\ \ ae GIFT — : y = “Dy. “Burge Ss Hunter College Library THIS BOOK IS A GIFT TO THE Department of Biological Sciences FROM EDWARD SANDFORD BURGESS, Ph. D., Se. D. Professor of Biological Sciences 1895-1925 LIBRARY OF THE Ay FORTHE ~& PEOPLE ~4 FOR EDVCATION EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS Ballantyne Press BALLANTYNE AND HANSON, EDINBURGH CHANDOS STREET, LONDON PART f. EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. Pele hsit ANIMALS Mees IVNCT WITHIN HISTORIC TIMES WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF BRITISH WILD WHITE CATTLE BY foes EDMUND HARTING, F.L.S., F.Z.5. AUTHOR OF ‘‘A HANDBOOK OF BRITISH BIRDS ;” ‘‘ THE ORNITHOLOGY OF SHAKESPEARE,” ETC. ETC, WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY F. WOLF, C. WHYMPER, Rk. W. SHERWIN, AND OTHERS BOSTON jus, OFS:G Ore) D> AN De CO: 1880 And in yon wither’d bracken’s lair, Slumbered the wolf and shaggy bear ; Once on that lone and trackless sod High chiefs and mail-clad warriors trod, And where the roe her bed has made, Their last bright arms the vanquish’d laid. The days of old have passed away Like leaves upon the torrent grey, And ail their dreams of joy and woe, As in yon eddy melts the snow ; And goon as far and dim behind, We too shall vanish on the wind. Lays of the Deer Forest. PREPAC HK Few who have studied the literature of British Zoology can have failed to remark the gap which exists between Owen’s “ British Fossil Mammals and Birds,” and Bell’s “ British Quadrupeds ;” the former dealing chiefly with prehistoric remains, the latter with species which are still existing. Between these two admirable works a connecting link, as it were, seems wanting in the shape of a history of such animals as have become extinct in Britain within historic times, and to supply this is the aim of the present writer. Of the materials collected, during many years of research, some portion has been already utilized in a Lecture delivered by the author before the “ Hert- fordshire Natural History Society,” in October, 1879, and in several articles in the Popular Science Review and the natural history columns of The Field. The exigencies of time and space, however, neces- * Popular Science Review, 1878, pp. 53, 141, 251, 396; and The Field, 1879; Sept. 27; Oct. 4,11; Nov. 1, 8,29; Dec. 20 and 27. SEATS vi PREFACE. sitated a much briefer treatment of the subject in the journals referred to than is here attempted, and to these essays, now presented to the reader in a con- solidated form, considerable additions have been made. That the subject admits of still further amplifica- tion the author is well aware; but “ars longa vita brevis est,” and the materials at present collected have already assumed such dimensions, that it has been deemed preferable to offer them to the reader in their present form, rather than postpone publica- tion indefinitely, in the hope of some day realizing an ideal state of perfection. Should the present volume pave the way for future research on the part of others, the Author will be amongst the first to welcome the result of their labours. He has already to acknowledge his indebtedness to Dr. J. A. Smith and Messrs. Edward Alston, J. A. Harvie Brown, and J. P. Hoare, whose taste in the same line of research has prompted them to favour him with several interesting commu- nications, which have been embodied in the following pages ; while to Dr. Smith he is especially obliged for the use of four woodcuts which were prepared to illustrate papers of his own in the ‘ Proceed- ings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland.” PREFACE. vii In regard to that portion of the present work which treats of the ancient breed of wild white cattle, it may be thought, by some, a little presump- tuous on the part of the writer to deal with a subject on which an entire volume has been so recently and so ably written by the late Mr. Storer. But it should be stated that almost all the materials for this portion of the book were not only collected long before Mr. Storer’s work was published, but were on the eve of being incorporated in an important essay by Mr. Edward Alston, which was nearly ready for the press when Mr. Storer’s volume appeared. It would be ungenerous, however, on the part of the writer were he to withhold an acknowledgment of his indebtedness to Mr. Storer’s work for many useful additions to his own (each, in fact, containing something which the other had not), and in particular for several details of the former extent of ancient forests, which have been embodied in the Intro- duction. afia L is January, 1832. Lig EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. called the “ Boar’s Head,” though less celebrated than the one just mentioned. It was situate in Southwark, and was standing in Henry the Sixth’s time. It is referred to in the “ Paston Letters,” in a letter from Henry Wyndesore to John Paston, dated August 27, 1458. The writer says,—“Please you to remembre my maistre at your best leiser, wheder his old promise shall stande as touchyng my pre- ferrying to the ‘ Boreshed’ in Suthwerke.”* It is in this same collection that we find mention made of the use of “‘boar-spears’ in Norfolk, in the fifteenth century, first in a petition of John Paston to the King and Parliament, in 1450, touching his expulsion from Gresham by Lord Molyns, whose retainers held forcible possession of this manor “ with bore-speres, swordes, and gesernys” (battle-axes) ; and again in a similar petition of Walter Ingham in 1454.7 The boar-spear of those days was very different from the spear now used by boar-hunters in India. Nicholas Cox, in ‘The Gentleman’s Recreation,” first published in 1674, thus describes it :—‘ The hunting spear must be very sharp and broad, branch- ing forth into certain forks, so that the boar may not break through them upon the huntsman.” The modern Anglo-Indian spear is from six to eight feet long; the shaft of bamboo weighted with lead ; the spear-head a broad and stout blade. * “The Paston Letters,” ed. Gairdner, vol. i. p. 431. 7 Op. cit:,, volpi.; pp. 107, 271. THE WOLF. Ls TEE WOLKE: Canis lupus. Or the five species which come within the scope of the present work, the Wolf was the last to disappear. On this account, partly, the materials for its history asa British animal are more complete than is the case with any of the others. — To judge by the osteological remains which the researches of geologists have brought to light, there was perhaps scarcely a county in England or Wales in which, at one time or another, Wolves did not I 116 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. abound, while in Scotland and Ireland they must have been even still more numerous. The vast tracts of unreclaimed forest land which formerly existed in these realms, the magnificent remnants of which in many parts still strike the beholder with awe and admiration, afforded for centuries an impenetrable retreat for these animals, from which it was well-nigh impossible to drive them. It was not, indeed, until all legitimate modes of hunting and trapping had proved in vain, until large prices set upon the heads of old and young had alike failed to compass their entire destruction, that by cutting down or burning whole tracts of the forests which harboured them, they were at length effectually extirpated. In the course of the following remarks it is proposed to deal, first, with the geological evidence of the former existence and distribution of Wolves in the British Islands ; secondly, with the historical evidence _of their survival and gradual extinction. Under the latter head it will be convenient to arrange the evidence separately for England and Wales, Scotland, and Ireland: and, as regards England and Wales, to subdivide the subject chronologically into (1) the Ancient British Period ; (2) the Anglo-Saxon Period; and (3) the period intervening between the Norman Conquest and the reign of Henry VII. In this reign, it is believed, the last trace of the Wolf in England disappeared, since history there- after is silent on the subject. In Scotland and THE WOLF. 117 Ireland, however, this was by no means the case, as, later on, we shall be able to show. GEOLOGICAL EVIDENCE. Owing to the great similarity which exists between the skeleton of a Wolf and that of a large Dog, such as would be used in the chase, it is very difficult to distinguish between them. Professor Owen, in his SKULL OF WOLF. (% NAT. SIZE.) “ British Fossil Mammals,” has remarked upon this difficulty, and, following Cuvier, has pointed out the chief distinguishing characters which may be relied upon for identification, and which lie chiefly in the skull. He says :—‘“ The Wolf has the triangular part of the forehead behind the orbits a little nar- rower and flatter, the occipito-sagittal crest longer and loftier, and the teeth, especially the canines, proportionately larger.’ * Compare the crania of the Wolf here figured (pp. 120, 121) with those of the Dog, upper and under surfaces, given by Professor Flower in his “ Osteology of the Mammalia,” pp. 113, 116 (1st ed.). L2 118 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. So far as we have been enabled to collect the evi- dence, it would appear that undoubted remains of the Wolf have been found in the following localities, for a knowledge of many of which we are indebted to Professor Boyd Dawkins’ able paper, “On the Distribution of the British Post-Glacial Mammals,” published in the Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, vol. xxv. 1869, p. 192. BerxksuireE.— Windsor (Mus. Geol. Survey). DERBYSHIRE.—Pleasby Vale (Mus. Geol, Survey); Windy Knoll, Castleton (Dawkins, “ Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc.” xxxi. p. 246, and xxxili. p. 727); Creswell Crag Caves (Mello and Busk, “ Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc.” xxxi. p. 684; Dawkins, op. cit. Xxxil. p. 248, and xxxiii. pp. 590 and 602.) DervonsHIRE.—Bench Cave, Brixham (W. A. Sanford); Kent's Hole, Torquay (Mus. Geol. Soc., Mus Roy. Coll. Surg., and Mus. Oxford); Oreston, near Plymouth (Brit. Mus. and Mus. Geol. Soc.; Owen, ‘ Brit. Foss. Mamm.” p. 123). GLAMORGANSHIRE.—Gower, Bacon’s Hole(Mus. Swansea; Falconer, “ Paleont. Mem.” ii. pp. 183, 325, 340, 349, 501); Bosco’s Hole (Mus. Swansea; Falconer, tom. cit. pp. 510, 589); Crow Hole (Mus. Swansea; Falconer, tom. cit. p. 519); Deborah Den (Mus. Swansea; Falconer, tom. cit. p. 467); Long Hole (Falconer, tom. cit. pp. 400, 525, 538); Minchin Hole (Brit. Mus.; Mus. Swansea); Paviland (Mus. Oxford and Swan- sea; Owen, “ Brit. Foss. Mamm.” p. 124); Ravenscliff (Falconer, tom. cit. p. 519); Spritsail Tor (ad. pp. 179, 462, 477, 522). GLOUCESTERSHIRE.—Tewkesbury (Owen, “ Brit. Foss. Mamm.”’). Kent.—Murston, Sittingbourne (Mus. Geol. Survey). Essex.—Valley of the Roding, Ilford (Sir A. Brady). Norroik.—Denver Sluicet (Mus. Geol. Cambr.). OxrorDsHIRE.—Thame (Coll. Codrington, “ Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc.” xx, p. 3749. SoMERSETSHIRE.—Benwell Cave (W. Borrer); Blendon (Mus. Taunton); Hutton (Mus. Taunton); Sandford Hill (Mus. Taunton); Uphill (Mus. Bath and Taunton); Wokey Hole (Mus. Oxford, Taunton, and Bristol). + A landscape by R. W. Fraser “ On the Ouze near Denver Sluice” was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1877, No. 794. The locality is a few miles to the South of Downham Market, and just below where the old and new Bedford rivers run into the natural stream. THE WOLF. 119 Sussex.—Bracklesham (Brit. Mus. and Mus. Chichester) ; Peven- sey* (“ Sussex Archzeol. Coll.” xxiv. p. 160.) WIttsHIrE.— Vale of Kennet (“ Sussex Archzol.” tom. cit.). YorxksHirE.—Bielbecks (Mus. York ; “ Phil. Mag.” vol. vi. p. 225); Kirkdale (Brit. Mus., Mus. Geol. Soc. and Roy. Coll. Surg ; Buckland, “Trans. Roy. Soc.” 1822; Clift, id. 1823, p. 90). We have here a dozen counties in different parts of England and Wales, north, south, east, and west, which show clearly from their position how very gene- rally distributed the Wolf must formerly have been. The geological record, however, is but an im- perfect one in showing the distribution of the Wolf in bygone times, for to the localities above mentioned might be added numerous others in which we know from history that this animal formerly abounded. The forest of Riddlesdale in Northumberland ; the great forests of Blackburnshire and Bowland in Lancashire ; Richmond Forest, Yorkshire ; Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire ; Savernake Forest, Wilts ; the New Forest ; the forests of Bere and Irwell, and many others, are on record as former strongholds of these ferocious animals. To these we shall have occasion to refer later when dealing with the historical evidence. Unlike other extinct British animals, the Wolf apparently has not deteriorated in size, for the fossil bones which have been discovered, as above men- tioned, are not larger, nor in any way to be dis- tinguished from those of European wolves of the present day. * In 1851 many skulls of Wolves were taken out of a disused medizeval well at Pevensey Castle. 120 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. HistoricAL EvVIpDENCE—ENGLAND. Ancient British Period. — Dio Niceeus, speaking of the inhabitants of the northern parts of this island, tells us they were a fierce and barbarous \ et Fa fi y CRANIUM OF WOLF. UPPER SURFACE, (3 NAT. SIZE.) people, who tilled no ground, but lived upon the depredations they committed in the southern dis- tricts or upon the food they procured by hunting. Strabo also says (lib. iv.) that the dogs bred in Britain were highly esteemed upon the Continent on account of their excellent qualities for hunting, and these qualities, he seems to hint, were naturai to THE WOLF. 121 them, and not the effect of tutorage by their foreign masters. Wolf-hunting appears to have been a favourite pursuit with the ancient Britons. Mem- pricius or Memprys, one of the immediate descendants of Brutus, who reigned until B.c. 980, fell a victim CRANIUM OF WOLF. UNDER SURFACE. (% NAT. SIZz.) in that year to the Wolves which he delighted to pursue, and was unfortunately devoured by them. “ Hys brothir he slwe— For tyl succede tyl hym as kyng. It happynde syne at a huntyng Wytht wolwys hym to weryde be ; Swa endyit his iniquite.” Wyntownis Cronykil, 1. p. 54. Blaiddyd, another British monarch (B.c. 863), who seems to have been learned in chemistry, is said to 122 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. have discovered the medicinal properties of the Bath mineral waters, by observing that cattle when attacked and wounded by the Wolves went and stood in these waters, and were then healed much sooner then they would have been by any other means. From this it may be inferred that Wolf- hunting was found by the ancient Britons to be a necessary and pleasurable, yet dangerous, pursuit. We do not find, says Strutt,* that during the establishment of the Romans in Britain, there were any restrictive laws promulgated respecting the killing of game. It appears to have been an established maxim in the early jurisprudence of that people, to invest the right of such things as had no master with those who were the first possessors. Wild beasts, birds, and fishes became the property of those who first could take them. It is most probable that the Britons were left at liberty to exercise their ancient privileges; for had any severity been exerted to prevent the destruction of game, such laws would hardly have been passed over without the slightest notice being taken of them by the ancient historians. Anglo-Saxon Period.—As early as the ninth cen- tury, and doubtless long before that, a knowledge of hunting formed an essential part of the education of a young nobleman. Asser, in his “ Life of Alfred the Great,” assures us that that monarch before he was ¢ twelve years of age “was a most expert and active hunter, and excelled in all the branches of that most * © Sports and Pastimes of the People of England.” THE WOLF. 123 noble art, to which he applied with incessant labour and amazing success.” Hunting the Wolf, the Wild Boar, the Fox, and the Deer, were the favourite pastimes of the nobility of that day, and the Dogs which they employed for these various branches of the sport, were held by them in the highest estimation. Suchravages did the Wolves commit during winter, ‘ WC nan | OM { \ AN Wt: ate YEW 1p \ \\ i ( ai TEETH OF WOLF. NATURAL SIZE, particularly in January when the cold was severest, that the Saxons distinguished that month by the name of ‘‘ Wolf month.” “The month which we now call January,” says Verstegan, “they called ‘Wolf monat,’ to wit, ‘Wolf moneth,’ because people are wont always in that month to be in more danger to be devoured of Wolves than in any season else of the year; for that, through the extremity of cold and snow, these ravenous 124 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. creatures could not find of other beasts sufficient to feed upon.”* The Saxons also called an outlaw “ wolfs-head,”+t as being out of the protection of the law, proscribed, and as liable to be killed as that destructive beast. “Et tune gerunt caput lupinum, ita quod sine judiciali inquisitione rite pereant.” t In the “ Penitentiale” of Archbishop Egbert, drawn up about A.D. 750, it is laid down (lib. iv.) that, “ if a wolf shall attack cattle of any kind, and the animal attacked shall die in consequence, no Christian may touch it.” It is to the terror which the Woif inspired among our forefathers that we are to ascribe the fact of kings and rulers, in a barbarous age, feeling proud of bearing the name of this animal as an attribute of courage and ferocity. Brute power was then con- sidered the highest distinction of man, and the sentiment was not mitigated by those refinements of modern life which conceal but do not destroy it. We thus find, amongst our Anglo-Saxon kings and great men, such names as Ethelwulf, “the Noble Wolf;” Berthwulf, “the Illustrious Wolf ;’ Eadwulf, “the Prosperous Wolf; Ealdwulf, “the Old Wolf.” in Athelstan’s reign, Wolves abounded so in York- shire that a retreat was built by one Acehorn, at * “ Restitution of Decayed Intelligence,”’ p. 64 (ed. 1673). tf Ang.-Sax. Wulvesheofod, that is, having the head of a Wolf. In 1041, the fugitive Godwin was proclaimed Wulvesheofod, a price being set upon his head. The term was in use temp. Henry IT. ¢ Bracton, “De legibus et consuetudinibus Angliw,” lib. iil. tr. ii. c. I1 (1569). See also Knighton, “De Eventibus Angliz,”’ in Twysden’s “ Historia Anglican Scriptores Decem,” p. 2356 (1652). THE WOLF. rs Flixton, near Filey, in that county, wherein travellers might seek refuge if attacked by them. Camden says :—‘‘ More inward stands Flixton, where a hospital was built in the time of Athelstan, for defending travellers from Wolves (as it is word for word in the public records), that they should not be devovred by them.”* It is currently believed that a farmhouse between the villages of Flixton and Staxton now stands on the site of this hospital. It was restored and confirmed in 1447 by the name of Canons Spittle, and was dissolved about 1535. The farm is still called Spittal Farm, and a small stream running by it is called Spittal Brook.* When Athelstan, in 938, obtained a signal victory at Brunanburgh over Constantine, King of Wales, he imposed upon him a yearly tribute of money and cattle, to which was also added a certain number of “hawks and sharp-scented dogs, fit for the hunting of wild beasts.”{ His successor, Edgar, remitted the pecuniary payment on condition of receiving annually from Ludwall§ (or Idwal|), the successor of Constantine, the skins of three hundred Wolves.‘ * Camden, “ Britannia,” tit. Yorkshire, vol. ii. p. 902. + This information was communicated to the author by the Rev. Henry Blane, of Folkton Rectory, Ganton, York. ~ William of Malmesbury, ‘“ Hist. Reg. Anglorum,” lib. 11. ¢. 6. § Cf. Holinshed’s “ Chronicles,” vol. 1. p. 378 (4to ed. 1807), and Selden’s Notes to Drayton’s “ Polyolbion,” Song ix. || Cf. Camden’s “ Britannia,” tit. Merionethshire, vol. 1. p. 785. | William of Malmesbury, op. cit. lib, 1. ¢. 8. See_also the quaint remarks on this subject by Taylor, the Water Poet, in his “ Journey through Wales,” 1652 (pp. 31, 32, Halliwell’s edition, 1859). The value of a wolf-skin in Wales, as fixed by the Code of Laws made by Howel Dha in the ninth century, was eightpence, the same value being set upon an otter-skin. 126 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. We do not find, indeed, that the hawks and hounds were included in this new stipulation, but it does not seem reasonable that Edgar, who, like his pre- decessor, was extremely fond of field sports, should have remitted that part of the tribute.* It is generally admitted that Edgar relinquished the fine of gold and silver imposed by his uncle Athelstan upon Constantine, and claimed in its stead the annual production of 300 wolf-skins, be- cause, say the historians, the extensive woodlands and coverts, abounding at that time in Britain, afforded shelter for the Wolves, which were ex- ceedingly numerous, especially in the districts bordering upon Wales. By this prudent expedient, in less than four years, it is said, the whole island was cleared of these ferocious animals, without putting his subjects to the least expense.t But, as Strutt has observed,{ “if this record be taken in its full latitude, and the supposition established, that the Wolves were totally exterminated in Britain during the reign of Edgar, more will certainly be admitted than is consistent with the truth, as certain documents clearly prove.” The words of William of Malmesbury on the subject are to this effect, that “he, Edgar, imposed a tribute upon the King of Wales, exacting yearly 300 Wolves. This tribute * Strutt, “Sports and Pastimes.” + It is singular that the same expedient has been resorted to in modern times, and with considerable success. In the accounts of Assinniboia, Red River Territory, there is an entry of payment for Wolves’ heads; andin 1868 the State of Minnesota paid for Wolves’ scalps 11,300 dollars, at the rate of 10 dollars apiece. {t “Sports and Pastimes.” THE WOLF. 127 continued to be paid for three years, but ceased upon the fourth, because, ‘nullum se ulterius posse invenire professus, it was said that he could not find any more.”* “ Cambria’s proud Kings (tho’ with reluctance) paid Their tributary wolves; head after head, In full account, till the woods yield no more, And all the rav’nous race extinct is lost.” SomMERVILE’S Chace. But this must be taken to refer only to Wales, for in the first place it can hardly be supposed that the Welsh chieftain would be permitted to hunt out of his own dominions, and in the next place there is abundant documentary evidence to prove the exist- ence of Wolves in England for many centuries later. Holinshed, who gives a much fuller account, says :t —“ The happie and fortunate want of these beasts in England is vniuersallie ascribed to the politike government of King Edgar, who to the intent the whole countrie might once be clensed and clearelie rid of them, charged the conquered Welshmen (who were then pestered with these rauenous creatures aboue measure) to paie him a yearlie tribute of woolfes skinnes, to be gathered within theland. He appointed them thereto a certaine number of 300, with free libertie for their prince to hunt and pursue them ouer all quarters of the realme ; as our chronicles doo report. Some there be which write * “Hist. Reg. Anglorum,” lib. ii. cap. 8. See also Wynne’s « Caradoc,” p. is + “Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland,” (ed. 4to, 1807), vol. i. p. 378, bk. iii. chap. iv.: ‘Of Savage Beasts and Vermines.’ 125. * EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. how Ludwall, prince of Wales, paid yearelie to King Edgar this tribute of 300 woolfes, whose carcases being brought into Lloegres, were buried at Wolfpit, in Cambridgeshire, and that by meanes thereof within the compasse and terme of foure yeares, none of these noisome creatures were left to be heard of within Walesand England. Since this time, also, we read not that anie woolfe hath beene seene here that hath beene bred within the bounds and limits of our countrie: howbeit there haue beene diuerse brought over from beyond the seas for greedinesse of gaine, and to make monie onlie by the gasing and gaping of our people vpon them, who couet oft to see them, being strange beasts in their eies, and sildome knowne (as I haue said) in England.” This event is related somewhat differently by the Welsh historians. ‘In the year 965,” says Powel, “the country of North Wales was cruelly wasted by the army of Edgar, King of England; the occasion of which was, the non-payment of the tribute that the king of Aberftraw (North Wales), by the laws of Howel Dha, was obliged to pay to the king of London (England). But at length a peace was con- cluded upon these conditions, that the king of North Wales, instead of money, should pay to the king of England the tribute of 300 Wolves yearly ; which creature was then very pernicious and destructive to England and Wales. This tribute being duly per- formed for two years, the third year there were none to be found in any part of the island, so that after- wards the prince of North Wales became exempt THE WOLF. 129 from paying any acknowledgment to the king of England.” The amount of the original tribute commuted for this tax of Wolves, the time when that tribute was appointed, and the cause for which it was imposed, are altogether circumstances not very generally under- stood. It is vaguely imagined to have been a de- grading tax paid by the people of Wales to the English monarch, in token of their subjection to his sovereignty as theirconqueror. “This,” says Powel, “ig not the fact ; it arose from a local cause : from one of those cruel dissensions among the native princes which too often disgrace the Welsh annals, and to settle which the weakest never failed to invite the aid of foreign force. About the year 953, Owen, the son of Griffith, was slain by the men of Cardigan ; and Athelstane, upon this pretext, entering with an army into Wales, imposed an annual tribute upon certain princes to the amount of £20 in gold, £300 in silver, and 200 head of cattle, but which was not observed by these Welsh princes, as appears by the laws of Howel Dha, wherein the levy is appointed. It is there decreed that the Prince of Aberffraw should pay no more to the English king than £66 tribute, and even this sum was to be contributed to the prince of Aberffraw by the princes of Dinefawr and Powis, upon whom this tax was virtually imposed. The principality of Dine- fawr, it may be observed, included Cardigan, by the men of which district the alleged crime had been committed; and Powis, which was close to the 130 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. English borders, was apparently implicated in the same offence.” Hence it appears the tax was a local fine imposed upon these two princes, only that the prince of North Wales was made answerable for its due per- formance. The tax existed therefore, though but nominally, for the space of two-and-thirty years— namely, from the time of Athelstane to Edgar—when the above recorded commutation of the tribute took place, and for the fulfilment of which condition it is apparent the prince of North Wales was again made answerable. That the principality of Wales was, by this salutary means, delivered in a great measure from the pest of Wolves may be conceived. In this the histories of the Welsh agree; but there is some shade of differ- ence in their conclusions as to the utter extermination of the race; and it is now believed that they were not entirely destroyed in Wales till years after. Owen, in his “ Cambrian Biography,” says it was not till forty-five years after.* Drayton, in his ‘‘ Polyolbion” (Song ix.), has thus commemorated the wisdom of Edgar’s policy :— “Thrice famous Saxon king, on whom Time ne’er shall prey. O Edgar! who compell’dst our Ludwall hence to pay Three hundred Wolves a year for tribute unto thee ; And for that tribute paid, as famous may’st thou be, O conquer’d British king, by whom was first destroy’d The multitude of Wolves that long this land annoy’d.” * “Tago ap Idwal Voel, king of Gwynedd, from a.p, 948 to 979. From 948 to 966 he reigned jointly with his brother Jevay. In 962 Edgar made him pay tribute of wolves’ heads; and in forty-five years after, all these animals were destroyed.” DHE WOLF. 13's The learned Dr. Kay* acquiesced in the vulgar opinion of the extinction of Wolves in England by King Edgar, and in his work on “British Dogs,” pub- lished in 1570, treating of the sheep-dog (Pastoralis) he says: “ Suné qui seribunt Ludwallum Cambric principem pendisse annuatim Edgaro regt 300 luporum tributi nomine, atque ita annis quatuor omnem Cambria, atgue adeo omnem Angliam, orbasse lupts.” Regnavit autem Edgarus circiter annum 959, a quo \ tempore non legimus nativum in Anglia visum lupum.” The worthy doctor seems to have been little aware that even at the date at which he wrote wolves still existed in the British Islands. Dr. John Walker was almost as much at fault when he wrote: “ Canis lupus. Habitavit olim in Britannia. Quondam incola sylvee caledoniw. In Scotia seculo av. extinctus, et postremo in regione Navernie.” Pennant, referring to the received opinion that a great part of the kingdom was freed from Wolves through the exertions of King Edgar, says :-—‘“ In England he attempted to effect it by commuting the punishments for certain crimes into the acceptance of a number of Wolves’ tongues from each criminal ; in Wales by converting a tax of gold and silver into an annual tribute of 300 Wolves’ heads. Notwith- standing his endeavours, however, and the assertions * “ Joannis Caiti Britanni ‘de Canibus Britannicis.’”’ Liber unus. Londini, per Gulielmum Seresium. 8vo, 1570. There is a transla- tion of this work in the British Museum, entitled, “ Of Englishe Dogges, newly drawn into English.” By Abraham Fleming, Student. London. 4to, 1576. A reprint of this has been recently published. + ‘Mammalia Scotica, in “Hssays on Nat. Hist. and Rural Economy,” 1814, p. 480. K 132 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. of some authors to the contrary, his scheme proved abortive.” We have met with a statement to the effect that “two wooden Wolves’ heads still remain near Glastonbury on an ancient house where [query, on the site of which] at Eadgerly, King Edgar lived and received annually his tax from the Welsh in 300 heads.’’t This statement, however, conflicts somewhat with that of Holinshed, who says that “ the carcases being brought into Lloegres, were buried at Wolfpit in Cambridgeshire. ”{ In the Forest Laws of Canute, promulgated in 1016, the Wolf is thus expressly mentioned :—“ As for foxes and wolves, they are neither reckoned as beasts of the forest or of venery, and therefore who- ever kills any of them is out of all danger of for- feiture, or making any recompense or amends for the same. Nevertheless, the killing them within the limits of the forest is a breach of the royal chase, and therefore the offender shall yield a recompense for the same, though it be but easy and gentle.”$ It was doubtless to this constitution that the Solicitor-General St. John referred, at the trial of the Earl of Strafford, when he said, ‘“ We give law to hares and deer, because they are beasts of chase ; but we give no law to wolves and foxes, because they are * “British Zoology,” vol. i. p. 88 (1812). + “ Sussex Archzeol. Coll.” vol. iv. p. 83 (1851). f “Chronicles,” vol. i. p. 378 (4to ed. 1807). § See Manwood’s “Forest Laws.” The Charter of the Forest of Cauutus the Dane (§ 27). THE WOLF. 133 beasts of prey, but knock them on the head wherever we find them.’”* Liulphus, a dean of Whalley in the time of Canute, was celebrated as a wolf-hunter at Rossendale, Lan- cashire.t Matthew Paris, in his “ Lives of the Abbots of St. Albans,” mentions a grant of church lands by Abbot Leofstan (the 12th abbot of that monastery) to Thurnoth and others, in consideration of their keep- ing the woods between the Chiltern Hundreds and London free from wolves and other wild beasts. “ ancient and accustomed It would seem that the tribute” due to the English kings was repeated by the Welsh princes in the very last years of the Anglo-Saxon monarchy. It was demanded by and rendered to Harold.{ Period from the Conquest to the reign of Henry VIL. —AHistorical evidence of the existence of wolves in Great Britain before the Norman Conquest, as might be expected, is meagre and unsatisfactory, and the abundance of these animals in our islands prior to that date is chiefly to be inferred from the measures which in later times were devised for their destruction. In the “Carmen de Bello Hastingensi,” by Guido, Bishop of Amiens (v. 571), it is related that William the Conqueror left the dead bodies of the English upon the battle-field to be devoured by worms, wolves, birds, and dogs—vermibus, atque lupis, avibus, cant- * Clarendon, “ Hist. Reb.” fol. ed., i. p. 183: + Whitaker’s “‘ History of Whalley,” p. 222. ft Palgrave. 2 134 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. busque voranda. When Waltheof, the son of Siward, with an invading Danish army arrived in the Humber, in September, 1069, and, reinforced by the men of Northumbria, made an attack upon York, itis related that 3,000 Normans fell. A hundred of the chiefest in rank were said to have fallen amongst the flames by the hand of Waltheof himself, and the Scalds of the North sang how the son of Siward gave the corpses of the Frenchmen as a choice banquet. for the Wolves of Northumberland.” In 1076 Robert de Umfraville,t Knight, lord of Toures and Tain, otherwise called ‘‘ Robert with the Beard,” being kinsman to that king, obtained from him a grant of the lordship, valley, and forest of Riddesdale, in the county of Northumberland, with all castles, manors, lands, woods, pastures, waters, pools, and royal franchises which were formerly pos- sessed by Mildred, the son of Akman, late lord of Riddesdale, and which came to that king upon his conquest of England; to hold by the service of defending that part of the country for ever from enemies and Wolves, with the sword which King William had by his side when he entered North- umberland.{ 1087-1100. The inveterate love of the chase * Freeman’s “ Norman Conquest.” + “The name seems to be derived from one of the several places in Normandy now called Amfreville, but in some instances originally Onmfreville, that is Humfredi villa, the vill or abode of Humphrey.” —Lower, Patronymica Britannica. t See Duedale’s “ Baronage,” vol. i. p. 504; and Blount’s “ Ancient Tenures,” p. 241. THE WOLF. 135 possessed by William Rufus, which prompted him to enforce, during his tragical reign, the most stringent and cruel forest laws, is too well known to readers of history to require comment. It cannot be doubted that in the vast forests* which then covered the greater part of the country, and through which he continuously hunted, he must have encountered and slain many a Wolf. Yet, strange to say, a careful search through a great number of volumes has re- sulted in a failure to discover any evidence upon this point, or indeed any mention of the Wolf in con- nection with this monarch. Longstaffe, in his account of “ Durham before the Conquest,” states that a great increase of Wolves took place in Richmondshire during this century, and mentions incidentally that Richard Ingeniator dealing with property at Wolverston (called Olveston in the time of William Rufus) sealed the grant with an impression of a Wolf. 1100-1135. In his passion for hunting wild animals, Henry I. excelled even his brother William, and not content with encountering and slaying those which, like the Wolf and the Wild-boar, were at that time indigenous to this country, he “ cherished of set purpose sundrie kinds of wild beasts, as bears, libards, ounces, lions, at Woodstocke and one or two other places in England, which he walled about with * “The word ‘forest,’ in its original and most extended sense, implied a tract of land lying out (foras), that is, rejected, as of no value, in the first distribution of property.”—Wuuitaker, History of Whalley, p. 193. 136 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. hard stone An. 1120, and where he would often fight with some one of them hand to hand.”* Amongst other forest laws made in this reign, was one which provided that compensation should be made for any injury occasioned during a wolf hunt. Si quis arcu vel balista de subitanti, vel pedico ad lupos vel ad aliud capiendum posito, dampanum vel malum aliquod recipiat, solvat qui posuit.t 1156. There can be no doubt that at this period, and for some time afterwards, the New Forest, as well as the Forest of Bere, in Hampshire, both favourite hunting-grounds with William Rufus and his brother Henry, were the strongholds of the Wolf, as they were of the Wild-boar and the Red-deer, for in the second year of the reign of Henry II. the sheriff of Hants had an allowance made to him in the Ex- chequer for several sums by him disbursed for the livery of the King’s wolf-hunters, hawkers, falconers, and others. ‘* Ht in Uberatione lupariorum 100s., et in liberatione accipitrariorum et falconariorum Regis 22h per Willelmum Cumin.’’t In the fourth year of the same reign, the sheriffs of London were allowed by the Chancellor 4os. out of the Exchequer for the King’s huntsmen and hisdogs. “Ht venatoribus Regis et canibus ejus x¥'. per cancellarium.”§ Conan, Duke of Brittany and Earl of Richmond, * Harrison’s “Description of England,” prefixed to Holinshed’s ** Chronicle,” p. 226. t “ Leges Regis Henrici primi,” cap, 90, § 2. ~ Madox, “ History and Antiquities of the Exchequer of the Kings of England from the Norman Conquest to the end of the Reign of Kdward IT.,” vol. i. p. 204 (1769). § Madox, tom. cit. p. 207. THE WOLF. 137 in 1164, granted, amongst other privileges, to the Abbey of Jourvaulx, several pastures on the north side of the river Jore, reserving only liberty for his deer, likewise pasturage throughout his new forest, near Richmond, Yorkshire, for all their cattle, with power to keep hounds for chasing Wolves out of those their territories.* It is related in the “Annales Cambrie” (Harl. MSS., No. 3859 on vellum) that in 1166 a rabid Wolf at Caermarthen bit twenty-two persons, nearly all of whom died.t In 1167, the Bishopric of Hereford was vested in the King in consequence of the see being then vacant ; and in the account of John Cumin, who acted in the capacity of Custos, we find in the accounts of the revenue and expenditure of the temporalities a payment of tos. for three Wolves captured that year. “ Kt pro tribus Lupis capiendis, x*.” William Beriwere obtained from Henry II. the confirmation of all his lands, as also the forestership of the Forest of De la Bere, with power to take any person transgressing therein between the bars of Hampton and the gates of Winchester, and likewise between the river of Ramsey and the river of Win- chester to the sea, as amply as his father had held the same in the times of King William and King Henry I. From Richard I. (whom he accompanied * Dugdale’s “ Baronage,” vol. i. p. 48. ‘Ex. Regist. Archiep. Cant.” p. 875a. {+ “Apud Kermerden lupus vabiosus duo de viginto homines momordit qui omnes fere protinus pericreunt,” This MS. is believed to be a translation from the original Welsh. Ed. Williams (Master of the Rolls Series), pp. 50, 51. 138 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. to the Holy Land, and whom he was instrumental in delivering from prison when that king was con- fined in Germany) he obtained many valuable emolu- ments as well as large territorial grants, and in the following reign was no less fortunate with King John, who, having a great regard for him in conse- quence of his knowledge in the art and mystery of venery, gave him license to enclose his woods at Joare, Cadelegh, Raddon, Ailesberie, and Burgh Walter, with free liberty to hunt the hare, fox, cat, and Wolf, throughout all Devonshire, and likewise the goat beyond the precincts of the forest ; and to have free warren throughout all his own lands for hares, pheasants, and partridges.* From a charter of liberties granted by King John, when Earl of Morton, to the inhabitants of Devon- shire, it appears that the Wolf was at that time included amongst the “beasts of venery” in that county. The original deed, which is still pre- served in the custody of the Dean and Chapter of Exeter, is under seal, and provides inter alia as follows :— “Quod habeant canes suos et alias libertates, sicut melius et liberius illas haberunt tempore ejusd. Henrici regis et reisellos suos, et quod capiant capreolum, vulpem, cattum, lupum, leporem, lutram, ubicumque alla invenirent extra regardumn forestee mea.” t 1209. Mr. Evelyn P. Shirley has printed { two * Dugdale’s “ Baronage,” vol. i. p. 7oT. f~ Ex Autographo penes Dec. et Capit. Exon. From Bp. Lyttelton’s Collection. Quoted by Pennant, “British Zoology,” vol. ii. p. 308. £ “ Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica,”’ vol. vi. p. 299. THE WOLF. 139 deeds of the roth of John relating to the manor of Henwick, in the parish of Bulwick, county North- ampton, held by the tenure of hunting the Wolf (fugaco’m lupi), and he suggests that from this tenure probably the family of Luvet or Lovett, originally of Rushton, and afterwards of Astwell, in the county of Northampton, bore, for their arms: Argent, three Wolves, passant, in pale, suble, armed and langued, gules.* 1212. In this year, when the errs around Kingsclere was all forest, an entry occurs in the Patent Rolls of a payment of 5s. as a reward for the capture of a Wolf at Freemantle.t The Roll referred to is doubtless the Rofulus Mise, annis Regis Johannis quartodecimt (1212-1213), where the following entries occur relating to the capture or chase of the Wolf :— “On Thursday next in the octave of the Holy Trinity [May 12], for a Wolf captured at Freemantle, [Surrey] by the dogs of Master Ernald de Auc- lent, 5s.” “Ttem. {at Hereford]. Thursday next following the Feast of St. Martin [Nov. 22] to Norman the keeper of the Veltrars,{ and to Wilkin Doggett, his associate, for two Wolves captured in the forest of Irwell, 10s., by the king’s command, &c.” “ Ttem. Wednesday next following the Feast of * The Wolf frequently appears on heraldic bearings. + “ Patent Rolls,” May 31, 1212, quoted in “ Sussex Archeological Collections,” xxiv. p. 161, t Veltrarius, or vautrarius, from the French vaultve, was a mongrel hound for the chase of the wild-boar. See Blount, “ Ancient Tenures,” P- 233: > 140 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. St. Gregory [March 12], for two Wolves captured, one at Boscha de Furchiis, the other at Willes, r1os., given to Smalobbe and Wilck, the keepers of the veltrarid of Thomas de Sandford.” It is perhaps not generally known that the cir- cumstance narrated in the story of Bedd Gélert, with which every one is familiar, is said to have occurred in the reign of King John, and, as it is a story of a British Wolf, it is scarcely to be passed over here without some brief notice, the more so as it is not at all unlikely that it is founded on fact. The tradition, as related by Bingley in his “ Tour round North Wailes,”* is to the effect that Llewellyn, who was Prince of Wales in the reign of King John, resided at the foot of Snowdon, and, amongst a number of other hounds which he possessed, had one of rare excellence which had been given to him by the king. On one occasion, during the absence of the family, a Wolf entered the house; and Llewellyn, who first returned, was met at the door by his favourite dog, who came out, covered with blood, to greet his master. The prince, alarmed, ran into the house, to find his child’s cradle overturned, and the ground flowing with blood. Ina moment of terror, imagining that the dog had killed the child, he plunged his sword into his body, and laid him dead on the spot. But, on turning up the cradle, he found his boy alive and sleeping by the side of the dead Wolf. This circumstance had such an effect on * “A Tour round North Wales,” 1800, vol. i. p. 363. See also Sir John Carr’s “ Stranger in Ireland,” 4to, 1806. LEE” WOLL. 14! the mind of the prince, that he erected a tomb over the faithful dog’s grave on the spot where afterwards the parish church was built, called from this incident Bedd Gélert, or the grave of Gélert. From this story was derived the common Welsh proverb, “I repent as much as the man who slew his greyhound.” The dog referred to belonged probably to the race called by Pennant “the Highland gre-hound,” of great size and strength, deep-chested, and covered with long rough hair. This kind was much esteemed in former days, and was used for hunting by all the great chieftains in preference to any other. Boethius styles it “ genus venaticum cum celerrimum tum audacissimum.” 1216-1272. In the following reign of Henry III. Wolves were sufficiently numerous in some parts of the country to induce the king to make grants of land to various individuals upon the express con- dition of their taking measures to destroy these animals wherever they could be found. In 1242 it appears that Vitalis Engaine made partition with William de Cantelupe, Baron of Ber- gavenny, of the manor of Badmundesfield, in Suffolk, as heir to William de Curtenai, and the same year had a summons, amongst divers great men, to attend the king, well appointed with horse and arms, in his expedition into France. He died in 1249, seized, inter alia, of part of the lordships of Laxton and Pichesle, in the county of Northampton, held by “petit serjeanty’—viz., to hunt the Wolf whensoever the king should command.* * Dugdale’s “ Baronage,” vol. i. p. 466. 142 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. Selden, in his notes to Drayton’s ‘ Polyolbion” (ix. 76), refers to the manor of Piddlesey in Leices- tershire, which was held by one Henry of Angage per serjeantiam capiendi lupos, and quotes as his authority ‘‘Itin. Leicesters. 27 Hen. IIT. in Archiv. Turr. Lond.” In the same reion, William de Limeyves held of the king, im capile, in the county of South- ampton, one carucate* of land in Comelessend by the service of hunting the Wolf with the king’s dogs.t 1272-1307. In the third year of the reign of Edward I., namely, in 1275, Sir John d’Engayne, knight, and Elena d’Engayne, his wife, held lands in Pightesley, in the county of Northampton, by the service of hunting the Wolf, for his pleasure, in that county,{ from which it is to be inferred that this animal was then common enough to be hunted for sport, as the fox is now-a-days. Other lands in the same county were held at this time on condition of the tenant finding dogs “for the destruction of Wolves” and other animals.§ It appears by the Patent Rolls of the 9th year of Edward I. that in 1280, John Giffard of Brymmesfield or Brampfield, was empowered to destroy the Wolves in all the king’s forests throughout the realm. || In 1281, Peter Corbet was commissioned to destroy * Carucate, a plough land. As much arable land as one plough, with the animals that worked it, could cultivate in a year. + Esc. temp. H. R. fil. R. Johannis. Harl. MS. Brit. Mus. No. 708, p. 8. $ Plac. Coron. 3 Edw. I. Rot. 20, dorso. Blount, “ Ancient Tenures,” p. 230. § Camden, “ Britannia,” p. 525, and Blount, p. 257. || “ Calend. Rot. Pat.,” 49. Seealso Rymer’s ‘‘ Feedera,”’ sub ano. THE WOLF. 143 all the Wolves he could find in the counties of Gloucester, Worcester, Hereford, Salop, and Stafford, and the bailiffs in the several counties were directed to be ready and assist him. The commission, which has been frequently referred to by different writers, runs as follows :— “ Pro Petro Corbet, de lupis capiendis. “Rex, omnibus Ballivis, &. Sciatis quod in- junximus delecto et fideli nostro Petro Corbet quod in omnibus forestis et parcis et aliis locis intra comitatus nostros Gloucester, Wygorn, Hereford, Salop, et Stafford, in quibus lupe poterunt inveniri, lupos cum hominibus canibus et ingeniis suis capiat et destruat modis omnibus quibus viderit expedire. “Hit ideo vobis mandamus quod idem intendentes et auxiliantes estis. “‘ Teste rege apud Westm. 14 Maii a.p. 1281.””* In the Wardrobe Accounts of Edward I. pre- served in the British Museum (Add. MS. No. 7966) anno 29 Edw. I. (1301), the following entry occurs :— * April 29. To the huntsman of Sir Peter Corbet, deceased, for bringing to the King the dogs which belonged to the said Peter at the time ofhisdeath . . . . 6s. 8d. In 1285, William de Reynes held two carucatest of land at Boyton, in the parish of Finchingfield, in the county of Essex, by the serjeanty of keeping for the king five Wolf-dogs (canes luporarios).{ In the * Rymer’s “ Foedera,” i. pt. 2, p. 192; ii. p. 168. tT See note on last page. ~ Plac. Coron. 13 Edw. J. Essex; Blount, “ Ancient Tenures,”’ p. 236. 144 EXIINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. following year, John Engaine was returned as hold- ing one carucate of land in Great Gidding, in the county of Huntingdon, by the serjeanty of hunting the Wolf, fox, and wild cat, and driving away all vermin out of the forest of the king in that county.* About the same time, Richard Engaine held one hundred shillings of Jand in the town of Guedding, in the county of Cambridge, by the serjeanty of taking Wolves, and he was to do this service daily (et facit servit suum cotidie),+ from which it may be inferred that Wolves at this date were particularly troublesome. Indeed, it is recorded that during this reion in a certain park at Farley the deer were entirely destroyed by Wolves.{ In 1297 John Engaine died, seized, inier alia, of certain lands in Pytesle, Northampton, found to be held of the king by the service of hunting the Wolf, fox {cat], badger [wild boar, and hare] ; and likewise the manor of Great Gidding in com. Huntendon, held by the service of catching the hare, fox, cat, and Wolf within the counties of Huntendon, Northampton, Buckingham, and Roteland.§ In the accounts of Bolton Priory, quoted in Whitaker’s “History of Craven” (p. 331), occur entries in the years 1306-1307, of payments made in * “ Plac. Coron. 14 Edw. I. Rot. 7,” dorso; Blount, p. 230. 7 “Testa de Nevil,” p. 358; Blount, p. 262. £ “Will. Poer fecit parcum apud Farley et quod pater Comitis Gilberti de Clare comes Gloucestriz dedit ei quasdam feras ad pre - dictum parcum instaurandum, que fere per lupos destruebantur.” 18 Edw. I. (1290) Wygorn. rot. 50 in abbreviat. Rotul. § Dugdale’s ‘‘Baronage,” vol. i. p. 466. See also the Rotuli Hundredorum, ii. p. 627. THE WOLF. 145 reward for the slaughter of Wolves, as “* Cuidam qui occidit lupum,” but the price paid to the slayer is not stated. Whitaker in a note to this remarks :— “Wolves, therefore, though rare, were not extinct in Craven in the beginning of the fourteenth cen- tury. This is an important circumstance.” 1307-1327. In the fourth year of Edward II. (1311) a composition was made between Sir John de Mowbray, son and heir of Sir Roger de Mowbray, of the one part, and the Abbot of Selby of the other part, whereby the said Sir John quitclaimed and released to the abbot all his right in the soil and manor of Crowle and other places therein mentioned, and the abbot and convent granted to the said Sir ~ John de Mowbray certain woods, saving their free warren of goats, foxes, Wolves, conies, &e.* The king’s forest of the Peak in Derbyshire was of great extent, and about this time was much in- fested with Wolves. A family of the hereditary name of Wolfhunt held lands by the service of keeping the forest clear of these destructive animals.t From the records in the Tower of London (13 Hdw. IL.) it appears that in 1320 some persons held lands at Wormhill, in the county of Derby, by the service of hunting and taking Wolves, from whence they were called Wolfhunt or Wolvehunt. Mr. W. H. G. Bagshawe, of Ford Hall, Chapel-en- * Burton, “ Monasticon Eboracense,” p. 389. The Abbots of Selby and of St. Mary, at York, were the only two mitred abbots in York- shire. + ‘The Local Laws, Courts, and Customs of Derbyshire,’ “ Journ. Brit. Archzol. Assoc.” vol. vii. p. 197. 146 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. le-Frith, Derbyshire, a descendant of the same family as Mr. F. W. Bagshawe, the present owner of Worm- hill Hall, in reply to inquiries on the subject, has been good enough to write as follows :— ‘With the particulars in Blount’s ‘Tenures’ I have long been familiar, but I am sorry to say that IT cannot add to them. Wormhill Hall was never, so far as I know, held under the tenure of destroying Wolves, but it is most probable that a portion of the lands there were originally held by the tenure of preserving the king’s ‘verte and venyson’ in his forest of the Peak. There is a tradition that the last Wolf in England was killed at Wormhill, but I never saw any evidence of it, nor did I ever hear any date assigned. In my pedigree of our family I find a note to the effect that John de |’ Hall (the ancestor of John de l’Hall, whose daughter Alice was the wife of Nicholas Bagshawe) was appointed a forester (of fee, I suppose) to the king by deed dated 1349.”* Tn 1321 William Michell, son and heir of John Michell, held a messuage and land at Middelton Lillebon, co. Wilts, of the king im capite, by the serjeanty of keeping his Wolf-dogs—per serjantiam custodiendi canes luparios Regis.+ 1327-1377. So faras can be gathered from history, it would seem that while stringent measures were being devised for the destruction of Wolves in all or most of the inhabited districts which they frequented, * Camden, “ Britannia,” tit. Derbyshire, i. p. 591; Blount, “ Ancient Tenures,’ p. 250. + Luparios elsewhere luporarios; Harl. MS. Brit. Mus, No. 134, p. 80. Blount, “ Ancient Tenures,” p. 258. THE WOLF. 147 in the less populous and more remote parts of the country, steps were taken by such of the principal landowners as were fond of hunting to secure their own participation in the sport of finding and killing them. In Edward III.’s time, Conan, Duke of Brittany, in 1342, gave pasture for cattle through all his new forest at Richmond in Yorkshire to the inmates of the Abbey of Fors in Wensleydale, forbidding them to use any mastifts to drive the Wolves from their pastures. * In the same year, Alan, Earl of Brittany, gave them common of pasture through all his forest of ‘‘ Wandesley-dale ;’ and to cut as much grass for hay as they might have occasion for, and also gave them leave to take such materials out of the said forest to build their houses, and for other uses; and such iron and lead as the monks found they might apply to their own use; and if the monks or their servants found any flesh of wild beasts in the forest, killed by Wolves, they might take it to their own use.t In 1348, we find that Alan, son and heir of Walter de Wulfhunte, paid a fine to the king of 2s. 4d. for his relief in respect of Jands at Mansfield Woodhouse in the county of Nottingham, which he held by the service of hunting Wolves out of the forest of Shire- wood, if he should find any of them. * Hscheat, 15 & 16 Edw. III. No. 76, in Turr. Lond, See also Burton, “ Monasticon Eboracense,” p. 370. The Abbey of Fors, in Wensleydale, was founded in 1145 (Whitaker). + Burton, loc. cit. + De termino Trin. anno 21 Edw, III. Rot. 1. Harl. M.S, Brit. Mus. No. 34, p. 166. Blount, “ Ancient Tenures,” p. 258. L 148 PALIN T BRITISH ANIMALS. Thomas Engaine, dying without issue in 1368, was found to be seized of 14 yardlands and meadow, and 14s. 4d. rent, in Pightesle, in the county of North- ampton, held by the service of finding, at his own proper costs, certain dogs for the destruction of Wolves, foxes, martens, cats, and other vermin within the counties of Northampton, Roteland, Oxford, Essex, and Buckingham.* 377-1399. In Richard II.’s reign Wolves must have been common enough in the forests of York- shire, for in the account-rolls of Whitby Abbey, amongst the disbursements made between 1394 and 1396, we find the following entry of a payment for dressing Wolf skins :— Pro tewyngy xij pellium luporum .. . . 10. ixd. Doubtless the skins of animals killed in some great raid made upon them at the instigation of the Abbey. 1399-1413. In Henry IV.’s reign, Sir Thomas de Aylesbury, knight, and Catharine his wife, held of the king, in capite, the manor of Laxton, inter alia, with appurtenances in the county of Northampton, by “grand serjeanty “—viz., by the service of taking Wolves, foxes, wild cats, and other vermin in the counties of Northampton, Rutland, Oxford, Essex, Huntingdon, and Buckingham.{ Shakespeare has pictured wolves as existing in Kent * Rot. fin. 42 Edw. III. m. 13. Dugdale’s “ Baronage,” vol. i. p. 467; and Blount, “ Ancient Tenures,” p. 231. t+ To ‘‘tew,” or “taw,” an obsolete word signifying to beat and dress leather with alum. Nares, “ Glossary.” ~ Blount, op. cit. p. 260. THE WOLE. 149 in the time of Henry VI. When the Duke of Suffolk lands at night upon the shore near Dover, he hears “ Loud howling wolves arouse the jades That drag the tragic melancholy night.” Second Part of Henry VL, act iv. sc. 1. This may or may not be a poetic license. At all events, no evidence on the subject is now forth- coming, and we must turn, therefore, to some more reliable source of information. 1422-1461. In the eleventh year of Henry VI. (1433), Sir Robert Plumpton, Knight, was seized of one bovate of land in Mansfield Woodhouse, in the county of Nottingham, called Wolf-hunt land, held by the service of winding a horn and chasing or frightening the Wolves in the forest of Shirewood.” This tenure is particularly referred to by the Rev. Samuel Pegge in his Paper “On the Horn as a Charter or Instrument of Conveyance.” =e Hes = H- 1) ct O a sowuer QL Harting, James Edmund, 1841- 1928. British animals extinct within historic times