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A Shadow Above

The Fall and Rise of the Raven

A Shadow Above cover

A Shadow Above

The Fall and Rise of the Raven

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Description

A Shadow Above chronicles the return of the raven and the people who have made that comeback possible.

For centuries, the raven Corvus Corax has stalked us in life and in death. Excavations of Bronze Age settlements in Britain have revealed raven bones mingled with human remains. The Viking and Norman warriors that stormed these shores did so sporting ravens on their shields and banners. By the 15th century the service the birds provided scavenging and picking clean bodies on the streets of British cities led to their protection, under the first-ever piece of nature conservation legislation.

Yet by the 1700s this relationship between humans and the raven had soured. The birds came to be regarded as vermin--representative of something deeper and more visceral--and were driven out of towns and cities with a hatred that moved into savagery. By the close of the 19th century, ravens clung on only in the furthest outposts of the United Kingdom--the southwest, west Wales, and the Scottish uplands--and this remained the case throughout most of the last century, but the past decade has witnessed a remarkable comeback. Raven numbers have increased by 134 percent since the turn of the millennium and there are now well over 12,000 breeding pairs across the country, with these moving ever closer to human settlements.

The history of this bird embodies our best and worst impulses, and symbolizes our deepest fears. Ravens became ingrained in our culture as omens of death, and we projected our own deepest fears on to them.

Joe Shute's book chronicles the return of the raven, and the people who have made that comeback possible. In it, he travels to every corner of the UK, meeting those who have spent the past ten years recording every sound and sighting, and showing why these birds reflect and provoke our innermost feelings.

His interviews will range from the descendants of the Vikings on Orkney to those who monitor the White Cliffs of Dover, where ravens have started breeding for the first time since the Victorian era, to the burgeoning raven roosts of Anglesey. Joe meets biologists studying the vast intellect of the birds which have proved how they mimic human speech--and interactions--and the city dwellers who never imagined the sight of ravens in residential streets could ever be possible in their lifetimes. He also spends time with upland sheep farmers still struggling to come to terms with this uneasy relationship, and asks why we drove this bird to near extinction in the first place.

Table of Contents

Prologue
Chapter 1: Coming in from the Cliffs
Chapter 2: Bird of Omen
Chapter 3: Ravens and the City
Chapter 4: Speaking with Ravens
Chapter 5: Ravens and the Forest
Chapter 6: Bird of War
Chapter 7: The Viking Survivors
Chapter 8: A Night in a Raven Roost
Chapter 9: Ravens in Quarries
Chapter 10: Hunting Ravens
Chapter 11: Living with Ravens

Chapter 12: The Ravens in the Tower
Further Reading
Acknowledgements
Index

Product details

Published Apr 10 2018
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 272
ISBN 9781472940285
Imprint Bloomsbury Natural History
Illustrations 12 black and white illustrations
Dimensions 9 x 5 inches
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Joe Shute

Joe Shute is an author and journalist with a passi…

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