[QUOTE=Micky Duck;1538526]I believe back in Robin Hood times they were refered to as the heart beast/hart beast
the ones yo usee will have come from peel forest estate down here..they have selectively bred them for a decade or more..what was once a very rare sight is now common enough.[/QUOTE
here ya go Mickey Duck ya learn something stupid every day but I like this kind of history
Hunting the Hart, a picture from Turbervile, copied from La Venerie de Jaques du Fouilloux, 16th Century
The word hart is an old alternative word for "stag" (from Old English heorot, "deer" – compare with modern Dutch hert and Swedish/Norwegian hjort, also "deer").
Specifically, the word "hart" was used of a red deer stag more than five years old. Inmedieval hunting terms, a stag in its first year was called a "calf" or "calfe", in its second a "brocket", in its third a "spayed", "spade", or "spayard", in its fourth a "staggerd" or "staggard", and in its fifth a "stag", or a "great stag".[1][2] To be a "hart" was its fully mature state. A lord would want to hunt not just any deer, but a mature stag in good condition, partly for the extra meat and fat it would carry, but also for prestige. Hence a hart could be designated "a hart of grease", (a fat stag), "a hart of ten", (a stag with ten points on its antlers) or "a royal hart" (a stag which had been hunted by a royal personage).[3][4] A stag which was old enough to be hunted was called a "warrantable" stag.
The hart was a "beast of venery" representing the most prestigious form of hunting, as distinct from lesser "beasts of the chase", and "beasts of warren", the last of which were considered virtually as being vermin. The membership of these different classes varies somewhat, according to which period, and which writer, is being considered, but the red deer is always in the first class, the fox hardly being regarded at all.[5] Like the fallow deer buck and the wild boar, the hart was normally sought out or "harboured" by a "limer", or bloodhound hunting on a leash, which would track it from its droppings or footprints to where it was browsing.[6] The huntsman would then report back to his lord and the hunting party would come bringing a pack ofraches. These scent hounds would "unharbour" the hart and chase it on its hot scent until it was brought to bay.[1]
The word hart is not now widely used, but Shakespeare makes several references (for example in Twelfth Night), punning on the homophones "hart" and "heart". The word is also used several times in The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien, when Bilbo Baggins and company pass through Mirkwood Forest. "The White Hart", a personal emblem of Richard II, and "The Red Hart" remain common English pubnames. The county Hertfordshire (along with Hertford, its county town, Hartford, its twin town in Connecticut) and the village of Hartford, near Northwich, in Cheshire) is thought to be named after a place where deer forded a watercourse. There is also the district of Hart inHampshire and the villages of Hartfield at the edge of Ashdown Forest in East Sussex and Hart Common on the outskirts ofWesthoughton, in Greater Manchester. Whinfell Forest once contained a landmark tree called Harthorn.[7] The surnames Hart andHartley ("wood of the hart") also derive from the animal
Bookmarks