354 HUNTING. 



APPENDIX D. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF HUNTING AND HUNTERS. 1 



Art de Venerie le quel Maistre Guillaume Twici venour le Roy 

 cTAngleterre fist en son temps per Aprandre autres. This is 

 the manuscript mentioned by Strutt in his Sports and Pastimes 

 as the earliest known to exist on the subject. The King of 

 England was Edward II., so the manuscript must have been 

 written between 1307 and 1327. See Chap. I. 



Le Art de Venerie, en MSS. Phillipps, no. 8336. Edited by Sir 

 T. Phillipps. Middle Hill, 4to., 1844. Privately printed. Ap- 

 parently another copy of the same work. 



The Art of Hunting, by W. T., huntsman to King Edward II. 

 With preface, translation, notes, and illustrations, by H. Dryden. 

 Daventry. Privately printed, 1843, 4to- 



The Maister of the Game, a manuscript attributed to Edward de 

 Langley, Duke of York, son of Edward III. See Chap. I. 



The Bokys of Haukyng and Huntyng, and also of Cootarmuris, 

 commonly called The Boke of S, Albans, St. Albans, 1481, fol. 

 See Chap. I. 



The Treatises of Hawking, Hunting, Coat-armour, Fishing, and 

 Biasing of Arms. Edited by Joseph Haslewood, printed by 

 Wynkyn de Worde. Westminster, 1486, fol. Another edition of 

 the above. 



Treatyses perteynge to Hawkynge, Huniynge, and Fishy nge with an 

 Angle. London, 1496. Another edition. A facsimile of The 

 Boke was published in 1881 under the supervision of Mr. William 

 Blades. 



1 Merely technical books, or books which have no special reference, among 

 other things, to hunting in any of its branches, are not included in this cata- 

 logue : e.g. general books on the horse, or horsemanship. The date given is 

 always, where possible, that of the first edition. 



