James was a popular, fun-loving king with many interests. Many Black Moors were present at his court. Some worked as servants or possibly slaves, but others seem to have been invited guests or musicians. We know that he courted Margaret with lute and clavichord recitals and took her out hunting and playing sports. After their marriage, the king's Lord High Treasurer's accounts provide numerous entries to show how much he enjoyed lively entertainment, employing foreign minstrels from Italy and elsewhere.
King James was generous to all kinds of people, including Black Moors, as the following entries from the Treasurer's accounts demonstrate:.
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Back Transparency Code Tenders. Back Rangers areas Planners areas. In a wider ecological sense, it consists of an uncultivated highland tract characterized by high rainfall, acidic soil, and low, scrubby vegetation.
There is uncertainty about how many moors were created by human activity. Oliver Rackham writes that pollen analysis shows that some moorland, such as in the islands and extreme north of Scotland, are clearly natural, never having had trees, whereas much of the Pennine moorland area was forested in Mesolithic times. So-called blackamoors, or Black Moors, were Black servants, originally enslaved North Africans, who worked in wealthy European households from the 15thth centuries.
Ireland was left with very few native tree species following the Ice Age and a changing climate. Moor, in English usage, a Moroccan or, formerly, a member of the Muslim population of al-Andalus, now Spain and Portugal. Skip to content Contents. It is widespread across the uplands of Northern Ireland, northern England, Scotland. Estimates vary, but this is an extensive habitat of one or more million hectares. The bleak, windswept landscape of moorland can seem quite sparsely populated with wildlife.
However, the cheery song of skylarks is ubiquitous, as is that of the meadow pipit, although the haunting cries of waders such as golden plover, curlew and lapwing are heard less often than in the past. Look for ring ouzel around rocky crags and gullies, red grouse in open heather and flocks of twite on moorland fringes. Merlin, hen harrier and short-eared owl may also be seen, although birds of prey are still illegally persecuted around some shooting estates. Easily identified in winter by its white coat, mountain hare is a native of moorland in the Highlands and was introduced to the Peak District.
On shady north or east facing slopes in the north-west of Scotland, look out for mats of deeply coloured bog-mosses and tiny filmy ferns. Known as the northern hepatic mat, this community can include rare liverworts. The invertebrate fauna of moorland tends to reflect its structural diversity, and can be quite rich.
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