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But Esmé had a son, Ludovic, who was nine years old when Esmé died. He was sent to James VI and this gives James' poem a hopeful ending, despite the TREACHERY and ENVY of those evil ravenous birds! :

'Part of my taill
Is yet untolde, Lo, here one of her race
Ane worm bred of her ash...'

(Part of my tale / Is yet untold, look! here is one of her race / a worm bred of her ash...)

James VI went on to have relationships with other men and women, but that's a story for another day!

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Then having tane ane dry and wethered strae
In deip despair, and in ane lofty rage
She sprang up heigh, outfleing every fae
Syne to Panchaeia came, to change her age
Upon Appollo's altar...

(Then having taken a dry and withered staw / In deep despair and in a lofty rage / She sprang up high, outflying every foe / Soon to Panchaea came, to change her age / Upon Apollo's alter...)

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The poem ends a bit sadly though. One day a group of carrion birds (ravens, kestrels, kites) get jealous and chase the phoenix back to her homeland, where she burns itself. In real life, Esmé and James VI were forcibly separated and Esmé was exiled back to France, where he died. Esmé also apparently sent his embalmed heart back to James which is pretty dark!

(lovely writeup here thehistoricalnovel.com/2022/02)

lgbthm

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Here is James' description of Esmé as a phoenix. 🏳️‍🌈​

'By her port
And glistring hewes I knew that she was sum
Rare stranger fowle, which oft had usde to scum
Through divers lands, delyting in her flight
Which made us see so strange and rare a sight.'

(by her comportment / And glistening hues I knew that she was some / Rare strange fowl, which often used to skim / Through diverse lands, delighting in her flight; / Which made us see so strange and rare a sight)

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For LGBT+ History Month I have been reading the poem that a broken-hearted teenager (James VI of Scotland) wrote about his first crush, Esmé Stuart, on the occasion of Esmé's death.

The poem is called 'Phoenix' and it is a metaphor. It describes a beautiful, exotic bird. The phoenix flies with smaller birds by day and returns to James every night... (read more in replies)

You can read the whole thing here (books.google.co.uk/books?id=l_)

It's from the birdsite but about real birds! Can you imagine, meeting one of your kind again?

#SiberianCranes #BirdMigration
#birds #EndangeredSpecies

RT @gibsontomgibo@twitter.com

"Omid, the last surviving Siberian Crane in the Western population met Roya, his companion introduced from a breeding program in Belgium. This is the first time Omid has seen a member of his species since 2009. When they saw each other they began to display and sing.
Photo sent to me by Elnaz.esmailzadeh on instagram."

The oldest #chameleon you’re ever likely to see. This is a #specimen from the 18th century Danish Kunstkammer, making it around 250 years old. It is in remarkably good condition!
#naturalhistory #herpetology #science

Outside of the woods the ground is still covered in ice, and most of the trees still don't have their leaves, but this bit of the mountain felt a bit green and cheerful today! 🌳❄

Have LED lights reduced #LightPollution, or have things gotten worse because of blue light emissions? We have the answer, and it's not good news...

#Tootorial 🧵 below, full methodology and results new in @sciencemagazine
: science.org/doi/10.1126/scienc #ScienceResearch
(1/)

I've just finished giving a seminar at the Animal History Group about my project mapping the wild animals of Britain and Ireland in the 16th-18th centuries! It absolutely flew by for me but it was so nice to see some people that I knew! :abunhdhappyhop: If anyone would like to hear more I will be giving another free presentation on this Saturday as part of the Gwent-Glamorgan Recorders Forum at 10:30AM GMT+0! 💚​ eventbrite.co.uk/e/gwent-glamo

How to sell a #broadside in early modern Germany?

Have a look at this single-sheet print of 1675 and discover a story of mice in battle formation including a religious comment. A thread for #bookhistory, #mediahistory and #animalhistory. #histodons #history

Access the print here: t1p.de/pjk1

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Typically by the time a #species gets listed by USFWS or NOAA, it is on the brink of #extinction. There is a backlog of applications, and USFWS has been successfully sued by nonprofits such as the Center for Biological Diversity to clear up the backlog. When a species is listed, critical #habitat is also designated. And announcements about listings must be published in the Federal Register so the public can comment.

(more)

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Next Wednesday evening (1900 GMT+0) I'll be giving a free academic seminar on my soon-to-be-released book (The Atlas of Early Modern Wildlife)! I'll be covering why Britain and Ireland's pre-industrial natural history data is so reliable, how I map historical records, and how you can tell the difference between when a species was unrecorded and when it was truly absent. Come nerd out with me! :alphys:​😻​ Register here - eventbrite.co.uk/e/ahg-seminar

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Happy !
Where I live now, eagles seem impossibly mythic birds, but according to my research, just 250-500 years ago White-tailed Eagles (or Sea Eagles) were widespread around the coasts of Britain and Ireland. The last native White-tailed Eagle was only shot in 1918! 🌬
But this is not the end of the story. The eagles are reintroduced on Mull, Wester Ross and Fife in Scotland, Killarney NP in Co Kerry and now the Isle of Wight in England. Please post pics if you see one! 🦅💚

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Yamaguchi Sekkei: Lions and Tigers in Peony and Bamboo

• Pair of six-panel folding screens
• Ink and color on gilded paper
• 149 × 330 cm (each screen)
• Edo period, 1668
• The Cleveland Museum of Art

#japan #japanese #art #artofmastodon #arthistory #japaneseart #japanesearthistory #artfromjapan #edo #japanesepainting

More on the limits of ChatGPT. One of the key points, which I also discovered when noodling around, is that the bot makes stuff up when it doesn't know something, so that anyone with detailed knowledge of a field is likely to notice immediately if a student submission is chatbot generated.

medievalists.net/2022/12/why-a

🧪 #Science
🦕 #Naturalhistory
🦭 #Nature

'Londoner solves 20,000-year Ice Age drawings mystery - determines that cave paintings included lunar calendar information about the fertility of different animal species'

This is a remarkable discovery for a professional but for an amateur. Simply wow. Well done, Mr Bacon.

bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-lond

Ok, this is cool: a team of biologists worked out that turtles can talk. The hatchlings even talk to each other in the egg to coordinate their hatching. Turtle talk is at frequencies not very audible for humans and it can take hours for some species to reply to each other.

“Had we had a bit more expansive imaginations, we might have caught this earlier,” said Karen Bakker, a fellow at Harvard’s Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.

washingtonpost.com/climate-env

My 1st (unfiltered) pass in #mapping #English #PlaceNames taking the form ‘X-on/upon-river Y’ (e.g. Stratford-on-Avon). Data (158 names) incl. both surviving & ‘lost’ names, with dates of 1st reference ranging from 900-1983! The distribution is intriguing, espec. the absence of names in the S & E, as is the tendency for names to cluster. Only named rivers drawn. Now time to slice, dice, & play. Your thoughts welcomed. #Medieval #EarlyModern #Names #EnvHist #Histodon #HistGeog #Rivers #Maps

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Computer Fairies is a Mastodon instance that aims to be as queer, friendly and furry as possible. We welcome all kinds of computer fairies!