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Eccentricities of the Animal Creation

Eccentricities of the Animal Creation

John Timbs
Language: English - ISBN: 9786256004856 - 342 pages
Paperback
€24.99
€24.99
E-Kitap Projesi & Cheapest Books

Synopsis

The collections of living animals, now popularly known as Zoological Gardens, are of considerable antiquity. We read of such gardens in China as far back as 2,000 years; but they consisted chiefly of some favourite animals, such as stags, fish, and tortoises. The Greeks, under Pericles, introduced peacocks in large numbers from India. The Romans had their elephants; and the first giraffe in Rome, under Cæsar, was as great an event in the history of zoological gardens at its time as the arrival in 1849 of the Hippopotamus was in London. The first zoological garden of which we have any detailed account is that in the reign of the Chinese Emperor, Wen Wang, founded by him about 1150 A.D., and named by him "The Park of Intelligence;" it contained mammalia, birds, fish, and amphibia. The zoological gardens of former times served their masters occasionally as hunting-grounds. This was constantly the case in Persia; and in Germany, so late as 1576, the Emperor Maximilian II. kept such a park for different animals near his castle, Neugebah, in which he frequently chased. Alexander the Great possessed his zoological gardens. We find from Pliny that Alexander had given orders.

About John Timbs

John Timbs was an English author and antiquary. Some of his work was published under the pseudonym of Horace Welby. John Timbs. Born, (1801-08-17)17 August .

Product specifications

BindingPaperback
LanguageEnglish
Publishing dateTuesday, 4 February 2025
Edition1
ISBN9786256004856
Pagecount342
Interior colorBlack/white
Size170 x 240 mm
PublisherE-Kitap Projesi & Cheapest Books
AuthorJohn Timbs
CategoryNature > Animals