The English: Are They Human? Case Study 10: Henry III’s Polar Bear

Despite controlling one-third of the world’s landmass and one-quarter of its population at its peak in the late 19th century, one really has to wonder if the English are even civilized in the first place. As Indian historian and MP Dr. Shashi Tharoor stated in a 2015 speech at Oxford University, “No wonder the sun never set on the British Empire… even God couldn’t trust the English in the dark.”

In G.J. Renier’s The English: Are They Human?, the author sets out to examine why the English are the way they are; it’s not an easy task. Despite the title being absolutely hilarious, the book itself is somewhat humorous, but overall quite academic. This, to me, is quite disappointing. Thus, I am setting out to improve upon his work, and find some case studies that properly shed light on what makes the English such an absurd people. Fortunately, there’s so much out there to choose from. After careful research, it is my conclusion that the English cannot be considered human.

Why?

Well, for this week’s reason, the king insisted on keeping a pet polar bear. In the middle of a crowded city.

King Henry III's Polar Bear - Historic UK
Statue of Henry III’s polar bear. [source]

HENRY III’S POLAR BEAR

Date: c. 1252

Location: Tower of London

The Tower of London
[source]
Kings of England have long been prone to excess. Famous ones include Henry VIII, of course, with his love of women, food, wine, and debauchery. John, trying to seize the throne from his brother Richard, was a psychopathic asshole who loved losing wars to the French. Richard, meanwhile, loved nothing more than running around killing Muslims in the Holy Land. All this to say that as a ruler, it was a benefit to the nation if your hobbies and interests didn’t involve having people killed. Even when they were as expensive as running a zoo filled with exotic animals out of the Tower of London.

Henry III of England - Wikipedia
Painting of Henry III – holding what might a model of his plan to rebuild Westminster Abbey (which happened during his reign)? [source]
Henry III, ruler of England after the demise of his father, the hated King John, came to the throne when he was only nine years old. His rule of England, while incredibly long (from 1216-1272, for a total of 56 years – seemingly a miracle in the High Middle Ages!), was not particularly successful. He spent large amounts of money trying, and failing, to re-conquer northern France, trying to put his brother Richard on the throne as Holy Roman Emperor, and trying to put his son Edmund Crouchback on the throne as King of Sicily. He also extracted huge amounts of money from England’s Jewish community, leaving them virtually unable to do business. That said, he did ratify the Magna Carta and called the first-ever version of what was to become the English Parliament… which are two steps shockingly close to displaying some humanity.

What Henry loved more than anything, however, was his animals. Especially his polar bear. How does a king of England even acquire such a creature in the first place? Apparently it was a gift from the Norwegian King Haakon the Younger around the year 1252.

While King John, Henry’s father, was the one who initially re-located the royal menagerie to the Tower of London, the zoo really came into its own when Henry ascended the throne. The zoo had lions, leopards, lynx, porcupines, camels, and even an African elephant, but it was the bear that attracted the most attention from both the King himself and from the residents of London.

Bears, as we know, can eat a fuck ton of food. And Henry III forced his city sheriffs to not only help pay for the cost of feeding the bear, but also lead him down to the River Thames every morning, on a leash and muzzle, to take a swim and catch fish. The townspeople, marvelling at the sight of the animal, found him to be quite the attraction, and he consistently attracted large crowds during his life at the Tower of London.

Medieval zoos, of course, were essentially no better than prisons. Virtually nobody knew what proper diets were for the animals, and most were kept in enclosures that were far too small for any sort of healthy existence. Death was rampant – for animals, of course, but also for their hapless handlers, most of whom had absolutely no business of being anywhere near exotic creatures. To further highlight how ridiculous the English were, the African elephant, which was a gift from French King Louis IX in 1255, had died by 1258 – possibly because it failed to adapt to the colder climate of England, but also possibly because animal keepers were constantly giving it red wine.

Sculpture of an elephant made from galvanised wire.
Wire sculpture of the famed elephant by British sculptor Kendra Haste, constructed c. 2010. [source]
The Royal Menagerie lasted from the middle of the 13th century all the way to 1835, when it was finally shuttered for good. It was even opened to the public in the 18th century – the price of admission was either three half-pence or a live cat or dog to be fed to the lions. Despite the long tradition of kings and queens keeping animals in the middle of a crowded city, it’s fair to say that allowing a polar bear to swim – on a leash – every morning in the River Thames is one of the most insane decisions ever made by any English monarch.

You can’t tell me the English are human. Put them in the cages instead.

***

Information for this article from here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here

 

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The Maestro
The Maestro is a mystical Canadian internet user and New England Patriots fan; when the weather is cooperative and the TV signal at his igloo is strong enough, he enjoys watching the NFL, the Ottawa Senators & REDBLACKS, and yelling into the abyss on Twitter. He is somehow allowed to teach music to high school students when he isn't in a blind rage about sports, and is also a known connoisseur of cheap beers across the Great White North.
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Unsurprised

In case you need more reasons to hate the English, I’m reading Shashi Tharoor’s Inglorious Empire: What the British Did to India. Tl;dr it’s not good.

Viva La Tabula Raza

Triggered by mention of King John. Nigel Terry as John, Anthony Hopkins as Richard (the Lionheart), both in their pre-king days, The Lion in Winter.comment image

Last edited 4 years ago by Viva La Tabula Raza
ballsofsteelandfury

All,

Thank you for waiting the 5 (10, 30?) minutes for the site to load up. We have the crack DFO technical team (insert funny Simpsons pic) working on the problem. We hope to be back up to speed soon.

If I had a nickel…

SonOfSpam

Instead of the crack team, I’d put the weed team on it. More focus with them.

Unsurprised

Put the meth team on it and they’ll just run laptops between everyone in real time.

Last edited 4 years ago by Unsurprised
Sharkbait

comment image

TheRevanchist

I’m still working on it. The IKEA Server Suite 6.9 Körcbuhga instruction manual just isn’t very clear what to do for a reset.

Senor Weaselo

Not to be confused with Crack Stuntman, because for us it’s pants back off.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bzJYW-xubRk

SonOfSpam

Public service announcement (for fat people): If you go to London and visit the Tower, please know that there are no elevators. And, because it’s a tower, you will climb stairs. What I’m saying is, make sure your traditional English Breakfast comes with extra baked beans that morning. Thank you for your time.

Game Time Decision

also if you’re over like 5’5″ you’ll need to duck the whole time or hit your head.
But worth it.

Unsurprised

I’m basically the American guy in In Bruges, so I’ll have to take your word for it.

Horatio Cornblower

5’5″? That’s like 11 Horatios!

nomonkeyfun

but also possibly because animal keepers were constantly giving it red wine.

comment image

Last edited 4 years ago by nomonkeyfun
ballsofsteelandfury

I think the bigger takeaway here is that an Englishman could take a pet cat or dog to the zoo and trade it in for free entrance.

That’s… kinda fucked up.

Horatio Cornblower

When I invent time travel I’m going to back to the Tower of London and introduce anyone trying to feed a stray cat or dog to the lions to the joy of an automatic shotgun blast to the genitals.

BrettFavresColonoscopy

Eh, I’m fine with the cat part(s)

Last edited 4 years ago by BrettFavresColonoscopy