Berkeley Hunt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Berkeley Hunt
Berkeley Hunt in 1988
Hunt typeFox hunting
Country England
History
Founded12th century
(foxes from 18th century)
Founded byBerkeley family
Historical quarryStag and buck
Hunt information
Hound breedFoxhound
Hunt countryGloucestershire & South Gloucestershire
Master(s)Henry Berkeley
QuarryFox
Websitewww.berkeleyhunt.co.uk

The Berkeley Hunt is a foxhound pack in the west of England. Its country lies in the southern part of Gloucestershire, between Gloucester and Bristol.

History[edit]

Hunt coat of the Berkeley Hunt: Yellow with green collar with silver foxes courant embroidered on collar.[1] 5 gold buttons, as worn by professional huntsman and "amateur huntsman" (i.e. a Master of Foxhounds who hunts his own hounds)[2]

The Berkeley Hunt's establishment is said to have been, in its (18th century) day, one of the largest and most important the world has ever known.[3] Hounds have been kept at Berkeley Castle since the 12th century, at first to hunt the stag and the buck, and since the 18th century, to hunt the fox. The Berkeley family of Berkeley Castle (which lost its titles of Baron Berkeley and Earl of Berkeley in 1882 and 1942 respectively) still owns the Berkeley hounds and the kennels.

Country[edit]

The "hill country" above Dursley and Wotton-under-Edge is hunted mainly in March and early April, and adjoins the Duke of Beaufort's estate. The "vale country" comprises the Vale of Berkeley, largely dairy and stock farms with much permanent pasture, although the use of this land for growing crops is increasing.

Relationship with the Old Berkeley Hunt and Cotswold Hunt[edit]

At one time the Berkeley Hunt's hounds were kennelled at Berkeley and at Cheltenham, Nettlebed, Gerrards Cross and Cranford, Middlesex. It should have been possible to hunt from Berkeley Castle to Wormwood Scrubs, 100 miles as the crow flies, although not on a regular basis without disturbing other hunts. This wide range of activity may have begun by the Berkeleys taking their hounds to London each year.[3] In the late 18th century, the fifth Earl of Berkeley lost most of his land in and around Middlesex.

The country around Cheltenham and Broadway became Cotswold, North Cotswold and Cotswold Vale Farmer's Hunt. Gerrards Cross and Cranford retained the old livery and became known as the Old Berkeley Hunt. They were later divided into East and West.[3][4]

After the Hunting Act[edit]

Although "hunting wild mammals with a dog" was made unlawful in England and Wales by the Hunting Act 2004, which came into effect in 2005,[5] a number of exemptions stated in Schedule 1 of the 2004 Act permit some previously unusual forms of hunting wild mammals with dogs to continue, such as "hunting... for the purpose of enabling a bird of prey to hunt the wild mammal".[6] The Berkeley stresses that its present-day hunting is within the exemptions permitted by law[citation needed] and the death of any fox is absolutely accidental and coincidental to its legal activities and definitely not the purpose of said activities.

Anti-hunting activists claim the hunt has been witnessed to trespass on farmland which they are aware they are not permitted to be on. They go on to say this shows that the hounds are not following a pre-laid trail and foxes are being deliberately hunted and killed. [citation needed]

Lending a name[edit]

The Old Berkeley Hunt developed a large following among the prosperous London middle classes:

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Home". berkeleyhunt.co.uk.
  2. ^ http://www.horsecountrylife.com
  3. ^ a b c Charles Richardson, The Complete Foxhunter, Methuen & Co, 1908
  4. ^ "Wallace Charles Devereux, master of the Old Berkeley Hunt (West)". Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News. 22 November 1946.
  5. ^ Hunting Act 2004 Archived April 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, text online at opsi.gov.uk
  6. ^ Stephen Moss, "The banned rode on: Eighteen months ago hunting was banned. Or was it?" from The Guardian dated 7 November 2006, at guardian.co.uk, accessed 29 April 2013
  7. ^ Jonathon Green, Cassell's Dictionary of Slang (Cassel & Co.) ISBN 0-304-35167-9.

External links[edit]