Species | African elephant |
---|---|
Sex | female |
Born | c. 1664 |
Died | 1681 Royal Menagerie of Versailles |
Resting place | Royal Menagerie of Versailles |
Owner | Louis XIV |
Louis XIV's elephant [1] (born around 1664 and died in 1681 at the Château de Versailles) was a gift from the King of Portugal to Louis XIV, King of France. It is the only African elephant recorded in Europe between 1483 and 1862. [2]
A diplomatic gift from Portugal in 1668, this elephant was a female from the Congo. [notes 1] The elephant, housed in the Royal Menagerie of Versailles, died 13 years later in 1681. It is known that she was fed daily with 80 pounds of bread, 12 litres of wine, a large portion of vegetable soup with bread and rice, and grass at will. In the last year of her life, she suffered muscle loss and had to be lifted onto her feet with a crane. [3]
After her death in 1681, the elephant was dissected by Claude Perrault. The results of the analysis were not published until 1734. [4]
The skeleton is now on display at the National Museum of Natural History, France, in the Galerie d'Anatomie comparée. [5]
Species | African elephant |
---|---|
Sex | female |
Born | c. 1664 |
Died | 1681 Royal Menagerie of Versailles |
Resting place | Royal Menagerie of Versailles |
Owner | Louis XIV |
Louis XIV's elephant [1] (born around 1664 and died in 1681 at the Château de Versailles) was a gift from the King of Portugal to Louis XIV, King of France. It is the only African elephant recorded in Europe between 1483 and 1862. [2]
A diplomatic gift from Portugal in 1668, this elephant was a female from the Congo. [notes 1] The elephant, housed in the Royal Menagerie of Versailles, died 13 years later in 1681. It is known that she was fed daily with 80 pounds of bread, 12 litres of wine, a large portion of vegetable soup with bread and rice, and grass at will. In the last year of her life, she suffered muscle loss and had to be lifted onto her feet with a crane. [3]
After her death in 1681, the elephant was dissected by Claude Perrault. The results of the analysis were not published until 1734. [4]
The skeleton is now on display at the National Museum of Natural History, France, in the Galerie d'Anatomie comparée. [5]