Throughout history there have been many
famous people who loved their pets, some to the point of obsession,
and some of their choices of pet were to say the least a little
bizarre.
Lord Byron
Lord Byron’s love of pets was
immortalised in his epitaph to his beloved Newfoundland dog
Boatswain. The epitaph is inscribed on the dog’s monument at
Newstead Abbey in Nottinghamshire. The first verse reads “Near this
Spot are deposited the Remains of one who possessed Beauty without
Vanity, Strength without Insolence, Courage without Ferocity, and all
the virtues of Man without his Vices”. Boatswain died of rabies and
to the end Byron nursed him, unafraid of becoming affected himself.
At university he was not allowed to
keep a dog, so
he kept a tame bear instead. As well as numerous dogs he kept a
variety of animals including six cats, four monkeys, a crocodile,
assorted bird species, a fox and a badger.
Queen Victoria
Queen Victoria was a devoted pet lover,
and it was she who gave royal patronage to the SPCA making the RSPCA
who offer insurance for a range of pets
through More Th>n. In her lifetime she owned many dogs, but of
them all she was most devoted to a Pekingese called Looty and given
to her by Captain Hart Dunne who had taken it from the Summer Palace
in Beijing during the 1856 Opium War. As the time Pekingese were
considered by the Chinese to be sacred.
The Maharaja of Junagadh
India’s last
Maharaja of Junagadh loved dogs, in fact he was truly obsessed with
them. He had 800, and each one had its own room and butler. Often he
would dress them in evening suits and his servants would drive then
around the estate in rickshaws. He even organised a wedding between a
Bobby, a golden retriever, and one of his hounds, lavishing £22,000
on the ceremony (in todays money around £1 million).
Queen Elizabeth II
Queen Elizabeth is a pet lover who is
particularly fond of Corgis. Since her coronation she has owned 30 of
them. As you might expect they have received special treatment. The
Queen Mother, who also kept corgis, insisted that they each had their
own basket and meals selected by veterinary experts served in their
own special dishes.
Margaret Thatcher, John Major, Tony
Blair and Humphrey
We will finish with a slightly
different slant, three Prime Ministers and a cat called Humphrey.
Humphrey was the official mouse killer at 10 Downing Street from
October 1989 until November 1997. Humphrey enjoyed a good
relationship with both Margaret Thatcher, John Major, but it wasn’t
to be the case with Cherie Blair who considered Humphrey to be
unhygienic. It is alleged that she had him evicted though by all
accounts to a good home where he lived
happily until his death in March 2006.