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Dovecote - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dovecote

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A dovecote or dovecot is a building intended to house pigeons or doves, which were an important food source in history. In Scotland the usual term is doocot, and the tradition is continued in modern urban areas. Dovecotes may be square or circular, or even built into the end of a house or barn and generally contain pigeonholes where the birds nest.[1] The birds were kept both for their eggs and flesh.

Dovecote at Nymans Gardens, West Sussex, England
Dovecote at Nymans Gardens, West Sussex, England

Contents

[edit] History

In some cultures, particularly Medieval Europe, the possession of a dovecote was a symbol of status and power and was consequently regulated by law. Only nobles had this special privilege known as droit de colombier. Many ancient manors in France and the United Kingdom have a dovecote (still standing or in ruins) in one section of the enclosure or in nearby fields. Examples include Château de Kerjean in Brittany, France, Bodysgallen Hall in Wales, and Muchalls Castle and Newark Castle in Scotland.

The oldest dovecotes are thought to have been the fortified dovecotes of High Egypt, and the domed Persian dovecotes. In the dry regions, the droppings were in great demand and were collected on uniformly cleaned braids.

The presence of dovecotes is not noted in France before the Roman invasion by Caesar. The pigeon farm was then a passion in Rome. The Roman, generally round, colombarium had its interior covered with a white coating of marble powder. Varron, Columelle and Pline the Old One wrote works on the pigeon farms and the dovecote construction.

In France, it was called a colombier or fuie from the 13th century onwards and pigeonnier until the 19th century.[citation needed]

The dovecote interior, the space granted to the pigeons, is divided into a number of boulins (pigeon holes). Each boulin is the lodging of a pair of pigeons. These boulins can be in rock, brick or cob (adobe) and installed at the time of the construction of the dovecote or be in pottery (jars lying sideways, flat tiles, etc.), in braided wicker in form of basket or of nest. It is the number of boulins that indicates the capacity of the dovecote. The one at the chateau d'Aulnay with its 2,000 boulins and the one at Port-d'Envaux with its 2,400 boulins of baked earth are among the largest ones in France.

In the Middle Ages, particularly in France, the possession of a colombier à pied (dovecote on the ground accessible by foot), constructed separately from the corps de logis (having boulins from the top down), was a privilege of the high seigniorial lord. For the other constructions, the dovecote rights (droit de colombier) varied according to the provinces. They had to be in proportion to the importance of the property, placed in a floor above a henhouse, a kennel, a bread oven, even a wine cellar. Generally the aviaries integrated to a stable, a barn or a shed, were allowed by the seigniorial manor owner to use at least 50 acres (about 2.5 hectares) of arable land, that it be noble or not, for a capacity not larger than that.

Although they produced an excellent fertilizer (known as colombine), the lord's pigeons were seen as a nuisance by the nearby peasant farmers, in particular at the time of sowing of new crops.

In numerous regions (in France) where the right to possess a dovecote was reserved solely for the nobility (Brittany, Normandy, etc.), the complaint rolls very frequently recorded formal requests for the suppression of this privilege and the right for its abolition; which would finally be ratified in August 4 1789 in France.

The earliest use of dovecotes in Britain may have been in the Roman period - although no certain examples are known of that date. The traditional view, however, is that dovecotes were introduced by the Normans. The earliest known examples of dove-keeping occur in Norman castles of the 12th century (for example, at Rochester Castle, Kent, where nest-holes can be seen in the keep), and documentary references also begin in the 12th century. The earliest surviving, definitely-dated free-standing dovecote in this country was built in 1326 at Garway in Herefordshire..[2]

[edit] Architecture

Their location is chosen away from large trees that can house raptors and shielded from prevailing winds and their construction obeys a few safety rules: tight access doors and smooth walls with a protruding band of stones (or other smooth surface) to prohibit the entry of climbing predators (martens, weasels…). The exterior facade was, if necessary, only coated evenly by a horizontal band, in order to prevent their ascent.

The dovecote materials can be very varied and shape and dimension extremely diverse:

  • the square dovecote with quadruple vaulting: built before the fifteenth century (Roquetaillade Castle, Bordeaux) or Saint-Trojan near Cognac)
  • the cylindrical tower: fourteenth century to the sixteenth century, it is covered with curved tiles, flat tiles, stone lauzes roofing and occasionally with a dome of bricks. A window or skylight is the only opening.
  • dovecote on stone or wooden pillars, cylindrical, hexagonal or square;
  • the hexagonal dovecote (dovecotes of the Royal Mail at Sauzé-Vaussais);
  • the square dovecote with flat roof tiles in the seventeenth century and a slate roof in the eighteenth century;
  • the lean-to structure against the sides of buildings.

Inside a dovecote could be virtually empty (boulins being located in the walls from bottom to top), the interior reduced to only the structure of a rotating ladder, or "potence", allowing the collection of eggs or squabs and maintenance.

Colombier at Manoir d'Ango near Dieppe
Colombier at Manoir d'Ango near Dieppe

[edit] Dovecotes of France

The French word for dovecote is pigeonnier or colombier. In some French provinces, especially Normandy, France, the dovecotes were built of wood in a very stylized way. Stone was the other popular building material for these old dovecotes. These stone structures were usually built in circular, square and occasionally octagonal form.

Some of the medieval French abbeys had very large stone dovecotes on their grounds.

In Brittany, France, the dovecote was sometimes built directly into the upper walls of the farmhouse or manor house.[3] In rare cases, it was built into the upper gallery of the lookout tower (for example at the Toul-an-Gollet manor in Plesidy, Brittany).[4] These types of dovecotes are called tour-fuie in French.

[edit] Dovecotes of the United Kingdom

Early purpose-built doocots in Scotland are of a "beehive" shape, circular in plan and tapering up to a domed roof with a circular opening at the top. In the late 16th century they were superseded by the "lectern" type, rectangular with a monopitch roof sloping fairly steeply in a suitable direction.[5] Phantassie Doocot is an unusual example of the beehive type topped with a monopitch roof, and Finavon Doocot of the lectern type is the largest doocot in Scotland, with 2,400 nesting boxes. Doocots were built well into the 18th century in increasingly decorative forms, then the need for them died out though some continued to be incorporated into farm buildings as ornamental features. However the 20th century saw a revival of doocot construction by pigeon fanciers, and dramatic towers clad in black or green painted corrugated iron can still be found on wasteland near housing estates in Glasgow and Edinburgh.[6][7]

The Welsh name colomendy has itself become a place name.

The Romans may have introduced dovecotes columbaria to Britain -- pigeon holes have been found in Roman ruins at Caerwent. However it is believed that doves were not commonly kept there until after the Norman invasion.

[edit] Dovecotes of Belgium

An old Dovecote in Doorn, The Netherlands
An old Dovecote in Doorn, The Netherlands

Dovecotes in Belgium are mostly associated with pigeon racing. They have special features such as trap doors which allow pigeons to fly in, but not out.

[edit] Dovecotes of Transylvania

The Szekely people of Transylvania incorporate a dovecote into the design of their famous gates. These intricately carved wooden structures feature a large arch with a slatted door, which is meant to admit drivers of carriages and wagons (although today the visitors are probably driving cars and trucks), and smaller arch with a similar door for pedestrians. Across the top of the gate is a dovecote with 6-12 or more pigeonholes and a roof of wooden shingles or tiles. Picture on web

[edit] Dovecotes of North America

In the U.S. an alternative English name for dovecotes is derived from the French: pigeonaire. This word is more common than "dovecote" in Louisiana and other areas with heavy Francophonic heritage.

[edit] Gallery

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Doocot Interior 1 photo - Duncan Smith photos
  2. ^ Spandl,Klara, British Archaeology, London: Exploring the round houses of doves, Issue no 35, June 1998, ISSN 1357-4442
  3. ^ Les façades à boulins
  4. ^ Les tours-fuies: manoir de Toul-an-Gollet
  5. ^ Doocots in Scotland
  6. ^ Foo’s yer doos – aye pickin?
  7. ^ hiddenglasgow: doocots (dookits).
  8. ^ Stoddart, John (1800), Remarks on local Scenery and Manners in Scotland. Pub. William Miller, London. Facing P.206.

[edit] Further reading

  • Gordon Emery, Curious Clwyd' (includes a list of dovecotes in Flintshire, Denbighshire and Wrexham with many photo examples) ISBN 1-872265-99-5
  • Gordon Emery, Curious Clwyd 2 (1996) ISBN 1-872265-97-9
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