Victorian Times is back!

Free monthly E-magazine
Find Out More
Sign up today!


   

Explore over 12,000 Victorian articles
BY TOPIC / BY MAGAZINE

Discover thousands of Victorian images in our CLIP ART section!

Search
VictorianVoices.net:



America
America - Regional
Architecture
Britain
Business
Children
Christmas
Civil War
Cooking
Crafts
Education
Etiquette & Entertaining
Fashion
FASHION IMAGES
Folklore
Garden
Health
History
Holidays
Home
Inventions
Issues
Life
London
Military
Music
Native Americans
Nature
Objects
People
Pets
Recreation
Royalty
Science & Technology
Servants
Sports
Statistics
Transportation
Women
Work
World

VICTORIAN FICTION COLLECTION

Welcome
HOMEABOUTSTORECLIP ARTCONTACT


Just in Time for the Holidays:
Check Out Our
Victorian Christmas Cards!


Animals in the Victorian World:
Animal Behavior Observations & Anecdotes

Home > Victorian Pets & Domestic Animals > Animal Behavior > Observations & Anecdotes

The Victorians, like ourselves, perceived many parallels between animal behavior and human behavior. Many observors felt that animals operated with a set of morals not dissimilar to those of man. Naturalists observed how animals interacted with one another, with other species, and also with humans. These observations have led to both scientific discussions of animal behaviors and more general observational anecdotes. The articles below often address similarities of behaviors in wild and domestic animals.

Strange Friendships Among Animals (Little Folks, 1878)

Can Animals Talk? by W. Harris (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1880)

How Many Senses Have Animals? by W. Harris (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1882)

Anecdotes of Unselfish Animals, by James Manson (Little Folks, 1883)

Over the Kaveri (Girl's Own Paper, 1888)
An interesting account of elephant behavior.

Expression in Animals, by Alexander Japp (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1892)

Some Animal Thieves, by Alexander Japp (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1892)
A look at some exceptional and ingenious thefts perpetrated within the animal kingdom.

Animal Courtesies, by Alexander Japp (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1893)
Some lovely anecdotes of the "true courtesies" shown by animals to one another, both within and between species.

Animal Humour, by Alexander Japp (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1893)
On the sense of humour shared by many species -- and how some animals have indulged it.

Animal Jealousies, by Alexander Japp (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1893)
"The most striking developments of jealousy are to be found among the animals brought most closely into contact with man."

Animal Playfulness, by Alexander Japp (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1893)

Animal Trials by Jury, by Alexander Japp (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1893)
Cases in which animals take on the roles of judge and jury to settle wrongs done to them.

Can Animals Count? by Alexander Japp (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1894)

Animals as Bargain-Makers, by Alexander Japp (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1894)
Animals know a bargain (or lack of one) when they see one!

Animals as Beggars, by Alexander Japp (Cassell's Family Magazine, 1895)

Animal Friendships, by Albert H. Broadwell (The Strand, 1899A)
The dog and the duck, the kangaroo and its canine mates, the cat who raised a litter of rabbits, the cow and her piglets, and a host of other unusual cross-species relationships.
Visit Our Victorian Shop
for:


Books


Coloring Books


Beautiful Spiral Journals


Holiday Greeting Cards

Find out more about the magazines used on this site
PDF files on this site are best viewed with Adobe Reader 9.0 or later. Download Acrobat Reader free.
Copyright © 2024 by Moira Allen. All rights reserved.
Please read our Privacy Statement.