Posted on 06/03/2011 9:28:21 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
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Who knew that the Cheshire cat was a “big cat”?
A smilodon?
The original Dr. Seuss’ ``The Cat in the Hat``
How is it that people in Britain in the 1400’s even knew about Lions? Or maybe they thought of them like they thought of dragons.
Thank heaven. I worried about what they did with the rest of the poor thing until I read the rest....
“How is it that people in Britain in the 1400s even knew about Lions? Or maybe they thought of them like they thought of dragons.”
I thought the same, after all, how would they know how to carve a creature they’d only heard legends of, and so well?
Were there lions in England? It’s the British symbol, too.?
A few things: first, the natural range of lions 500 years ago was larger than today (making them more vulnerable for find and capture), and second, I believe that a captured lion displayed in Europe at that time would not be unusual. The Romans did it 2,000 years ago.
The medieval English would have known about lions from the Bible at least—Gen. 49.9 (”Judah is a lion’s whelp”), Judges 14.5-6 (Samson kills a young lion), Daniel in the lions’ den, etc. One of the medieval kings was known as Richard the Lion-heart.
I remember a classmate in high school announcing that the Garden of Eden was in Africa because the Bible says that Adam named all the animals, so he would have had to be in Africa in order to have named the lion.
Does this mean that we now have to “reintroduce” bronze lions to the British countryside?
Nice find; too bad they’re going to plant house seeds on the farm; those things should be declared noxious weeds, and be eradicated from the fields.
Indeed...the Asiatic lion (slightly smaller then the African lion) was not uncommon in Israel during biblical times. Before climate change around 10,000 years ago, wiki says that lions were the most widespread mammal in the world, after humans.
Question. No Europeans in the Middle Ages had been to Africa. How would they know from lions?
captive lions were brought to ship to Roman cities for sport and exhibition for well over 2500 years.
Not all knowledge of past times was lost with the general “fall” of the Roman Empire. Ships still sailed the middle sea as well.
That’s BEAUTIFUL!
REALLY?!!
I don't believe this statement is accurate.
St. Louis was in Africa on two crusades--the first one in Egypt, the second one (on which he died) in Tunisia. See Joinville's Life of St. Louis.
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