Codex Manesse – Beyond the Court: Big game, small game

Hunt for a big game was a dangerous affair. Not just because you could break royal monopoly, but also because the animals hunted were intrinsicly dangerous. A meeting with a bear or a wild boar, could easily end badly for the hunter. Yet no beast commanded more fear and awe than a mighty auroch. Below you can see a young Auroch cow springing from the thicket suprising the hunting party of Her von Buwenburg. Cowardly squire abandonned his master on frightened horse, himself climbing to safety on a nearby tree. Her Hawart rushing bravely spear in hand to ward off the beast. (Of his courage testifies his folio in Codex Manesse depicting him fighting a bear. This bear already “miniaturized” you can find here.)

Aurochs were indeed powerfull and majestic beasts, it was writted tey were capable of lifting on their horns an armoured knight. Still encroachment of civilisation, deforestation and expansion of agricultural lands reduced their habitats further and further, leading to their eventual extinction. In France no one have seen an auroch by the end of carolingian period, in german states they became rare by the XIIIth century, and extinct by the XVth. The last herds populated deep marshy forests in west Moldavia, Romania, Lithuania and Poland. Despite efforts of royal foresters, total ban for hunting and encroachment to their woods, the last known auroch died in Jaktorów forest (Poland) in 1627r. of old age.

Codex Manesse is however set in XIII century, so such hunt could take place on invitation of some Polish duke or Hungarian king.

Anyway not wanting to risk their life or legal complications Her Geltar and Der Kohl von Nussen decided to entertain themselves with a hunt for small game. Small game included foxes, ferrets, otters, sables, hares, squirrels, various kinds of fowl both land such as pigeon, phaesant or partridge and waterfowl such as duck, wild goose, swan etc. Roe deer was also sometimes included in small game depending on time and location.

Hunt for small game was usually more widely permitted, unless occured in someones private forest, as nobles were often entitled to set the rules for hunting on their lands as they pleased. On the agricultural lands however, it was encouraged in part as pest control (as weasels and foxes posed a risk for chickens, while hares and birds eaten out freshly sown grain, endangering future crops). The peasants of course would hunt with simpler and cheaper tools than swift greyhounds or crosbows, enjoyed by above presented lords. Most common tools of the simple folk included nets, snares, simple bows or slings.

Codex Manesse – Beyond Court and Castle: Call of the hunt

After a long break I am getting back to Codex Manesse miniatures, with a new theme “Beyound Court and Castle”. We will explore knightly activities, related with everyday life, obligations and pasttimes.

For the first set meet Herr Heinrich Hetzbold von Wissense with his retinue, following a call of the hunt. Not just any hunt, but a Great Hunt (lat. Venatio Magna). That is a hunt for big game. What prey was treated as a big game varied depending on time and place, but in general in medieval Europe big game included animals such as Red Deer, European Bison, Auroch, Bear, Boar, Lynx, Moose, Wild Horse and occasionally even Roe and Beaver (sic.). In fact it was not the size of the animal that was a deciding factor but rather scarcity and prestige of the trophy,

Quite early in middle ages a hunt for big game became subject of royal monopoly (lat. regale), and privilege awarded to high lords and bishops. Dedicated officials and servants were appointed to keep track of quantity, of big game in royal forests, managing the game populations and protecting from poachers. Breaking of this monopoly could be punished by death, so forget about camping in the bushes, waiting for deer to show up at the tip of your arrows.

Indeed the Great hunt was rarely a romanticized a solitary experience of just “hunter and its prey” but rather a big, celebrated social and political event. An occassion to invite guests and reinforce alliances, discuss politics, arrange marriages etc. The hunt itself involved not just noble hunters themselves, usually hunting from horseback, but also a number of servants, and often peasants form local villages going in battue with rattles and horns to scare the game from its hiding.

The most treasured and invaluable hunting “tools” of the Great Hunt were not weapons but dogs, bred and cared for often by specialized class of servants. These dogs were divided not necessarily by breed but rather by function. There were separate dogs for tracking and chasing the game, herding the frightened animal towards the hunters, other hounds were trained to engage, and subdue the prey, or at least bleed and weaken it enough, so the hunter could catch up and finish the job with spear, sword or dagger. Separate kinds of dogs were bred for small game. But we will look at small hunt on another time.