The Ravens of the Tower of London:
In the year of 1666, London was struck by a devastating
fire, eviscerating almost everything in sight. For nearly three days the
medieval part of the city was under flames.
It consumed the homes of approximately 70,000 people of the
80,000 inhabitants living in that part of London, on the inside of the old
Roman city wall.
The fire nearly reached the home of the king, Charles II,
the Palace of Whitehall, located in Westminister, the aristocratic part of the
town.
Although threatened to lose his life and vanish in flames
with the rest of the city, he and most of the royalties survived, left alive to
witness the city ruined and ravaged by scavengers.
Pigs, cats and a vast amount of wild ravens flocked the
city. London was in utter chaos. Therefore, the king inclined to take action,
called for the extinction of all wildlings, rodents, and pests from the streets
to save the town from diseases that potentially could be spread.
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Jubilee and Munin,
the youngest and the oldest raven of the
Tower of London
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However, the royal astronomer and one of his loyal advisors,
John Flamsteed, warned him that killing all of the ravens, along with every
other scavenger, would be a bad omen and that the kingdom could fall with the
last one killed. Thus, the king being pragmatic, ordered all to be killed,
except, 6, which by his command and supervision would be kept at the Tower.
Those were the hard times of a glorious city, and one of the
many versions of how, nowadays, six ravens, magnificent specimens and large
members of the genus Corvus, are kept at the Tower of London and treated like
royalty.
There are six ravens, plus one as a reserve, and all of them
are specially bred and selected as some of the most brilliant examples
currently. They are kept at her Majesty’s Royal Palace under the premise that,
if they leave the Tower, the kingdom will fall. The first relation to this
premise dates from July 1944, when ravens were being used as informal spotters
for enemy bombs and planes during the heavy air attacks carried out in Britain
throughout the Second World War.
Only one of them survived the hardships of the bombing. As a
result, the Prime Minister, Sir Winston Churchill, gave order for more ravens
to be fetched, so the flock can once again count the right number of six.
From then on, the ravens were enlisted as soldiers of the
Kingdom, and as soldiers, they now can be discharged for unacceptable conduct.
These prominent assistants to the Crown hey are the most
pampered birds in the country and serve as the guardians of the Tower who
answer only to their Raven Master and the other 37 Yeoman Warders, also known
as “Beefeaters,” and should not be approached too closely by anyone else.
Like the Royals, these ravens have a grandeur lifestyle,
residing in a palace and waited on by servants. They are kept at the public
expense and in exchange, they occasionally must present themselves to the
public in settings of exceptional brilliance.
Since 1987, they have been the subject of a successful
captive breeding program, and since 2013, the Tower is the home for 8 of them,
spread over four different territories within the Tower precincts. Six primary,
one reserve and one still in training. They are named Merlin, Hugin, Munin,
Jubilee, Portia, Erin, Rocky, and Grip (after Charles Dickens’s pet raven), but
their names are changing as they come and go.
Today, the ravens are one of the attractions for tourists
who visit the City, and despite having their one wing trimmed, they roam freely
throughout the premises. They are trained to speak and mimic sounds, so much
that even the President of Russia, Vladimir Putin was impressed by them during
his visit to the Tower. Allegedly, one of the ravens addressed each person in
the entourage with a “Good morning!”
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