricted to the noble classes due to the prerequisite commitment of time, money, and space. In art and other aspects of culture, such as literature, falconry remained a status symbol long after it was no longer popularly practiced. The historical significance of falconry within lower social classes may be underrepresented in the archaeological record, due to a lack of surviving evidence, especially from nonliterate nomadic and nonagrarian societies. Within nomadic societies such as the Bedouin, falconry was not practiced for recreation by noblemen. Instead, falcons were trapped and hunted on small game during the winter to supplement a very limited diet.[39][page needed]

In the UK and parts of Europe, falconry probably reached its zenith in the 17th century,[1][2] but soon faded, particularly in the late 18th and 19th centuries, as firearms became the tool of choice for hunting. (This likely took place throughout Europe and Asia in differing degrees.) Falconry in the UK had a resurgence in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when a number of falconry books were published.[40][page needed] This revival led to the introduction of falconry in North America in the early 20th century. Colonel R. Luff Meredith is recognized as the father of North American falconry.[41]

Throughout the 20th century, modern veterinary practices and the advent of radio telemetry (transmitters attached to free-flying birds) increased the average lifespan of falconry birds, and allowed falconers to pursue quarry and styles of flight that had previously resulted in the loss of their hawk or falcon.

Timeline

 
A couple belonging to the Sambal warrior class, documented by the 16th-century Boxer Codex: The female warrior is holding a raptor, which has captured a bird, exemplifying a culture of falconry.
  • 722–705 BC – An Assyrian bas-relief found in the ruins at Khorsabad during the excavation of the palace of Sargon II (Sargon II) has been claimed to depict falconry. In fact, it depicts an archer shooting at raptors and an attendant capturing a raptor. A. H. Layard's statement in his 1853 book Discoveries in the Ruins of Nineveh and Babylon is "A falconer bearing a hawk on his wrist appeared to be represented in a bas-relief which I saw on my last visit to those ruins."
  • 680 BC – Chinese records describe falconry.
  • Fourth century BC - Aristotle wrote that in Thrace, the boys who want to hunt small birds, take hawks with them. When they call the hawks addressing them by name, the hawks swoop down on the birds. The small birds fly in terror into the bushes, where the boys catch them by knocking them down with sticks; in case the hawks themselves catch any of the birds, they throw them down to the hunters. When the hunting finishes, the hunters give a portion of all that is caught to the hawks.[42] He also wrote that in the city of Cedripolis (Κεδρίπολις), men and hawks jointly hunt small birds. The men drive them away with sticks, while the hawks pursue closely, and the small birds in their flight fall into the clutches of the men. Because of this, they share their prey with the hawks.[43]
  • Third century BC - Antigonus of Carystus wrote the same story about the city of Cedripolis.[44]
  • 355 ADNihon-shoki, a largely mythical narrative, records hawking first arriving in Japan from Baekje as of the 16th emperor Nintoku.
  • Second–fourth century – the Germanic tribe of the Goths learned falconry from the Sarmatians.
  • Fifth century – the son of Avitus, Roman Emperor 455–56, from the Celtic tribe of the Arverni, who fought at the Battle of Châlons with the Goths against the Huns, introduced falconry in Rome.
  • 500 – a Roman floor mosaic depicts a falconer and his hawk hunting ducks.
  • Early seventh century – Prey caught by trained dogs or falcons is considered halal in Quran.[45] By this time, falconry was already popular in the Arabian Peninsula.
  • 818 – Japanese Emperor Saga ordered someone to edit a falconry text named Shinshuu Youkyou.
  • 875 – Western Europe and Saxon England practiced falconry widely.
  • 991 – In the poem The Battle of Maldon describing the Battle of Maldon in Essex, before the battle, the Anglo-Saxons' leader Byrhtnoth says, "let his tame hawk fly from his hand to the wood".
  • 1070s – The Bayeux Tapestry shows King Harold of England with a hawk in one scene. The king is said to have owned the largest collection of books on the sport in all of Europe.
  • 1100Norman nobility distinguished falconry from the sport of 'hawking'.[38] Normans practiced falconry by horseback and 'hawking' by foot.[38]
  • Around 1182Niketas Choniates wrote about hawks that are trained to hunt at the Byzantine Empire.[46]
  • Around the 1240s – The treatise of an Arab falconer, Moamyn, was translated into Latin by Master Theodore of Antioch, at the court of Frederick II, it was called De Scientia Venandi per Aves and much copied.
  • 1250 – Frederick II wrote in the last years of his life a treatise on the art of hunting with birds: De arte venandi cum avibus.
  • 1285 – The Baz-Nama-yi Nasiri, a Persian treatise on falconry, was compiled by Taymur Mirza, an English translation of which was produced in 1908 by D. C. Phillott.[47]
  • 1325 – The Libro de la caza, by the prince of Villena, Don Juan Manuel, includes a detailed description of the best hunting places for falconry in the kingdom of Castile.
  • 1390s – In his Libro de la caza de las aves, Castilian poet and chronicler Pero López de Ayala attempts to compile all the available correct knowledge concerning falconry.
  • 1486 – See the Boke of Saint Albans
  • Early 16th century – Japanese warlord Asakura Norikage (1476–1555) succeeded in captive breeding of goshawks.
  • 1580s – Spanish drawings of Sambal people recorded in the Boxer Codex showed a culture of falconry in the Philippines.
  • 1600s – In Dutch records of falconry, the town of Valkenswaard was almost entirely dependent on falconry for its economy.
  • 1660sTsar Alexis of Russia writes a treatise that celebrates aesthetic pleasures derived from falconry.
  • 1801Joseph Strutt of England writes, "the ladies not only accompanied the gentlemen in pursuit of the diversion [falconry], but often practiced it by themselves; and even excelled the men in knowledge and exercise of the art."
  • 1864 – The Old Hawking Club is formed in Great Britain.
  • 1921 – Deutscher Falkenorden is founded in Germany. Today, it is the largest and oldest falconry club in Europe.
  • 1927 – The British Falconers' Club is founded by the surviving members of the Old Hawking Club.
  • 1934 – The first US falconry club, the Peregrine Club of Philadelphia, is formed; it became inactive during World War II and was reconstituted in 2013 by Dwight A. Lasure of Pennsylvania.
  • 1941 – Falconer's Club of America formed
  • 1961 – Falconer's Club of America was defunct
  • 1961North American Falconers Association formed
  • 1968 – International Association for Falconry and Conservation of Birds of Prey formed[48]
  • 1970 – Peregrine falcons were listed as an endangered species in the U.S., due primarily to the use of DDT as a pesticide (35 Federal Register 8495; June 2, 1970).
  • 1970 – The Peregrine Fund is founded, mostly by falconers, to conserve raptors, and focusing on peregrine falcons.
  • 1972 – DDT banned in the U.S. (EPA press release – December 31, 1972) but continues to be used in Mexico and other nations.
  • 1999 – Peregrine falcon removed from the Endangered Species List in the United States, due to reports that at least 1,650 peregrine breeding pairs existed in the U.S. and Canada at that time. (64 Federal Register 46541-558, August 25, 1999)
  • 2003 – A population study by the USFWS shows peregrine falcon numbers climbing ever more rapidly, with well over 3000 pairs in North America
     
    Hunting falcon as depicted by Edwin Henry Landseer in 1837.
  • 2006 – A population study by the USFWS shows peregrine falcon numbers still climbing. (Federal Register circa September 2006)
  • 2008 – USFWS rewrites falconry regulations virtually eliminating federal involvement. {Federal Register: October 8, 2008 (Volume 73, Number 196)}
  • 2010 – Falconry is added to the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)[16][49]

Falconry in Britain in Early 12th century

Medieval Normans distinguished falconry from the sport of 'hawking'.[38] Normans practiced falconry by horseback and 'hawking' by foot.[38] An immediate impact of the Norman Conquest of England was a penchant for falconry enjoyed by Norman nobility.[38] So much so, in fact, that they outlawed commoners from hunting particular lands so that nobility could freely enjoy both sports.[38] Both falconry and 'hawking' were central to Norman cultural identity in medieval times.[38] Normans transported their falcons on a frame called a cadge.[38]

The Book of St Albans

 
A lady with peregrine falcon on horse

The often-quoted Book of Saint Albans or Boke of St Albans, first printed in 1486, often attributed to Dame Juliana Berners, provides this hierarchy of hawks and the social ranks for which each bird was supposedly appropriate.

  1. Emperor: Eagle, vulture, and merlin
  2. King: gyr falcon and the tercel of the gyr falcon
  3. Prince: falcon gentle and the tercel gentle
  4. Duke: falcon of the loch
  5. Earl: Peregrine falcon
  6. Baron: bustard
  7. Knight: sacre and the sacret
  8. Esquire: lanere and the laneret
  9. Lady: marlyon
  10. Young man: hobby
  11. Yeoman: goshawk
  12. Poor man: tercel
  13. Priest: sparrowhawk
  14. Holy water clerk: musket
  15. Knave or servant: kestrel

This list, however, was mistaken in several respects.

  • 1) Vultures are not used for falconry.
  • 3) 4) 5) These are usually said to be different names for the peregrine falcon. But there is an opinion that renders 4) as "rock falcon" = a peregrine from remote rocky areas, which would be bigger and stronger than other peregrines. This could also refer to the Scottish peregrine.
  • 6) The bustard is not a bird of prey, but a game species that was commonly hunted by falconers; this entry may have been a mistake for buzzard, or for busard which is French for "harrier"; but any of these would be a poor deal for barons; some treat this entry as "bastard hawk", possibly meaning a hawk of unknown lineage, or a hawk that could not be identified.
  • 7) Sakers were imported from abroad and very expensive, and ordinary knights and squires would be unlikely to have them.
  • 8) Contemporary records have lanners as native to England.
  • 10) 15) Hobbies and kestrels are historically considered to be of little use for serious falconry (the French name for the hobby is faucon hobereau, hobereau meaning local/country squire. That may be the source of the confusion), however King Edward I of England sent a falconer to catch hobbies for his use. Kestrels are coming into their own as worthy hunting birds, as modern falconers dedicate more time to their specific style of hunting. While not suitable for catching game for the falconer's table, kestrels are certainly capable of catching enough quarry that they can be fed on surplus kills through the molt.
  • 12) An opinion[50] holds that since the previous entry is the goshawk, this entry ("Ther is a Tercell. And that is for the powere [= poor] man.") means a male goshawk and that here "poor man" means not a labourer or beggar, but someone at the bottom of the scale of landowners.

The relevance of the "Boke" to practical falconry past or present is extremely tenuous, and veteran British falconer Phillip Glasier dismissed it as "merely a formalised and rather fanciful listing of birds".

Falconry in Britain in 1973

A book about falconry published in 1973[51] says:

  • Most falconry birds used in Britain were taken from the wild, either in Britain, or taken abroad and then imported.
  • Captive breeding was initiated. The book mentions a captive-bred goshawk and a brood of captive-bred red-tailed hawks. It describes as a new and remarkable event captive breeding hybrid young in 1971 and 1972 from John Morris's female saker and Ronald Stevens's peregrine falcon.
  • Peregrine falcons were suffering from the post–World War II severe decline caused by pesticides. Taking wild peregrines in Britain was only allowed to train them to keep birds off Royal Air Force airfields to prevent bird strikes.
  • The book does not mention telemetry.
  • Harris hawks were known to falconers but unusual. For example, the book lists a falconry meet on four days in August 1971 at White Hill and Leafield in Dumfriesshire in Scotland; the hawks flown were 11 goshawks and one Harris hawk. The book felt it necessary to say what a Harris hawk is.
  • The usual species for a beginner was a kestrel.
  • A few falconers used golden eagles.
  • Falcons in falconry would have bells on their legs so the hunters could find them. If the bells fell off the falcon, the hunter would not be able to find his bird easily. The bird usually died if it could not find a way to remove the leather binding on its feet.

Intangible cultural heritage

 
A falconer from Saudi Arabia, 1970s.

In 2010, UNESCO inscribed falconry as a living human heritage element of 11 countries, including the United Arab Emirates, Belgium, Czech Republic, Slovakia, France, Republic of Korea, Mongolia, Morocco, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Spain, and the Syrian Arab Republic. Austria and Hungary were added in 2012, and Germany, Italy, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, and Portugal were added in 2016. With a total of eighteen countries, falconry is the largest multi-national nomination on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.[52]

Literature and film

  • In historic literature of Mongols, The Secret History of Mongol is one of earliest books that described Bodonchar Munkhag, first leader of the Borjigan tribe as having first caught a falcon and fed it until spring. Through falconry, he not only survived, but also made it his tribal custom. His eighth-generation descendent Esukhei Baatar (hereo) was also in falconry, and he was the father of Genghis Khan. Through Genghis Khan's Great Mongol empire, this custom was introduced to China, Korea, Japan, and Europe, as well as the Western Asia.
  • In the Tale XXXIII of the Tales of Count Lucanor by the prince of Villena, Lo que sucedió a un halcón sacre del infante don Manuel con una garza y un águila, the tale tries to teach a moral based on a story about falconry lived by the father of the author.
  • In the ninth novel of the fifth day of Giovanni Boccaccio's The Decameron, a medieval collection of novellas, a falcon is central to the plot: Nobleman Federigo degli Alberighi has wasted his fortune courting his unrequited love until nothing is left but his brave falcon. When his lady comes to see him, he gives her the falcon to eat. Knowing his case, she changes her mind, marries him, and makes him rich.
  • Famous explorer Sir Richard Francis Burton wrote an account of falconry in India, Falconry in the Valley of the Indus, first published in 1852 and now available in modern reprints.
  • A 17th-century English physician-philosopher, Sir Thomas Browne, wrote a short essay on falconry.[53]
  • T.H. White was a falconer and wrote The Goshawk about his attempt to train a hawk in the traditional art of falconry. Falconry is also featured and discussed in The Once and Future King.
  • In Virginia Henley's historical romance books, The Falcon and the Flower, The Dragon and the Jewel, The Marriage Prize, The Border Hostage, and Infamous, numerous mentions to the art of falconry are made, as these books are set at dates ranging from the 1150s to the 16th century.
  • The main character, Sam Gribley, in the children's novel My Side of the Mountain, is a falconer. His trained falcon is named Frightful.
  • William Bayer's novel Peregrine set in the world of falconry, about a rogue peregrine falcon in New York City, won the 1982 Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Mystery.
  • Stana Katic, the Canadian actress who played Detective Kate Beckett on Castle, enjoys falconry in her spare time.[54] She has said that "It gives me self-respect."
  • In the book and movie The Falcon and the Snowman about two Americans who sold secrets to the Soviets, one of the two main characters, Christopher Boyce, is a falconer.
  • In The Royal Tenenbaums, Richie keeps a falcon named Mordecai on the roof of his home in Brooklyn.
  • In James Clavell's Shōgun, Toranaga, one of the main characters, practices falconry throughout the book, often during or immediately before or after important plot events. His thoughts also reveal an analogy between his falconry and his use of other characters towards his ends.
  • The 1985 film Ladyhawke involved a medieval warrior who carried a red-tailed hawk as a pet, but in truth, the hawk was actually his lover, who had been cursed by an evil bishop to keep the two apart.
  • In The Dark Tower series, the main character, Roland, uses a hawk named David, to win a trial by combat to become a Gunslinger.
  • "The Falconer" is a recurring sketch on Saturday Night Live, featuring Will Forte as a falconer who constantly finds himself in mortal peril and must rely on his loyal falcon, Donald, to rescue him.
  • Gabriel García Márquez's novel Chronicle of a Death Foretold's main character, Santiago Nasar, and his father are falconers.
  • Hodgesaargh is a falconer based in Lancre Castle in Terry Pratchett's Discworld books. He is an expert and dedicated falconer who unluckily seems to only keep birds that enjoy attacking him.
  • Fantasy author Mercedes Lackey is a falconer and often adds birds of prey to her novels. Among the Tayledras or Hawkbrother race in her Chronicles of Valdemar, everyone bonds with a specially bred raptor called a bondbird, which has limited powers of speech mind-to-mind and can scout and hunt for its human bondmate.
  • Crime novelist Andy Straka is a falconer and his Frank Pavlicek private eye series features a former NYPD homicide detective and falconer as protagonist. The books include A Witness Above, A Killing Sky, Cold Quarry (2001, 2002, 2003), and Kitty Hitter (2009).
  • In Irish poet William Butler Yeats's poem, "The Second Coming", Yeats uses the image of "The falcon cannot hear the falconer" as a metaphor for social disintegration.
  • American poet Robert Duncan's poem "My Mother Would Be a Falconress"[55]
  • The comic book Gold Ring by Qais M. Sedki and Akira Himekawa features falconers and falcons.
  • The Marvel Comics character The Falcon is both named after the animal, but is a falconer himself, fighting crime with his falcon Redwing.
  • C. J. Box's Joe Pickett series of novels has a recurring character, Nate Romanowski, who is a falconer.
  • A Kestrel for a Knave is a novel by British author Barry Hines, published in 1968. It is set in Barnsley, South Yorkshire, and tells of Billy Casper, a young working-class boy troubled at home and at school, who only finds solace when he finds and trains a kestrel, which he names "Kes". The film made from the book in 1969 by Ken Loach is also called Kes.
  • Barry Hines was inspired by his younger brother Richard, who like Billy Casper, took kestrels from the wild and trained them. (He trained the three hawks used in the film Kes.) He has written of this in his memoir No Way But Gentleness: A Memoir of How Kes, My Kestrel, Changed My Life (Bloomsbury, 2016).
  • H is for Hawk (Vintage, 2015) by Helen Macdonald, which won the Samuel Johnson Prize and Costa Book of the Year prizes in 2014, tells of how she trained a goshawk and mourned her father in the same year. It has echoes of T.H. White's The Goshawk.
  • Dragonheart features Brok, the brutal knight for the iron fisted King Einon, who proved a capable falconer and owns a falcon.
  • On The Mummy Returns, Ardeth Bay proved a capable falconer and owned a saker falcon named after the Egyptian god Horus. Sadly, while delivering a message, Horus was shot to death by Lock-Nah with a rifle.
  • Avatar: The Last Airbender featured falconry, involving many using messenger hawks to deliver messages. Also the assassin, Combustion Man showed talents with falconry. owned a raven eagle, which he used to intercept a messenger hawk carrying information about Aang's whereabouts. The raven eagle tied the hawk up, stole the message it was carrying, and delivered it to Combustion Man, thus keeping the Avatar's survival after the Coup of Ba Sing Se a secret.

English language words and idioms derived from falconry

These English language words and idioms are derived from falconry:

Expression Meaning in falconry Derived meaning
haggard[56] of a hawk, caught from the wild when adult looking exhausted and unwell, in poor condition; wild or untamed
lure[57] Originally a device used to recall hawks. The hawks, when young, were trained to associate the device (usually a bunch of feathers) with food. To tempt with a promise/reward/bait
rouse[58] To shake one's feathers Stir or awaken
pounce[59] Referring to a hawk's claws, later derived to refer to birds springing or swooping to catch prey Jump forward to seize or attack something
to turn tail[60] Fly away To turn and run away

See also

Notes

  1. ^ About 5,000 falconers were in the United States in 2008.[20]

References

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  2. ^ a b c Latham, S. (1633), The Falcon's Lure and Cure.
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  8. ^ Hollinshead, Martin (2006), , The Fernhill Press, archived from the original on 2011-09-28, retrieved 2007-06-21.
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  21. ^ Ranahan, Jared (28 January 2022). "Preying for a paycheck: The birds that work for hotels". The Washington Post.
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  23. ^ "International Association for Falconry and Conservation of Birds of Prey - Home". Iaf.org. from the original on 6 September 2019. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  24. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Peregrine Falcons". Endangered Species Program. US Fish & Wildlife Service. from the original on 3 January 2013. Retrieved 23 December 2012.
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  38. ^ a b c d e f g h i 15 Let's play Age of Empires IV. Falconry & Hawking: Norman Nobility.
  39. ^ Thesiger, W (1959), Arabian Sands, Penguin Books.
  40. ^ Mitchell, EB (1971) [1900], The art & practice of hawking (7th ed.), Newton, MA: Charles T. Branford. 291 pp.
  41. ^ , NAFA, archived from the original on 2015-04-08.
  42. ^ "Aristotelian Corpus, On Marvelous Things Heard, 27.118". from the original on 2020-10-29. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  43. ^ "Aristotle, History of Animals, 9.36.2". from the original on 2020-10-09. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  44. ^ "Antigonus, Compilation of Marvellous Accounts, 28". from the original on 2020-03-06. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  45. ^ Quran 5:4.
  46. ^ "Niketas Choniates, Annals, 251". from the original on 2020-07-26. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  47. ^ Phillott, DC (translator) (1908). The Baz-Nama-Yi Nasiri. A Persian Treatise on Falconry. London: Bernard Quaritch. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  48. ^ . Iaf.org. Archived from the original on 26 November 2017. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  49. ^ "- intangible heritage - Culture Sector - UNESCO". Unesco.org. from the original on 5 November 2015. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  50. ^ , Austringer (36): 11, archived from the original on 2010-10-13, retrieved 2008-05-09.
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  52. ^ "Falconry, a living human heritage". UNESCO. from the original on 16 November 2019. Retrieved 10 November 2017.
  53. ^ "Sir Thomas Browne's Miscellany Tracts: Of Hawks and Falconry". Penelope.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  54. ^ Katic, Stana (2009-10-08). Kimmel, James 'Jimmy' (ed.). "On Falconry". You tube (video). from the original on 2012-09-23. Retrieved 2012-05-21.
  55. ^ aapone (6 May 2005). . My Mother Would Be a Falconress. Archived from the original on 2013-09-21. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  56. ^ "haggard". Online Etymology Dictionary. from the original on 2013-12-24. Retrieved 2013-12-22.
  57. ^ "lure". Online Etymology Dictionary. from the original on 2013-09-21. Retrieved 2013-03-19.
  58. ^ "rouse". Online Etymology Dictionary. from the original on 2013-09-21. Retrieved 2013-03-19.
  59. ^ "pounce". Online Etymology Dictionary. from the original on 2013-09-21. Retrieved 2013-03-19.
  60. ^ "tail". Online Etymology Dictionary. from the original on 2013-09-21. Retrieved 2013-03-19.

Further reading

  • Ash, Lydia, Modern Apprentice: site for North Americans interested in falconry. Much information for this entry was due to her research.
  • Beebe, FL; Webster, HM (2000), North American Falconry and Hunting Hawks (8th ed.), ISBN 0-685-66290-X.
  • Chenu, Jean Charles; Des Murs, Marc Athanase Parfait Œillet (1862). La fauconnerie, ancienne et moderne. Paris: Librairie L. Hachette et Cie.
  • Chiorino, G. E. (1906). Il Manuale del moderno Falconiere. Milan: Ulrico Hoepli.
  • Fernandes Ferreira (b. 1546), Diogo; Cordeiro (1844-1900), Luciano (1899). Arte da caça de altaneria. Lisbon: Lisboa Escriptorio.
  • Freeman, Gage Earle; Salvin, Francis Henry (1859). Falconry : Its Claims, History and Practice. London: Longman, Green, Longman and Roberts.
  • Freeman, Gage Earle (1869). Practical falconry - to which is added, How I became a falconer. London: Horace Cox.
  • Fuertes, Louis Agassiz; Wetmore, Alexander (1920). "Falconry, the sport of kings". National Geographic Magazine. 38 (6).
  • García, Beatriz E. Candil; Hartman, Arjen E (2007), Ars Accipitraria: An Essential Dictionary for the Practice of Falconry and hawking, London: Yarak, ISBN 978-0-9555607-0-5 (the excerpt on the language of falconry comes from this book).
  • ——— (2008), The Red-tailed Hawk: The Great Unknown, London: Yarak, ISBN 978-0-9555607-4-3.
  • Harting, James Edmund (1891). Bibliotheca Accipitraria: A Catalogue of Books Ancient and Modern Relating to Falconry, with notes, glossary and vocabulary. London: Bernard Quaritch.
  • López de Ayala (1332-1407), Pedro; de la Cueva, duque de Albuquerque (d. 1492), Beltrán; de Gayangos (1809-1897), Pascual; Lafuente y Alcántara, Emilio (1869). El libro de las aves de caça. Madrid: M. Galiano.
  • Mortara, Alessandro de (ed); Latini (1220-1295), Brunetto; Bono (c. 1240 – c. 1292), Giamboni (1851). Scritture antiche toscane di falconeria ed alcuni capitoli nell' originale francese del Tesoro di Brunetto Latini sopra la stessa materia. Prato: Tipografia F. Alberghetti e C. {{cite book}}: |first1= has generic name (help)
  • Phillott, Douglas Craven; al-Dawlah Timur Mirza, Husam (1908). The Baz-nama-yi Nasiri, a Persian treatise on falconry. London: Bernard Quaritch.
  • Riesenthal, Oskar von (1876). Die Raubvögel Deutschlands und des angrenzenden Mitteleuropas; Darstellung und Beschreibung der in Deutschland und den benachbarten Ländern von Mitteleuropa vorkommenden Raubvögel. Cassel, Germany: Verlag von Theodor Fischer.
  • Deva, Raja of Kumaon, Rudra; Shastri (tr.), Hara Prasad (1910). Syanika satra: or a book on hawking. Calcutta: Asiatic Society.
  • Soma, Takuya. 2012. ‘Contemporary Falconry in Altai-Kazakh in Western Mongolia’The International Journal of Intangible Heritage (vol.7), pp. 103–111. [1] 2017-06-21 at the Wayback Machine
  • Soma, Takuya. 2013. ‘Ethnographic Study of Altaic Kazakh Falconers’, Falco: The Newsletter of the Middle East Falcon Research Group 41, pp. 10–14.

External links

  • IAF - International Association for Falconry and Conservation of Birds of Prey.
  • Falconry at Curlie

falconry, album, slechtvalk, hunting, wild, animals, their, natural, state, habitat, means, trained, bird, prey, small, animals, hunted, squirrels, rabbits, often, fall, prey, these, birds, traditional, terms, used, describe, person, involved, falconry, falcon. For the album see Slechtvalk Falconry is the hunting of wild animals in their natural state and habitat by means of a trained bird of prey Small animals are hunted squirrels and rabbits often fall prey to these birds Two traditional terms are used to describe a person involved in falconry a falconer flies a falcon an austringer Old French origin flies a hawk Accipiter some buteos and similar or an eagle Aquila or similar In modern falconry the red tailed hawk Buteo jamaicensis Harris s hawk Parabuteo unicinctus and the peregrine falcon Falco perigrinus are some of the more commonly used birds of prey The practice of hunting with a conditioned falconry bird is also called hawking or gamehawking although the words hawking and hawker have become used so much to refer to petty traveling traders that the terms falconer and falconry now apply to most use of trained birds of prey to catch game Many contemporary practitioners still use these words in their original meaning however Falconry a living human heritageUNESCO Intangible Cultural HeritageA GoshawkCountryAustria Belgium Croatia Czechia France Germany Hungary Ireland Italy Japan Kazakhstan Republic of Korea Kyrgyzstan Mongolia Morocco Netherlands Pakistan Poland Portugal Qatar Saudi Arabia Slovakia Spain and Syrian Arab Republic United Arab EmiratesDomainsKnowledge and practicesReference1708Inscription historyInscription2021 16th session ListRepresentativeFlying a saker falcon In early English falconry literature the word falcon referred to a female peregrine falcon only while the word hawk or hawke referred to a female hawk A male hawk or falcon was referred to as a tiercel sometimes spelled tercel as it was roughly one third less than the female in size 1 2 This traditional Arabian sport grew throughout Europe Falconry is also an icon of Arabian culture Contents 1 Birds used in contemporary falconry 1 1 Species for beginners 1 2 Soaring hawks and the common buzzard Buteo 1 3 Harris s hawk Parabuteo unicinctus 1 4 True hawks Accipiter 1 5 Harriers Circus 1 6 Falcons Falco 1 7 Owls Strigidae 1 8 Booted eagles Aquila 1 9 Sea eagles Haliaetus 2 Husbandry training and equipment 3 Falconry around the world 3 1 Falconry today 4 Clubs and organizations 5 Captive breeding and conservation 6 Hybrid falcons 7 Artificial selection and domestication 8 Escaped falconry birds 9 Regulations 9 1 In Great Britain 9 2 In the United States 10 History 10 1 Timeline 10 2 Falconry in Britain in Early 12th century 10 3 The Book of St Albans 10 4 Falconry in Britain in 1973 11 Intangible cultural heritage 12 Literature and film 13 English language words and idioms derived from falconry 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksBirds used in contemporary falconry EditSeveral raptors are used in falconry They are typically classed as Broadwings Buteo and Parabuteo spp and eagles red tailed hawks Harris hawks golden eagles Shortwings Accipiter Cooper s hawk goshawks sparrow hawks Longwings Falcons peregrine falcons kestrels gyrfalcons saker falcons Owls are also used although they are far less common In determining whether a species can or should be used for falconry the species behavior in a captive environment its responsiveness to training and its typical prey and hunting habits are considered To some degree a species reputation will determine whether it is used although this factor is somewhat harder to objectively gauge Species for beginners Edit In North America the capable red tailed hawk is commonly flown by beginner falconers during their apprenticeship 3 4 Opinions differ on the usefulness of the kestrel for beginners due to its inherent fragility In the UK beginner falconers are often permitted to acquire a larger variety of birds but Harris s hawk and the red tailed hawk remain the most commonly used for beginners and experienced falconers alike 5 Red tailed hawks are held in high regard in the UK due to the ease of breeding them in captivity their inherent hardiness and their capability hunting the rabbits and hares commonly found throughout the countryside in the UK Many falconers in the UK and North America switch to accipiters or large falcons following their introduction with easier birds In the US accipiters several types of buteos and large falcons are only allowed to be owned by falconers who hold a general license The three kinds of falconry licenses in the United States typically are the apprentice class general class and master class Soaring hawks and the common buzzard Buteo Edit A falconer s red tailed hawk Buteo jamaicensis The genus Buteo known as hawks in North America and not to be confused with vultures has worldwide distribution but is particularly well represented in North America The red tailed hawk ferruginous hawk and rarely the red shouldered hawk are all examples of species from this genus that are used in falconry today The red tailed hawk is hardy and versatile taking rabbits hares and squirrels given the right conditions it can catch the occasional duck or pheasant The red tailed hawk is also considered a good bird for beginners The Eurasian or common buzzard is also used although this species requires more perseverance if rabbits are to be hunted Harris s hawk Parabuteo unicinctus Edit Harris s hawk used in falconry Falconer with a Harris s hawk Parabuteo unicinctus is one of two representatives of the Parabuteo genus worldwide The other is the white rumped hawk P leucorrhous Arguably the best rabbit or hare raptor available anywhere Harris s hawk is also adept at catching birds Often captive bred Harris s hawk is remarkably popular because of its temperament and ability It is found in the wild living in groups or packs and hunts cooperatively with a social hierarchy similar to wolves This highly social behavior is not observed in any other bird of prey species and is very adaptable to falconry This genus is native to the Americas from southern Texas and Arizona to South America Harris s hawk is often used in the modern technique of car hawking or drive by falconry where the raptor is launched from the window of a moving car at suitable prey True hawks Accipiter Edit The genus Accipiter is also found worldwide Hawk expert Mike McDermott once said The attack of the accipiters is extremely swift rapid and violent in every way They are well known in falconry use both in Europe and North America The northern goshawk has been trained for falconry for hundreds of years taking a variety of birds and mammals Other popular Accipiter species used in falconry include Cooper s hawk and the sharp shinned hawk in North America and the European sparrowhawk in Europe and Eurasia Harriers Circus Edit New Zealand is likely to be one of the few countries to use a harrier species for falconry there falconers successfully hunt with the Australasian harrier Circus approximans 6 A lanner falcon with its lure Falcons Falco Edit The genus Falco is found worldwide and has occupied a central niche in ancient and modern falconry Most falcon species used in falconry are specialized predators most adapted to capturing bird prey such as the peregrine falcon and merlin A notable exception is the use of desert falcons such the saker falcon in ancient and modern falconry in Asia and Western Asia where hares were and are commonly taken In North America the prairie falcon and the gyrfalcon can capture small mammal prey such as rabbits and hares as well as the standard gamebirds and waterfowl in falconry but this is rarely practiced Young falconry apprentices in the United States often begin practicing the art with American kestrels the smallest of the falcons in North America debate remains on this as they are small fragile birds and can die easily if neglected 7 Small species such as kestrels merlins and hobbys are most often flown on small birds such as starlings or sparrows but can also be used for recreational bug hawking that is hunting large flying insects such as dragonflies grasshoppers and moths Owls Strigidae Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message A barn owl landing on a falconer s hand Owls family Strigidae are not closely related to hawks or falcons Little is written in classic falconry that discusses the use of owls in falconry However at least two species have successfully been used the Eurasian eagle owl and the great horned owl Successful training of owls is much different from the training of hawks and falcons as they are hearing rather than sight oriented Owls can only see black and white and are long sighted This often leads falconers to believe that they are less intelligent as they are distracted easily by new or unnatural noises and they do not respond as readily to food cues However if trained successfully owls show intelligence on the same level as those of hawks and falcons Booted eagles Aquila Edit A Mongolian man inspects his golden eagle Aquila chrysaetos before competing in an eagle hunting contest in northern Mongolia Main article Hunting with eagles The Aquila all have booted or feathered tarsi genus has a nearly worldwide distribution The more powerful types are used in falconry for example golden eagles have reportedly been used to hunt wolves 8 in Kazakhstan and are now most widely used by the Altaic Kazakh eagle hunters in the western Mongolian province of Bayan Olgii to hunt foxes 9 10 11 12 13 and other large prey as they are in neighbouring Kyrgyzstan 14 Most are primarily ground oriented but occasionally take birds Eagles are not used as widely in falconry as other birds of prey due to the lack of versatility in the larger species they primarily hunt over large open ground the greater potential danger to other people if hunted in a widely populated area and the difficulty of training and managing an eagle A little over 300 active falconers are using eagles in Central Asia with 250 in western Mongolia 50 in Kazakhstan and smaller numbers in Kyrgyzstan and western China 12 Sea eagles Haliaetus Edit Most species of genus Haliaetus catch and eat fish some almost exclusively but in countries where they are not protected some have been effectively used in hunting for ground quarry citation needed Husbandry training and equipment EditSee Hack falconry and Falconry training and technique They can be trained by nurturing a deep bond between the falconer and Falcon They should cover the falcon s head with a leather band if not hunting Falconry around the world Edit A brown falcon used for falconry in Tasmania Falconry is currently practiced in many countries around the world The falconer s traditional choice of bird is the northern goshawk and peregrine falcon In contemporary falconry in both North America and the UK they remain popular although Harris hawks and red tailed hawks are likely more widely used The northern goshawk and the golden eagle are more commonly used in Eastern Europe than elsewhere In the west asia the saker falcon is the most traditional species flown against the houbara bustard sandgrouse stone curlew other birds and hares Peregrines and other captive bred imported falcons are also commonplace Falconry remains an important part of the Arab heritage and culture The UAE reportedly spends over US 27 million annually towards the protection and conservation of wild falcons and has set up several state of the art falcon hospitals in Abu Dhabi and Dubai 15 The Abu Dhabi Falcon Hospital is the largest falcon hospital in the whole world Two breeding farms are in the Emirates as well as those in Qatar and Saudi Arabia Every year falcon beauty contests and demonstrations take place at the ADIHEX exhibition in Abu Dhabi A saker falcon used for falconry in Qatar A hobby Falconer from Al Ain Abu Dhabi 16 Eurasian sparrowhawks were formerly used to take a range of small birds but are really too delicate for serious falconry and have fallen out of favour now that American species are available In North America and the UK falcons usually fly only after birds Large falcons are typically trained to fly in the waiting on style where the falcon climbs and circles above the falconer and or dog and the quarry is flushed when the falcon is in the desired commanding position Classical game hawking in the UK had a brace of peregrine falcons flown against the red grouse or merlins in ringing flights after skylarks Rooks and crows are classic game for the larger falcons and the magpie making up in cunning what it lacks in flying ability is another common target Short wings can be flown in both open and wooded country against a variety of bird and small mammal prey Most hunting with large falcons requires large open tracts where the falcon is afforded opportunity to strike or seize its quarry before it reaches cover Most of Europe practices similar styles of falconry but with differing degrees of regulation Medieval falconers often rode horses but this is now rare with the exception of contemporary Kazakh and Mongolian falconry In Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan and Mongolia the golden eagle is traditionally flown often from horseback hunting game as large as foxes and wolves 17 In Japan the northern goshawk has been used for centuries Japan continues to honor its strong historical links with falconry takagari while adopting some modern techniques and technologies In Australia although falconry is not specifically illegal it is illegal to keep any type of bird of prey in captivity without the appropriate permits The only exemption is when the birds are kept for purposes of rehabilitation for which a licence must still be held and in such circumstances it may be possible for a competent falconer to teach a bird to hunt and kill wild quarry as part of its regime of rehabilitation to good health and a fit state to be released into the wild In New Zealand falconry was formally legalised for one species only the swamp Australasian harrier Circus approximans in 2011 This was only possible with over 25 years of effort from both Wingspan National Bird of Prey Center 18 and the Raptor Association of New Zealand 19 Falconry can only be practiced by people who have been issued a falconry permit by the Department of Conservation Tangent aspects such as bird abatement and raptor rehabilitation also employ falconry techniques to accomplish their goals Falconry today Edit Falconry Falcons can live into their midteens with larger hawks living longer and eagles likely to see out middle aged owners Through the captive breeding of rescued birds the last 30 years have had a great rebirth of the sport with a host of innovations falconry s popularity through lure flying displays at country houses and game fairs has probably never been higher in the past 300 years Ornithologist Tim Gallagher editor of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology s Living Bird magazine documented his experiences with modern falconry in a 2008 book Falcon Fever a Making use of the natural relationship between raptors and their prey falconry is now used to control pest birds and animals in urban areas landfills commercial buildings hotels and airports 21 Falconry centres or bird of prey centres house these raptors They are responsible for many aspects of bird of prey conservation through keeping the birds for education and breeding Many conduct regular flying demonstrations and educational talks and are popular with visitors worldwide Such centres may also provide falconry courses hawk walks displays and other experiences with these raptors Clubs and organizations EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the UK the British Falconers Club BFC is the oldest and largest of the falconry clubs BFC was founded in 1927 by the surviving members of the Old Hawking Club itself founded in 1864 Working closely with the Hawk Board an advisory body representing the interests of UK bird of prey keepers the BFC is in the forefront of raptor conservation falconer education and sustainable falconry Established in 1927 the BFC now has a membership over 1 200 falconers It began as a small and elite club but it is now a sizeable democratic organisation that has members from all walks of life flying hawks falcons and eagles at legal quarry throughout the British Isles The North American Falconers Association 22 NAFA founded in 1961 is the premier club for falconry in the US Canada and Mexico and has members worldwide NAFA is the primary club in the United States and has a membership from around the world Most USA states have their own falconry clubs Although these clubs are primarily social they also serve to represent falconers within their states in regards to that state s wildlife regulations The International Association for Falconry and Conservation of Birds of Prey 23 founded in 1968 currently represents 156 falconry clubs and conservation organisations from 87 countries worldwide totalling over 75 000 members The Saudi Falcons Club preserves the historical heritage associated with the falconry culture and spreads awareness and provides training to protect falcons and flourish falconry tone Captive breeding and conservation EditThe successful and now widespread captive breeding of birds of prey began as a response to dwindling wild populations due to persistent toxins such as PCBs and DDT systematic persecution as undesirable predators habitat loss and the resulting limited availability of popular species for falconry particularly the peregrine falcon The first known raptors to breed in captivity belonged to a German falconer named Renz Waller In 1942 43 he produced two young peregrines in Dusseldorf in Germany Falconry equipment The first successful captive breeding of peregrine falcons in North America occurred in the early 1970s by the Peregrine Fund professor and falconer Heinz Meng and other private falconer breeders such as David Jamieson and Les Boyd who bred the first peregrines by means of artificial insemination In Great Britain falconer Phillip Glasier of the Falconry Centre in Newent Gloucestershire was successful in obtaining young from more than 20 species of captive raptors A cooperative effort began between various government agencies non government organizations and falconers to supplement various wild raptor populations in peril This effort was strongest in North America where significant private donations along with funding allocations through the Endangered Species Act of 1972 provided the means to continue the release of captive bred peregrines golden eagles bald eagles aplomado falcons and others By the mid 1980s falconers had become self sufficient as regards sources of birds to train and fly in addition to the immensely important conservation benefits conferred by captive breeding Between 1972 and 2001 nearly all peregrines used for falconry in the U S were captive bred from the progeny of falcons taken before the U S Endangered Species Act was passed and from those few infusions of wild genes available from Canada and special circumstances Peregrine falcons were removed from the United States endangered species list on August 25 1999 24 Finally after years of close work with the US Fish and Wildlife Service a limited take of wild peregrines was allowed in 2001 the first wild peregrines taken specifically for falconry in over 30 years Some controversy has existed over the origins of captive breeding stock used by the Peregrine Fund in the recovery of peregrine falcons throughout the contiguous United States Several peregrine subspecies were included in the breeding stock including birds of Eurasian origin Due to the extirpation of the eastern subspecies Falco peregrinus anatum its near extirpation in the Midwest and the limited gene pool within North American breeding stock the inclusion of non native subspecies was justified to optimize the genetic diversity found within the species as a whole 25 Such strategies are common in endangered species reintroduction scenarios where dramatic population declines result in a genetic bottleneck and the loss of genetic diversity Laws regulating the hunting import and export of wild falcons vary across Asia and effective enforcement of current national and international regulations is lacking in some regions It is possible that the spread of captive bred falcons in falcon markets in the Arabian Peninsula has mitigated this demand for wild falcons Hybrid falcons EditThe species within the genus Falco are closely related and some pairings produce viable offspring The heavy northern gyrfalcon and Asiatic saker are especially closely related and whether the Altai falcon is a subspecies of the saker or descendants of naturally occurring hybrids is not known Peregrine and prairie falcons have been observed breeding in the wild and have produced offspring 26 These pairings are thought to be rare but extra pair copulations between closely related species may occur more frequently and or account for most natural occurring hybridization Some male first generation hybrids may have viable sperm whereas very few first generation female hybrids lay fertile eggs Thus naturally occurring hybridization is thought to be somewhat insignificant to gene flow in raptor species The first hybrid falcons produced in captivity occurred in western Ireland when veteran falconer Ronald Stevens and John Morris put a male saker and a female peregrine into the same moulting mews for the spring and early summer and the two mated and produced offspring Captive bred hybrid falcons have been available since the late 1970s and enjoyed a meteoric rise in popularity in North America and the UK in the 1990s Hybrids were initially created to combine the horizontal speed and size of the gyrfalcon with the good disposition and aerial ability of the peregrine Hybrid falcons first gained large popularity throughout the Arabian Peninsula feeding a demand for particularly large and aggressive female falcons capable and willing to take on the very large houbara bustard the classic falconry quarry in the deserts of the West Asia These falcons were also very popular with Arab falconers as they tended to withstand a respiratory disease aspergillosis from the mold genus Aspergillus in stressful desert conditions better than other pure species from the Northern Hemisphere Artificial selection and domestication EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Some believe that no species of raptor have been in captivity long enough to have undergone successful selective breeding for desired traits Captive breeding of raptors over several generations tends to result either deliberately or inevitably as a result of captivity in selection for certain traits including Ability to survive in captivity Ability to breed in captivity Suitability in most cases for interactions with humans for falconry Birds that demonstrated an unwillingness to hunt with men were most often discarded rather than being placed in breeding projects With gyrfalcons in areas away from their natural Arctic tundra habitat better disease resistance With gyrfalcons feather color 27 Escaped falconry birds Edit The Shaw Monument a falconry observation tower in Scotland This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Falconers birds are inevitably lost on occasion though most are found again The main reason birds can be found again is because during free flights birds usually wear radio transmitters or bells The transmitters are in the middle of the tail on the back or attached to the bird s legs Records of species becoming established in Britain after escaping or being released include Escaped Harris hawks reportedly bred in the wild in Britain The return of the goshawk as a breeding bird to Britain since 1945 is due in large part to falconers escapes the earlier British population was wiped out by gamekeepers and egg collectors in the late 19th and early 20th centuries A pair of European eagle owls bred in the wild in Yorkshire for several years feeding largely or entirely on rabbits The pair are most likely captive escapees If this will lead to a population becoming established is not yet known In 1986 a lost captive bred female prairie falcon which had been cross fostered by an adult peregrine in captivity mated with a wild male peregrine in Utah The prairie falcon was trapped and the eggs removed incubated and hatched and the hybrid offspring were given to falconers The wild peregrine paired with another peregrine the next year Falconry in Hawaii is prohibited largely due to the fears of escaped non native birds of prey becoming established on the island chain and aggravating an already rampant problem of invasive species impacts on native wildlife and plant communities Regulations EditIn Great Britain Edit In sharp contrast to the US falconry in Great Britain is permitted without a special license but a restriction exists of using only captive bred birds In the lengthy record breaking debates in Westminster during the passage of the 1981 Wildlife and Countryside Bill efforts were made by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and other lobby groups to have falconry outlawed but these were successfully resisted After a centuries old but informal existence in Britain the sport of falconry was finally given formal legal status in Great Britain by the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 which allowed it to continue provided all captive raptors native to the UK were officially ringed and government registered DNA testing was also available to verify birds origins Since 1982 the British government s licensing requirements have been overseen by the Chief Wildlife Act Inspector for Great Britain who is assisted by a panel of unpaid assistant inspectors A white gyrfalcon British falconers are entirely reliant upon captive bred birds for their sport The taking of raptors from the wild for falconry although permitted by law under government licence has not been allowed in recent decades Anyone is permitted to possess legally registered or captive bred raptors although falconers are anxious to point out this is not synonymous with falconry which specifically entails the hunting of live quarry with a trained bird A raptor kept merely as a pet or possession although the law may allow it is not considered to be a falconer s bird Birds may be used for breeding or kept after their hunting days are over but falconers believe it is preferable that young fit birds are flown at quarry In the United States Edit In the United States falconry is legal in all states except Hawaii and in the District of Columbia A falconer must have a state permit to practice the sport Requirements for a federal permit were changed in 2008 and the program discontinued effective January 1 2014 28 Acquiring a falconry license in the United States requires an aspiring falconer to pass a written test have equipment and facilities inspected and serve a minimum of two years as an apprentice under a licensed falconer during which time the apprentice falconer may only possess one raptor Three classes of the falconry license have a permit issued jointly by the falconer s state of residence and the federal government The aforementioned apprentice license matriculates to a general class license which allows the falconer to up to three raptors at one time Some jurisdictions may further limit this After a minimum of five years at general level falconers may apply for a master class license which allows them to keep up to five wild raptors for falconry and an unlimited number of captive produced raptors All must be used for falconry Certain highly experienced master falconers may also apply to possess golden eagles for falconry Within the United States a state s regulations are limited by federal law and treaties protecting raptors Most states afford falconers an extended hunting season relative to seasons for archery and firearms but species to be hunted bag limits and possession limits remain the same for both No extended seasons for falconry exist for the hunting of migratory birds such as waterfowl and doves Federal regulation of falconry in North America is enforced under the statutes of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 MBTA originally designed to address the rampant commercial market hunting of migratory waterfowl during the early 20th century Birds of prey suffered extreme persecution from the early 20th century through the 1960s where thousands of birds were shot at conspicuous migration sites and many state wildlife agencies issued bounties for carcasses 29 Due to widespread persecution and further impacts to raptor populations from DDT and other toxins the act was amended in 1972 to include birds of prey Eagles are also protected under the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act of 1959 Under the MBTA taking migratory birds their eggs feathers or nests is illegal Take is defined in the MBTA to include by any means or in any manner any attempt at hunting pursuing wounding killing possessing or transporting any migratory bird nest egg or part thereof 30 Falconers are allowed to trap and otherwise possess certain birds of prey and their feathers with special permits issued by the Migratory Bird Office of the U S Fish and Wildlife Service and by state wildlife agencies issuers of trapping permits The Convention on International Trade on Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna CITES restricts the import and export of most native birds species and are listed in the CITES Appendices I II and III The Wild Bird Conservation Act legislation put into effect circa 1993 regulates importation of any CITES listed birds into the United States Some controversy exists over the issue of falconer s ownership of captive bred birds of prey Falconry permits are issued by states in a manner that entrusts falconers to take trap and possess permitted birds and use them only for permitted activities but does not transfer legal ownership No legal distinction is made between native wild trapped vs captive bred birds of the same species This legal position is designed to discourage the commercial exploitation of native wildlife History Edit Detail of two falconers from De arte venandi cum avibus 1240s Indian king Maharaja Suraj Mal of Bharatpur with a hawk Mughal emperor Akbar with a hawk The medieval poet Konrad von Altstetten shown with his falcon in the embrace of his lover From the Codex Manesse Evidence suggests that the art of falconry may have begun in Mesopotamia with the earliest accounts dating to around 2 000 BC Also some raptor representations are in the northern Altai western Mongolia 2 31 The falcon was a symbolic bird of ancient Mongol tribes 32 Some disagreement exists about whether such early accounts document the practice of falconry from the Epic of Gilgamesh and others or are misinterpreted depictions of humans with birds of prey 33 page needed 34 page needed During the Turkic Period of Central Asia seventh century AD concrete figures of falconers on horseback were described on the rocks in Kyrgyz 31 Falconry was probably introduced to Europe around AD 400 when the Huns and Alans invaded from the east citation needed Frederick II of Hohenstaufen 1194 1250 is generally acknowledged as the most significant wellspring of traditional falconry knowledge He is believed to have obtained firsthand knowledge of Arabic falconry during wars in the region between June 1228 and June 1229 He obtained a copy of Moamyn s manual on falconry and had it translated into Latin by Theodore of Antioch Frederick II himself made corrections to the translation in 1241 resulting in De Scientia Venandi per Aves 35 King Frederick II is most recognized for his falconry treatise De arte venandi cum avibus The Art of Hunting with Birds Written himself toward the end of his life it is widely accepted as the first comprehensive book of falconry but also notable in its contributions to ornithology and zoology De arte venandi cum avibus incorporated a diversity of scholarly traditions from east to west and is one of the earliest challenges to Aristotle s explanations of nature 36 page needed Three panels depicting hawking in England from various time periods as reprinted in Joseph Strutt s 1801 book The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England from the Earliest Period The middle panel is from a Saxon manuscript dated to the late 10th century early 11th century as of 1801 held in the Cotton Library showing a Saxon nobleman and his falconer The top and bottom panels are drawings from a manuscript held as of 1801 in the Royal Library dating from the early 14th century showing parties of both sexes hawking by the waterside the falconer is frightening the fowl to make them rise and the hawk is in the act of seizing upon one of them 37 Mughal emperor Jahangir in the desert hunting deer with a falcon Brooklyn Museum c 1600 Icelandic gyrfalcon 1759 Livrustkammaren Historically falconry was a popular sport and status symbol among the nobles of medieval Europe 38 and Asia Many historical illustrations left in Rashid al Din s Compendium chronicles book described falconry of the middle centuries with Mongol images Falconry was largely restricted to the noble classes due to the prerequisite commitment of time money and space In art and other aspects of culture such as literature falconry remained a status symbol long after it was no longer popularly practiced The historical significance of falconry within lower social classes may be underrepresented in the archaeological record due to a lack of surviving evidence especially from nonliterate nomadic and nonagrarian societies Within nomadic societies such as the Bedouin falconry was not practiced for recreation by noblemen Instead falcons were trapped and hunted on small game during the winter to supplement a very limited diet 39 page needed In the UK and parts of Europe falconry probably reached its zenith in the 17th century 1 2 but soon faded particularly in the late 18th and 19th centuries as firearms became the tool of choice for hunting This likely took place throughout Europe and Asia in differing degrees Falconry in the UK had a resurgence in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when a number of falconry books were published 40 page needed This revival led to the introduction of falconry in North America in the early 20th century Colonel R Luff Meredith is recognized as the father of North American falconry 41 Throughout the 20th century modern veterinary practices and the advent of radio telemetry transmitters attached to free flying birds increased the average lifespan of falconry birds and allowed falconers to pursue quarry and styles of flight that had previously resulted in the loss of their hawk or falcon Timeline Edit A couple belonging to the Sambal warrior class documented by the 16th centuryBoxer Codex The female warrior is holding a raptor which has captured a bird exemplifying a culture of falconry 722 705 BC An Assyrian bas relief found in the ruins at Khorsabad during the excavation of the palace of Sargon II Sargon II has been claimed to depict falconry In fact it depicts an archer shooting at raptors and an attendant capturing a raptor A H Layard s statement in his 1853 book Discoveries in the Ruins of Nineveh and Babylon is A falconer bearing a hawk on his wrist appeared to be represented in a bas relief which I saw on my last visit to those ruins 680 BC Chinese records describe falconry Fourth century BC Aristotle wrote that in Thrace the boys who want to hunt small birds take hawks with them When they call the hawks addressing them by name the hawks swoop down on the birds The small birds fly in terror into the bushes where the boys catch them by knocking them down with sticks in case the hawks themselves catch any of the birds they throw them down to the hunters When the hunting finishes the hunters give a portion of all that is caught to the hawks 42 He also wrote that in the city of Cedripolis Kedripolis men and hawks jointly hunt small birds The men drive them away with sticks while the hawks pursue closely and the small birds in their flight fall into the clutches of the men Because of this they share their prey with the hawks 43 Third century BC Antigonus of Carystus wrote the same story about the city of Cedripolis 44 355 AD Nihon shoki a largely mythical narrative records hawking first arriving in Japan from Baekje as of the 16th emperor Nintoku Second fourth century the Germanic tribe of the Goths learned falconry from the Sarmatians Fifth century the son of Avitus Roman Emperor 455 56 from the Celtic tribe of the Arverni who fought at the Battle of Chalons with the Goths against the Huns introduced falconry in Rome 500 a Roman floor mosaic depicts a falconer and his hawk hunting ducks Early seventh century Prey caught by trained dogs or falcons is considered halal in Quran 45 By this time falconry was already popular in the Arabian Peninsula 818 Japanese Emperor Saga ordered someone to edit a falconry text named Shinshuu Youkyou 875 Western Europe and Saxon England practiced falconry widely 991 In the poem The Battle of Maldon describing the Battle of Maldon in Essex before the battle the Anglo Saxons leader Byrhtnoth says let his tame hawk fly from his hand to the wood 1070s The Bayeux Tapestry shows King Harold of England with a hawk in one scene The king is said to have owned the largest collection of books on the sport in all of Europe 1100 Norman nobility distinguished falconry from the sport of hawking 38 Normans practiced falconry by horseback and hawking by foot 38 Around 1182 Niketas Choniates wrote about hawks that are trained to hunt at the Byzantine Empire 46 Around the 1240s The treatise of an Arab falconer Moamyn was translated into Latin by Master Theodore of Antioch at the court of Frederick II it was called De Scientia Venandi per Aves and much copied 1250 Frederick II wrote in the last years of his life a treatise on the art of hunting with birds De arte venandi cum avibus 1285 The Baz Nama yi Nasiri a Persian treatise on falconry was compiled by Taymur Mirza an English translation of which was produced in 1908 by D C Phillott 47 1325 The Libro de la caza by the prince of Villena Don Juan Manuel includes a detailed description of the best hunting places for falconry in the kingdom of Castile 1390s In his Libro de la caza de las aves Castilian poet and chronicler Pero Lopez de Ayala attempts to compile all the available correct knowledge concerning falconry 1486 See the Boke of Saint Albans Early 16th century Japanese warlord Asakura Norikage 1476 1555 succeeded in captive breeding of goshawks 1580s Spanish drawings of Sambal people recorded in the Boxer Codex showed a culture of falconry in the Philippines 1600s In Dutch records of falconry the town of Valkenswaard was almost entirely dependent on falconry for its economy 1660s Tsar Alexis of Russia writes a treatise that celebrates aesthetic pleasures derived from falconry 1801 Joseph Strutt of England writes the ladies not only accompanied the gentlemen in pursuit of the diversion falconry but often practiced it by themselves and even excelled the men in knowledge and exercise of the art 1864 The Old Hawking Club is formed in Great Britain 1921 Deutscher Falkenorden is founded in Germany Today it is the largest and oldest falconry club in Europe 1927 The British Falconers Club is founded by the surviving members of the Old Hawking Club 1934 The first US falconry club the Peregrine Club of Philadelphia is formed it became inactive during World War II and was reconstituted in 2013 by Dwight A Lasure of Pennsylvania 1941 Falconer s Club of America formed 1961 Falconer s Club of America was defunct 1961 North American Falconers Association formed 1968 International Association for Falconry and Conservation of Birds of Prey formed 48 1970 Peregrine falcons were listed as an endangered species in the U S due primarily to the use of DDT as a pesticide 35 Federal Register 8495 June 2 1970 1970 The Peregrine Fund is founded mostly by falconers to conserve raptors and focusing on peregrine falcons 1972 DDT banned in the U S EPA press release December 31 1972 but continues to be used in Mexico and other nations 1999 Peregrine falcon removed from the Endangered Species List in the United States due to reports that at least 1 650 peregrine breeding pairs existed in the U S and Canada at that time 64 Federal Register 46541 558 August 25 1999 2003 A population study by the USFWS shows peregrine falcon numbers climbing ever more rapidly with well over 3000 pairs in North America Hunting falcon as depicted by Edwin Henry Landseer in 1837 2006 A population study by the USFWS shows peregrine falcon numbers still climbing Federal Register circa September 2006 2008 USFWS rewrites falconry regulations virtually eliminating federal involvement Federal Register October 8 2008 Volume 73 Number 196 2010 Falconry is added to the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity by the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO 16 49 Falconry in Britain in Early 12th century Edit Medieval Normans distinguished falconry from the sport of hawking 38 Normans practiced falconry by horseback and hawking by foot 38 An immediate impact of the Norman Conquest of England was a penchant for falconry enjoyed by Norman nobility 38 So much so in fact that they outlawed commoners from hunting particular lands so that nobility could freely enjoy both sports 38 Both falconry and hawking were central to Norman cultural identity in medieval times 38 Normans transported their falcons on a frame called a cadge 38 The Book of St Albans Edit A lady with peregrine falcon on horse The often quoted Book of Saint Albans or Boke of St Albans first printed in 1486 often attributed to Dame Juliana Berners provides this hierarchy of hawks and the social ranks for which each bird was supposedly appropriate Emperor Eagle vulture and merlin King gyr falcon and the tercel of the gyr falcon Prince falcon gentle and the tercel gentle Duke falcon of the loch Earl Peregrine falcon Baron bustard Knight sacre and the sacret Esquire lanere and the laneret Lady marlyon Young man hobby Yeoman goshawk Poor man tercel Priest sparrowhawk Holy water clerk musket Knave or servant kestrelThis list however was mistaken in several respects 1 Vultures are not used for falconry 3 4 5 These are usually said to be different names for the peregrine falcon But there is an opinion that renders 4 as rock falcon a peregrine from remote rocky areas which would be bigger and stronger than other peregrines This could also refer to the Scottish peregrine 6 The bustard is not a bird of prey but a game species that was commonly hunted by falconers this entry may have been a mistake for buzzard or for busard which is French for harrier but any of these would be a poor deal for barons some treat this entry as bastard hawk possibly meaning a hawk of unknown lineage or a hawk that could not be identified 7 Sakers were imported from abroad and very expensive and ordinary knights and squires would be unlikely to have them 8 Contemporary records have lanners as native to England 10 15 Hobbies and kestrels are historically considered to be of little use for serious falconry the French name for the hobby is faucon hobereau hobereau meaning local country squire That may be the source of the confusion however King Edward I of England sent a falconer to catch hobbies for his use Kestrels are coming into their own as worthy hunting birds as modern falconers dedicate more time to their specific style of hunting While not suitable for catching game for the falconer s table kestrels are certainly capable of catching enough quarry that they can be fed on surplus kills through the molt 12 An opinion 50 holds that since the previous entry is the goshawk this entry Ther is a Tercell And that is for the powere poor man means a male goshawk and that here poor man means not a labourer or beggar but someone at the bottom of the scale of landowners The relevance of the Boke to practical falconry past or present is extremely tenuous and veteran British falconer Phillip Glasier dismissed it as merely a formalised and rather fanciful listing of birds Falconry in Britain in 1973 Edit A book about falconry published in 1973 51 says Most falconry birds used in Britain were taken from the wild either in Britain or taken abroad and then imported Captive breeding was initiated The book mentions a captive bred goshawk and a brood of captive bred red tailed hawks It describes as a new and remarkable event captive breeding hybrid young in 1971 and 1972 from John Morris s female saker and Ronald Stevens s peregrine falcon Peregrine falcons were suffering from the post World War II severe decline caused by pesticides Taking wild peregrines in Britain was only allowed to train them to keep birds off Royal Air Force airfields to prevent bird strikes The book does not mention telemetry Harris hawks were known to falconers but unusual For example the book lists a falconry meet on four days in August 1971 at White Hill and Leafield in Dumfriesshire in Scotland the hawks flown were 11 goshawks and one Harris hawk The book felt it necessary to say what a Harris hawk is The usual species for a beginner was a kestrel A few falconers used golden eagles Falcons in falconry would have bells on their legs so the hunters could find them If the bells fell off the falcon the hunter would not be able to find his bird easily The bird usually died if it could not find a way to remove the leather binding on its feet Intangible cultural heritage EditMain article UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists A falconer from Saudi Arabia 1970s In 2010 UNESCO inscribed falconry as a living human heritage element of 11 countries including the United Arab Emirates Belgium Czech Republic Slovakia France Republic of Korea Mongolia Morocco Qatar Saudi Arabia Spain and the Syrian Arab Republic Austria and Hungary were added in 2012 and Germany Italy Kazakhstan Pakistan and Portugal were added in 2016 With a total of eighteen countries falconry is the largest multi national nomination on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity 52 Literature and film EditIn historic literature of Mongols The Secret History of Mongol is one of earliest books that described Bodonchar Munkhag first leader of the Borjigan tribe as having first caught a falcon and fed it until spring Through falconry he not only survived but also made it his tribal custom His eighth generation descendent Esukhei Baatar hereo was also in falconry and he was the father of Genghis Khan Through Genghis Khan s Great Mongol empire this custom was introduced to China Korea Japan and Europe as well as the Western Asia In the Tale XXXIII of the Tales of Count Lucanor by the prince of Villena Lo que sucedio a un halcon sacre del infante don Manuel con una garza y un aguila the tale tries to teach a moral based on a story about falconry lived by the father of the author In the ninth novel of the fifth day of Giovanni Boccaccio s The Decameron a medieval collection of novellas a falcon is central to the plot Nobleman Federigo degli Alberighi has wasted his fortune courting his unrequited love until nothing is left but his brave falcon When his lady comes to see him he gives her the falcon to eat Knowing his case she changes her mind marries him and makes him rich Famous explorer Sir Richard Francis Burton wrote an account of falconry in India Falconry in the Valley of the Indus first published in 1852 and now available in modern reprints A 17th century English physician philosopher Sir Thomas Browne wrote a short essay on falconry 53 T H White was a falconer and wrote The Goshawk about his attempt to train a hawk in the traditional art of falconry Falconry is also featured and discussed in The Once and Future King In Virginia Henley s historical romance books The Falcon and the Flower The Dragon and the Jewel The Marriage Prize The Border Hostage and Infamous numerous mentions to the art of falconry are made as these books are set at dates ranging from the 1150s to the 16th century The main character Sam Gribley in the children s novel My Side of the Mountain is a falconer His trained falcon is named Frightful William Bayer s novel Peregrine set in the world of falconry about a rogue peregrine falcon in New York City won the 1982 Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Mystery Stana Katic the Canadian actress who played Detective Kate Beckett on Castle enjoys falconry in her spare time 54 She has said that It gives me self respect In the book and movie The Falcon and the Snowman about two Americans who sold secrets to the Soviets one of the two main characters Christopher Boyce is a falconer In The Royal Tenenbaums Richie keeps a falcon named Mordecai on the roof of his home in Brooklyn In James Clavell s Shōgun Toranaga one of the main characters practices falconry throughout the book often during or immediately before or after important plot events His thoughts also reveal an analogy between his falconry and his use of other characters towards his ends The 1985 film Ladyhawke involved a medieval warrior who carried a red tailed hawk as a pet but in truth the hawk was actually his lover who had been cursed by an evil bishop to keep the two apart In The Dark Tower series the main character Roland uses a hawk named David to win a trial by combat to become a Gunslinger The Falconer is a recurring sketch on Saturday Night Live featuring Will Forte as a falconer who constantly finds himself in mortal peril and must rely on his loyal falcon Donald to rescue him Gabriel Garcia Marquez s novel Chronicle of a Death Foretold s main character Santiago Nasar and his father are falconers Hodgesaargh is a falconer based in Lancre Castle in Terry Pratchett s Discworld books He is an expert and dedicated falconer who unluckily seems to only keep birds that enjoy attacking him Fantasy author Mercedes Lackey is a falconer and often adds birds of prey to her novels Among the Tayledras or Hawkbrother race in her Chronicles of Valdemar everyone bonds with a specially bred raptor called a bondbird which has limited powers of speech mind to mind and can scout and hunt for its human bondmate Crime novelist Andy Straka is a falconer and his Frank Pavlicek private eye series features a former NYPD homicide detective and falconer as protagonist The books include A Witness Above A Killing Sky Cold Quarry 2001 2002 2003 and Kitty Hitter 2009 In Irish poet William Butler Yeats s poem The Second Coming Yeats uses the image of The falcon cannot hear the falconer as a metaphor for social disintegration American poet Robert Duncan s poem My Mother Would Be a Falconress 55 The comic book Gold Ring by Qais M Sedki and Akira Himekawa features falconers and falcons The Marvel Comics character The Falcon is both named after the animal but is a falconer himself fighting crime with his falcon Redwing C J Box s Joe Pickett series of novels has a recurring character Nate Romanowski who is a falconer A Kestrel for a Knave is a novel by British author Barry Hines published in 1968 It is set in Barnsley South Yorkshire and tells of Billy Casper a young working class boy troubled at home and at school who only finds solace when he finds and trains a kestrel which he names Kes The film made from the book in 1969 by Ken Loach is also called Kes Barry Hines was inspired by his younger brother Richard who like Billy Casper took kestrels from the wild and trained them He trained the three hawks used in the film Kes He has written of this in his memoir No Way But Gentleness A Memoir of How Kes My Kestrel Changed My Life Bloomsbury 2016 H is for Hawk Vintage 2015 by Helen Macdonald which won the Samuel Johnson Prize and Costa Book of the Year prizes in 2014 tells of how she trained a goshawk and mourned her father in the same year It has echoes of T H White s The Goshawk Dragonheart features Brok the brutal knight for the iron fisted King Einon who proved a capable falconer and owns a falcon On The Mummy Returns Ardeth Bay proved a capable falconer and owned a saker falcon named after the Egyptian god Horus Sadly while delivering a message Horus was shot to death by Lock Nah with a rifle Avatar The Last Airbender featured falconry involving many using messenger hawks to deliver messages Also the assassin Combustion Man showed talents with falconry owned a raven eagle which he used to intercept a messenger hawk carrying information about Aang s whereabouts The raven eagle tied the hawk up stole the message it was carrying and delivered it to Combustion Man thus keeping the Avatar s survival after the Coup of Ba Sing Se a secret English language words and idioms derived from falconry EditThese English language words and idioms are derived from falconry Expression Meaning in falconry Derived meaninghaggard 56 of a hawk caught from the wild when adult looking exhausted and unwell in poor condition wild or untamedlure 57 Originally a device used to recall hawks The hawks when young were trained to associate the device usually a bunch of feathers with food To tempt with a promise reward baitrouse 58 To shake one s feathers Stir or awakenpounce 59 Referring to a hawk s claws later derived to refer to birds springing or swooping to catch prey Jump forward to seize or attack somethingto turn tail 60 Fly away To turn and run awaySee also Edit Birds portal Sports portalAbu Dhabi Falcon Hospital Animal training Anti hunting Car hawking Falconer s knot Falconry training and technique Hack falconry Hunting Hunting dog Hunting with eagles Jess falconry Parahawking TakagariNotes Edit About 5 000 falconers were in the United States in 2008 20 References Edit a b Bert E 1619 An Approved Treatise on Hawks and Hawking a b c Latham S 1633 The Falcon s Lure and Cure The Modern Apprentice The Red Tail Hawk Themodernapprentice com Archived from the original on 22 October 2017 Retrieved 29 October 2017 Beginners Circle Americanfalconry com Archived from the original on 31 October 2017 Retrieved 29 October 2017 Harris Hawk DK Cyber city Archived from the original on 2013 03 05 Retrieved 2013 03 19 Falconry NZ Falconers Association Archived from the original on 30 November 2017 Retrieved 29 October 2017 Should Apprentice Falconers be Allowed to Fly American Kestrels American falconry 1992 04 14 Archived from the original on 2012 03 27 Retrieved 2013 03 19 Hollinshead Martin 2006 The last Wolf Hawker The Eagle Falconry of Friedrich Remmler The Fernhill Press archived from the original on 2011 09 28 retrieved 2007 06 21 International Journal of Intangible Heritage International Journal of Intangible Heritage Archived from the original on 21 June 2017 Retrieved 29 October 2017 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 12 03 Retrieved 2013 12 01 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 10 17 Retrieved 2015 10 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Eagle Hunters Discover bayanolgii com 28 December 2012 Archived from the original on 25 November 2017 Retrieved 29 October 2017 International Journal of Intangible Heritage International Journal of Intangible Heritage Archived from the original on 21 June 2017 Retrieved 29 October 2017 Stewart Rowan 2002 Kyrgyzstan Odyssey p 182 UAEINTERACT UAE Interact United Arab Emirates information news photographs maps and webcams Uaeinteract com Archived from the original on 13 October 2017 Retrieved 29 October 2017 a b A Falconer with His Falcon near Al Ain World Digital Library 1965 Archived from the original on 2016 05 25 Retrieved 2013 07 07 Kyrgyz berkut kyrgyz hunting eagle Pipex Archived from the original on 2012 03 03 Retrieved 2013 03 19 Wingspan National Bird of Prey Center NZ Retrieved 1 September 2012 Raptor Association NZ Archived from the original on 8 February 2013 Retrieved 19 March 2013 Tim Gallagher s got Falcon Fever Blog spot Wild Bird on the Fly World Wide Web log Archived from the original on 2011 07 08 Retrieved 2009 04 11 Ranahan Jared 28 January 2022 Preying for a paycheck The birds that work for hotels The Washington Post North American Falconers Association N a f a com Archived from the original on 31 May 2010 Retrieved 29 October 2017 International Association for Falconry and Conservation of Birds of Prey Home Iaf org Archived from the original on 6 September 2019 Retrieved 29 October 2017 Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Peregrine Falcons Endangered Species Program US Fish amp Wildlife Service Archived from the original on 3 January 2013 Retrieved 23 December 2012 Cade TJ Burnham W 2003 The Return of the Peregrine a North American sage of tenacity and teamwork The Peregrine Fund Oliphant LW 1991 Hybridization Between a Peregrine Falcon and a Prairie Falcon in the Wild The Journal of Raptor Research 25 2 36 39 Welcome to Canada s oldest and most successful gyrfalcon breeding establishment Archived from the original on 2013 12 30 Retrieved 2013 09 20 73 FR 59448 PDF Gpo gov Archived PDF from the original on 2017 08 31 Retrieved 29 October 2017 Matthiessen P 1959 Wildlife in America Viking Migratory Bird Treaty Act Archived from the original on 2010 12 03 Retrieved 2010 12 07 a b The Asian Conference on the Social Sciences ACSS PDF ACSS Archived PDF from the original on 8 May 2016 Retrieved 29 October 2017 Archived copy PDF www mefrg org Archived from the original PDF on 1 July 2016 Retrieved 13 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Epic of Gilgamesh Layard A H 1853 Discoveries in the Ruins of Nineveh and Babylon London John Murray Egerton F 2003 A History of the Ecological Sciences Part 8 Fredrick II of Hohenstaufen Amateur Avian Ecologist and Behaviorist PDF Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America Esa pubs 84 1 40 44 doi 10 1890 0012 9623 2003 84 40 ahotes 2 0 co 2 archived PDF from the original on 2007 11 27 retrieved 2007 11 03 Ferber S 1979 Islam and The Medieval West Strutt Joseph 1801 Cox J Charles ed The sports and pastimes of the people of England from the earliest period Methuen amp co p 24 Archived from the original on September 21 2013 Retrieved June 6 2009 a b c d e f g h i 15 Let s play Age of Empires IV Falconry amp Hawking Norman Nobility Thesiger W 1959 Arabian Sands Penguin Books Mitchell EB 1971 1900 The art amp practice of hawking 7th ed Newton MA Charles T Branford 291 pp A brief history of North American Falconry NAFA archived from the original on 2015 04 08 Aristotelian Corpus On Marvelous Things Heard 27 118 Archived from the original on 2020 10 29 Retrieved 2020 04 04 Aristotle History of Animals 9 36 2 Archived from the original on 2020 10 09 Retrieved 2020 04 04 Antigonus Compilation of Marvellous Accounts 28 Archived from the original on 2020 03 06 Retrieved 2020 04 04 Quran 5 4 Niketas Choniates Annals 251 Archived from the original on 2020 07 26 Retrieved 2020 04 04 Phillott DC translator 1908 The Baz Nama Yi Nasiri A Persian Treatise on Falconry London Bernard Quaritch a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help International Association for Falconry and Conservation of Birds of Prey Role of IAF Iaf org Archived from the original on 26 November 2017 Retrieved 29 October 2017 intangible heritage Culture Sector UNESCO Unesco org Archived from the original on 5 November 2015 Retrieved 29 October 2017 The Welsh Hawking Club Austringer 36 11 archived from the original on 2010 10 13 retrieved 2008 05 09 Evans Humphrey 1973 Falconry an illustrated introduction John Bartholomew amp Son ISBN 0 85152 921 6 Falconry a living human heritage UNESCO Archived from the original on 16 November 2019 Retrieved 10 November 2017 Sir Thomas Browne s Miscellany Tracts Of Hawks and Falconry Penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 29 October 2017 Katic Stana 2009 10 08 Kimmel James Jimmy ed On Falconry You tube video Archived from the original on 2012 09 23 Retrieved 2012 05 21 aapone 6 May 2005 My Mother Would Be a Falconress My Mother Would Be a Falconress Archived from the original on 2013 09 21 Retrieved 29 October 2017 haggard Online Etymology Dictionary Archived from the original on 2013 12 24 Retrieved 2013 12 22 lure Online Etymology Dictionary Archived from the original on 2013 09 21 Retrieved 2013 03 19 rouse Online Etymology Dictionary Archived from the original on 2013 09 21 Retrieved 2013 03 19 pounce Online Etymology Dictionary Archived from the original on 2013 09 21 Retrieved 2013 03 19 tail Online Etymology Dictionary Archived from the original on 2013 09 21 Retrieved 2013 03 19 Further reading EditAsh Lydia Modern Apprentice site for North Americans interested in falconry Much information for this entry was due to her research Beebe FL Webster HM 2000 North American Falconry and Hunting Hawks 8th ed ISBN 0 685 66290 X Chenu Jean Charles Des Murs Marc Athanase Parfait Œillet 1862 La fauconnerie ancienne et moderne Paris Librairie L Hachette et Cie Chiorino G E 1906 Il Manuale del moderno Falconiere Milan Ulrico Hoepli Fernandes Ferreira b 1546 Diogo Cordeiro 1844 1900 Luciano 1899 Arte da caca de altaneria Lisbon Lisboa Escriptorio Freeman Gage Earle Salvin Francis Henry 1859 Falconry Its Claims History and Practice London Longman Green Longman and Roberts Freeman Gage Earle 1869 Practical falconry to which is added How I became a falconer London Horace Cox Fuertes Louis Agassiz Wetmore Alexander 1920 Falconry the sport of kings National Geographic Magazine 38 6 Garcia Beatriz E Candil Hartman Arjen E 2007 Ars Accipitraria An Essential Dictionary for the Practice of Falconry and hawking London Yarak ISBN 978 0 9555607 0 5 the excerpt on the language of falconry comes from this book 2008 The Red tailed Hawk The Great Unknown London Yarak ISBN 978 0 9555607 4 3 Harting James Edmund 1891 Bibliotheca Accipitraria A Catalogue of Books Ancient and Modern Relating to Falconry with notes glossary and vocabulary London Bernard Quaritch Lopez de Ayala 1332 1407 Pedro de la Cueva duque de Albuquerque d 1492 Beltran de Gayangos 1809 1897 Pascual Lafuente y Alcantara Emilio 1869 El libro de las aves de caca Madrid M Galiano Mortara Alessandro de ed Latini 1220 1295 Brunetto Bono c 1240 c 1292 Giamboni 1851 Scritture antiche toscane di falconeria ed alcuni capitoli nell originale francese del Tesoro di Brunetto Latini sopra la stessa materia Prato Tipografia F Alberghetti e C a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first1 has generic name help Phillott Douglas Craven al Dawlah Timur Mirza Husam 1908 The Baz nama yi Nasiri a Persian treatise on falconry London Bernard Quaritch Riesenthal Oskar von 1876 Die Raubvogel Deutschlands und des angrenzenden Mitteleuropas Darstellung und Beschreibung der in Deutschland und den benachbarten Landern von Mitteleuropa vorkommenden Raubvogel Cassel Germany Verlag von Theodor Fischer Deva Raja of Kumaon Rudra Shastri tr Hara Prasad 1910 Syanika satra or a book on hawking Calcutta Asiatic Society Soma Takuya 2012 Contemporary Falconry in Altai Kazakh in Western Mongolia The International Journal of Intangible Heritage vol 7 pp 103 111 1 Archived 2017 06 21 at the Wayback Machine Soma Takuya 2013 Ethnographic Study of Altaic Kazakh Falconers Falco The Newsletter of the Middle East Falcon Research Group 41 pp 10 14 2 External links Edit Look up falconry in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Falconry IAF International Association for Falconry and Conservation of Birds of Prey Falconry at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Falconry amp oldid 1153058717, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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