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y employed by the Emperor Frederic II. in Italy, and accompanied him on all his marches. They were introduced into France in the latter part of the 15th century, and frequently employed by Lewis XI., Charles VIII., and Lewis XII. The leopards were kept in a ditch of the Castle of Amboise, and the name still borne by a gate hard by, _Porte des Lions_, is supposed to be due to that circumstance. The _Moeurs et Usages du Moyen Age_ (Lacroix), from which I take the last facts, gives copy of a print by John Stradanus representing a huntsman with the leopard on his horse's crupper, like Kublai's (supra, Bk. I. ch. lxi.); Frederic II. used to say of his Cheetas, "they knew how to ride." This way of taking the Cheeta to the field had been first employed by the Khalif Yazid, son of Moawiyah. The Cheeta often appears in the pattern of silk damasks of the 13th and 14th centuries, both Asiatic and Italian. (_Ayeen Akbery_, I. 304, etc.; _Boldensel_, in _Canisii Thesaurus_, by _Basnage_, vol. IV. p. 339; _Kington's Fred. II._ I. 472, II. 156; _Bochart_, _Hierozoica_, 797; _Rock's Catalogue, passim_.) [The hunting equipment of the Sultan consisted of about thirty falconers on horseback who carried each a bird on his fist. These falconers were in front of seven horsemen, who had behind a kind of tamed tiger at times employed by His Highness for hare-hunting, notwithstanding what may be said to the contrary by those who are inclined not to believe the fact. It is a thing known by everybody here, and cannot be doubted except by those who admit that they believe nothing of foreign customs. These tigers were each covered with a brocade cloth--and their peaceful attitude, added to their ferocious and savage looks, caused at the same time astonishment and fear in the soul of those whom they looked upon. (_Journal d'Antoine Galland_, trad. par Ch. Schefer, I. p. 135.) The Cheeta (_Gueparda jubata_) was, according to Sir W. Jones, first employed in hunting antelopes by Hushing, King of Persia, 865 B.C.--H. C.] NOTE 2.--The word rendered Lynxes is _Leu cervers_ (G. Text), _Louz serviers_ of Pauthier's MS. C, though he has adopted from another _Loups_ simply, which is certainly wrong. The _Geog. Latin_ has "_Linceos i.e. lupos cerverios_." There is no doubt that the _Loup-cervier_ is the Lynx. Thus Brunetto Latini, describing the Loup-cervier, speaks of its remarkable powers of vision, and refers to its agency in the production of the preciou
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