Pug who bit Napoleon
animal tales of the 18th and 19th centuries
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Word Count
45,000 words, Guess
Page Count
180 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-101526705001
- ISBN-139781526705006
- OCLC Control Number1030158688
- Better World Books9781526705006
- Better World BooksP9-BAN-643
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL26954403M
Classifications
- DDC591
- LCCQL791 .M38 2017
- LCCQL50
Description
"From elaborate Victorian cat funerals to a Regency era pony who took a ride in a hot air balloon, Mimi Matthews shares some of the quirkiest and most poignant animal tales of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Meet Fortune, the Pug who bit Napoleon on his wedding night, and Looty, the Pekingese sleeve dog who was presented to Queen Victoria after the 1860 sacking of the Summer Palace in Peking. The four-legged friends of Lord Byron, Emily Bront , and Prince Albert also make an appearance, as do the treasured pets of Alexander Pope, Samuel Johnson, and Charles Dickens. Less famous, but no less fascinating, are the animals that were the subject of historical lawsuits, scandals, and public curiosity. There's Tuppy, the purloined pet donkey; Biddy, the regimental chicken; and Barnaby and Burgho, the bloodhounds hired to hunt Jack the Ripper. Wild animals also get a mention in tales that encompass everything from field mice and foxes to alligators and sharks lurking in the Thames. Using research from eighteenth and nineteenth century books, letters, and newspapers, Mimi Matthews brings each animal's unique history to vivid life. The details are sometimes humorous, sometimes heartbreaking, but the stories are never anything less than fascinating reading for animal lovers of all ages"--Page 4 of cover.
Subjects
Series Statement
- Pen & Sword history
Other Editions
- Pug who bit Napoleon
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