Little is known of the early history of falconry in Africa, but from very ancient Egyptian carvings and drawings it seems to have been known there many ages ago.’ It was probably also in vogue in the countries of Morocco, Oran, Algiers, Tunis and Egypt, at the same time as in Europe. The older writers on falconry, English and continental, often mention Barbary and Tunisian falcons. It is still practiced in Egypt.
Perhaps the oldest records of falconry in Europe are supplied by the writings of Pliny, Aristotle and Martial. Although their notices of the sport are slight and somewhat vague, they are quite sufficient to show clearly that it was practiced in their days—between the years 384 B.C. and A.D. 40. It was probably introduced into England from the continent about AD. 860, and from that time down to the middle of the 17th century falconry was followed with an ardor that perhaps no English sport has ever called forth, not even fox-hunting.
The writings of Shakespeare furnish ample testimony to the high and universal estimation in ,which it was held in his days. About the middle of the 17th century falconry began to decline in England, to revive somewhat at the Restoration. It never, however, completely recovered its former favor, a variety of causes operating against it, such as enclosure of waste lands, agricultural improvements, and the introduction of fire-arms into the sporting field, till it fell, as a national sport, almost into oblivion. Yet it has never been even temporarily extinct, and it is successfully practiced even at the present day.
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