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- He gifted birds of prey to other rulers and dignitaries, employing falconry as a tool for political relationships. In the end, Frederick II’s engagement with falconry was not just a hobby or a sport; it was an intellectual pursuit, a passion, and a reflection of his multifaceted personality.
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Jan 1, 2011 · Frederick certainly gives us plenty about falconry itself, but he is interested in what we now call the “life histories” of birds in general, and the book bubbles over with intriguing pieces of information on clutch size, nesting habits, food sources… the list goes on and on.
His treatise on falconry is generally considered the lengthiest written work by any reigning monarch of Europe until his time (Frederick died in 1250), and the defining standard of this unique form of hunting with notes on ornithology - De Arte Venandi cum Avibus (The Art of Hunting with Birds).
Jun 1, 2007 · As expected, much of the wisdom on the description, care, training and flying of falcons and hawks derives from De arte Venandi cum Avibus (The Art of Hunting with Birds), completed about 1248 by Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II. Falconry was a royal sport in pre-Conquest England, and the next four chapters, Anglo-Saxon England, William I to ...
- Richard Almond
- 2007
Frederick II was more modest in his estimate of the benefits of falconry: “The pursuit of falconry enables nobles and rulers disturbed and worried by the cares of state to find relief in the pleasures of the chase.
In the course of the treaty negotiations, he sent the sultan a copy of his remarkable book The Art of Falconry, arguably the first real ornithology text, which has survived to the present day.
Although falconry, which has been called the oldest sport known to man, was practiced in western Europe before the Crusades, it re-ceived new impetus from knights returning from the Near East, where it had been known at least as early as the first millennium be-fore Christ. The Emperor Frederick II, who employed Muhammadan trainers, was one of