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MYSTERY OF THE MEDIEVAL COCKATOO FROM A LAND THAT NO ONE KNEW

Bird in early Middle East book confirms trade with Australia long before its ‘discovery,’ writes James Langton

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It was a long journey for such a small bird – more than 12,000 miles from the islands of Australasi­a via the Arabian Peninsula to Cairo, and then on to Europe.

Even more remarkable, the sulphur-crested cockatoo came to the Middle East from a part of the world that would remain formally off the map to western explorers for another 400 years.

The discovery, announced last week, of a 13th century illustrati­on of an Australasi­an cockatoo confirms medieval trade links that stretched half way around the world.

It was not until the early 17th century that Dutch explorers reached Australia. Long before that, it now seems, goods from the region were part of a complex network of transconti­nental mercantile routes. On the Art of Hunting with

Birds is celebrated as one of the most famous, and earliest, works on falconry. An image of the cockatoo appears four times in the book, written by Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II, also king of Sicily from 1198.

A copy held by the Vatican library has several coloured illustrati­ons of birds in its margins. Four of them show a cockatoo. Researcher­s believe that it was painted from life in Europe, meaning it would have travelled from northern Australia or the islands around Papua New Guinea.

The species was confirmed by Dr Heather Dalton, a historian at the University of Melbourne in Australia. It was most likely a present to Frederick from Al Kamil, the fourth Ayyubid sultan of Egypt, who knew the emperor liked to collect exotic animals.

Earlier, Dr Dalton had identified a similar cockatoo tucked away in a 15th century painting,

Madonna della Vittoria, by the Italian Renaissanc­e artist Andrea Mantegna. At the time, it was the earliest known depiction of such a bird in Europe.

She was contacted by a group of Finnish scientists who were studying Frederick’s book, and who thought it might be the same species. The conclusion was published this month in the academic journal Parergon.

About the least surprising thing in the story, according to Dr Dalton, is that the parrot survived the long journey from the Far East to an island in the Mediterran­ean.

“If anything was going to make it, it would be a sulphurcre­sted cockatoo,” she says. “They live over 100 years in captivity. I saw one of 111 that had outlived two owners and spoke several languages.

“They love company. They are team players and they eat almost anything.”

The route the bird took to Cairo remains a matter of speculatio­n but Dr Dalton thinks it would have probably followed the medieval Silk Road, mostly overland. After capture in Australasi­a, one possibilit­y is that it would have gone by ship to Canton, the Chinese city near Hong Kong and now called Guangdong.

The medieval trade routes would have taken it north and then east, probably crossing India and reaching the coast near either present day Mumbai or Karachi. It could then have gone overland through Persia, and across present day Iraq, Syria and Jordan to Cairo, or a similar route but with a boat journey up the Arabian Gulf.

An alternativ­e would have been a ship from India to what is now Aden, then sailing up the Red Sea or taking a land route though Saudi Arabia. A further possibilit­y is that the bird sailed directly from Canton, through Indonesia and across the Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea, although this is the least likely for that time.

The Silk Road, says Dr Dalton, was really a web of routes. “By the 13th century it had grown to the point that there were a lot of towns providing a safe haven for merchants. It was getting safer and safer.”

The sultan may not have known where the bird came from, but he knew that Frederick would have liked it.

A witness report of the emperor’s return to Jerusalem in 1231 noted he was accompanie­d by: “Elephants, dromedarie­s, camels, panthers, gyrfalcons, lions, leopards, white falcons and bearded owls.”

“To Al Kamil, the cockatoo was a rare, sociable and gifted bird from afar – a fitting gift for the Holy Roman Emperor,” the paper in Parergon says.

At the time, the kingdom of Sicily, which Frederick inherited at the age of three, would have had a large Muslim population, and the emperor is known to have spoken Arabic. With his coronation as Holy Roman Emperor in 1220, the island became the political centre of Europe.

The translatio­n from Latin in On the Art of Hunting with Birds describes the cockatoo as: “Sent to us by the Sultan of Babylon [meaning Al Kamil]: It had white feathers and quills, changing to yellow under the sides.”

Dr Dalton believes the bird could be one of two almost identical species, the sulphurcre­sted cockatoo or the smaller yellow-crested cockatoo.

Although the drawings are not to scale, the gender is easier to guess, she says. “The eyes of all four images are literally full of red paint,” she says. “And the female has a red or reddish brown eye.”

She was also probably quite happy in captivity, Dr Dalton says. The crest is drawn flat against the head. Cockatoos only raise it when they are frightened or surprised or as a part of courtship display.

The cockatoos were once only found in the islands around Indonesia and Papua New Guinea and down the east coast of Australia.

They have since been spread by human interventi­on across other parts of Australia, including Melbourne, in the south, and where Dr Dalton now lives.

Cockatoos have become a pest, and Melbourne city officials have resorted to using falcons to hunt them down after the birds repeatedly stripped silicon sealant from windows.

Frederick was also known to breed waterbirds to feed and train his falcons, says Dr Dalton. “Hopefully, his cockatoo did not meet the same fate.”

The bird was most likely a present to Frederick from Al Kamil, the fourth Ayyubid sultan of Egypt

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 ?? Alamy ?? Clockwise from top, sulphurcre­sted cockatoo; a 15th century ‘Madonna della Vittoria’ with a sulphur-crested cockatoo (close-up above); a page from ‘On the Art of Hunting with Birds’, showing a sulphur-crested cockatoo
Alamy Clockwise from top, sulphurcre­sted cockatoo; a 15th century ‘Madonna della Vittoria’ with a sulphur-crested cockatoo (close-up above); a page from ‘On the Art of Hunting with Birds’, showing a sulphur-crested cockatoo
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