The Rest Is History - 426. History's Greatest Monkeys
Episode Date: March 7, 2024Man in his arrogance thinks himself a great work, worthy the interposition of a deity. More humble, and I believe truer, to consider him created from animals. A military grave from the 5th century BC ...was found to contain something extraordinary; a macaque monkey dressed as a roman legionary. Did he fight alongside his human fellows, or merely serve as their mascot? Whatever the case, it demonstrates the role of monkeys and chimps throughout human history. From antiquity, when to possess a monkey signified status, to the the east where they symbolised corruption and vice, to the fighting pits of regency London where the ape Jacco Macacco had fortunes lost and won on his violent exploits. So too the monkey accused of treason during the Napoleonic Wars, the noble Corporal Jackie, a South African baboon who nursed injured human soldiers during WWII, and Jenny; the orangutan who in her commonality with man influenced Darwin's theory of evolution. Less earnest but just as dazzling was the role of monkeys and chips in art and culture. From starring roles on television amidst the glitz and glamor of Hollywood, to the diva-like personalities of Elvis’ erratic Scatter and Michael Jackson’s infamous Bubbles. Join Dominic and Tom as they reveal history’s greatest apes, orangutans and monkeys, and the extraordinary lives they lead. From Roman legionaries, war veterans and train conductors, to superstars, football mascots and artists, these remarkable creatures have featured in every corner of human life, imitating us, befriending us and even influencing us. *The Rest Is History LIVE in 2024* Tom and Dominic are back onstage this summer, at Hampton Court Palace in London! Buy your tickets here: therestishistory.com Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Producer: Theo Young-Smith Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Thank you for listening to The Rest Is History. For weekly bonus episodes,
ad-free listening, early access to series, and membership of our much-loved chat community,
go to therestishistory.com and join the club. That is therestishistory.com. For my own part, I would as soon be descended from that heroic little monkey
who braved his dreaded enemy in order to save the life of his keeper,
or from that old baboon who, descending from the mountains,
carried away in triumph his young comrade from a crowd of astonished dogs,
as from a savage who delights to torture his enemies,
offers up bloody sacrifices,
practices infanticide without remorse,
treats his wives like slaves,
knows no decency,
and is haunted by the grossest superstitions.
So that, Dominic, was Charles Darwin, I think friend of the show.
He sounds very miserable in that reading, Tom. Darwin, I think friend of the show.
He sounds very miserable in that reading, Tom. God, he sounds very downbeat and hangdog. He's not. He's sticking up for monkeys and for apes. And I should just add that that was in
The Descent of Man, which of course is the book in which he famously points out that man too is
an ape. And so there were lots of cartoons,'t there in the 19th century which portrayed Darwin as either
a monkey or an ape.
And we should point out, shouldn't we, at the head
of this show, which we have titled
History's Greatest Monkeys, that
we are also bundling apes
into the discussion and that monkeys and apes
are not the same thing. Well this is
the thing Tom, this hangs over this whole story.
So Sam Brock Jr. said to me before I
started that if I introduce it I should say that i was delighted that we were being joined today by a
top baboon tom holland but i can't do that joke now but i've done it anyway no sorry but this issue
see we've chosen the greatest primates in history most interesting and colorful primates in history
but but not man not man tom and also some of my choices i'm not sure they are monkeys
because a baboon is a monkey is it a baboon is a monkey no baboon is an ape oh no so you can tell
basically monkeys have tails and apes don't yeah and apes have kind of broader chests and they can
swing through trees and they tend to be a little bit cleverer okay so obviously humans
have broad chests very smart yeah swing through trees yeah all the time and also i mean if you
find yourself with a creature that looks like either a monkey or an ape and it's dead you can
dissect it and see if it's got an appendix or not and if it has an appendix then it's an ape
and if it doesn't then it's a monkey a monkey does not have an appendix. No. Interesting. The rest is primatology.
And so a chimpanzee is an ape?
It's an ape.
Yes.
A lemur, however, is a monkey.
Or is that just a lemur?
It's got a tail.
Right.
A macaque?
A macaque is a monkey.
Yeah.
Hold on.
Is a lemur?
I don't know.
Isn't a lemur a lemur?
Well, this is the thing.
We should have prepared this before we started broadcasting. We're a history podcast. We're not a lemur a lemur? Well, this is the thing. We should have prepared this before we started broadcasting.
We're a history podcast.
We're not a lemur podcast.
So anyway, human beings and monkeys have obviously interacted from the dawn of time, haven't they?
And people have always looked into the soul of monkeys and apes and seen themselves looking back.
Can you see yourself looking back from a soul?
Maybe you can.
So lemurs are primates.
Oh, you've been looking that up all this time.
An order that includes monkeys, apes, and humans. So I don't think they are monkeys. Monkeys, apes, and humans. Buturs are primates oh you've been looking that up all this time an order that includes monkeys apes and humans
so I don't think
they are monkeys
monkeys apes and humans
but they are primates
you see that thing
that you just quoted
distinguishes between
an ape and a human
yeah
but a human is an ape
I know
it's so complicated
this is why I was never
you know
zoology
it's very complicated
we've done some
complicated subjects
on the rest of this
but none is
so we've got a whoop
or a flange
a flange
of top historical monkeys and Tom I believe you're going to none as so we've got a whoop or a flange a flange of top
historical monkeys and tom i believe you're going to kick us off you've got a brilliant monkey or
have you well let's find out so the thing is and i think that this will be true of all the monkeys
or apes that we're looking at over the course of this show humans have been fascinated by them
because they are like us and so therefore even more than dogs or cats or whatever, they can be adopted and kind of given almost human roles.
And so I want to begin with, it is a macaque, which we've already mentioned as being a monkey, although it's better known in Europe as a Barbary ape.
It's not an ape, but it's that kind of monkey that's indigenous to North Africa, so land of the Berbers.
But probably the most famous one is actually not in north africa but in gibraltar so the gibraltar apes and it's said that if they leave then gibraltar will fall
but they apparently were not indigenous to gibraltar okay because no classical author
mentions them so they brought over by the moors maybe tom yeah maybe but what we do know is that
there were macaques to be found in the Roman Empire right the way through. And the most
intriguing one, this is my first top monkey. This is a monkey whose remains were uncovered in 2001
in a pass through the Pyrenees. So just inside Spain, but right on the border with France. It's
the town of Livia or Iulia Libica, as it was called by the Romans. And this is a grave. It had been dug out and this monkey had been laid to rest
in it. It was found near to a great building, great public building dating back to the kind
of the heyday of the Roman empire. But this had been repurposed in late antiquity. And there was
this monkey, probably they've done tests on it about five and a half years old. So it had died
early and its teeth
were in a fairly shocking state had very bad dentistry so probably it hadn't died of old age
it hadn't had the right diet basically right and it's been dated to the end of the fifth century
okay so in the absolute dying days of roman power in the west and it's been buried with various grave goods
so food in pots kind of various ornaments but above all military kit so belt buckles okay and
various kind of iron plates suggesting that this was armor and belt buckles are particularly
associated with barbarian burials because the romans didn't bury people with funerary goods.
Right.
So the question is...
Is he a Visigothic?
Is this a Roman macaque?
Or a Visigothic macaque?
So hold on,
it's in the Pyrenees.
Is it in the Pyrenees?
It's in the Pyrenees, yeah.
Is that the Vandals,
the Visigoths?
It could be either.
Yeah.
But it's definitely
under Roman control.
So it's either barbarian
kind of foederati,
so people employed
by the Romans,
or Romans who, one might say, are aping barbarian style.
Very good.
Very good, I like it.
Back of the net.
So, Tom, is the implication of this
that the Empire's got a manpower problem?
They're recruiting monkeys.
The Empire's recruiting macaques.
Is that what's happening?
I think it's obviously a kind of mascot for the regiment. Right, yeah. And clearly much loved. Well, hold on. Those are expensive stuff,
right? The belt buckle and all that. I mean. Yeah. Well, I think he's been enrolled in the
unit, I would guess. Right. A bit like Wojcik. The bear. The bear who became a corporal in the
Polish army in the second world war. Yeah. So I think a little bit like that perhaps. Yeah. So
there are other examples of this as well. So the idea of giving macaques, you know, they're treated as pets throughout the history
of the Roman Empire.
Giving them formal burial is something that you can trace throughout military bases.
So buried monkeys have been found in forts in Gaul, in Germany.
There's even one being found in Yorkshire.
So it's an exciting fact.
That's nice.
Yeah.
But they were also kept as pets. So it wasn't
necessarily military. So Marshall makes a joke about a guy having an ape that looks like an ape.
What kind of ape that was, I don't know. The remains of a baby macaque were found in Pompeii.
Oh, wow. In Pompeii.
So another one was found in an acropolis outside Poitiers. So it's all going on. And I reckon you could make a case that when the
empire fell, the ownership of macaques, of Barbary apes, were seen as markers of Romanitas,
of kind of Roman class, of the sophistication of the vanished empire. And you can see this in the
opposite ends of the empire. So in Britain, quite a lot of macaques have been found
in kind of, let's call them dark ages settlements, because we don't know anything about how they got
there, what they were doing there. So there's one in Roxeter.
Oh, Shropshire.
Abandoned Roman town, very near you.
Yes.
Again, it's kind of been buried there. And it suggests, I think, that it's a little bit like
the wine going to Tintagel, that kind of thing.
It's people in Britain, warlords there, wanting to lay claim to a touch of Roman class. But the
other example of this, I think, is at the opposite end of the empire in Syria, after the collapse of
Roman power there and the takeover by the Arabs and the Umayyads come to power. Muawiyah, the first Umayyad, and then his son,
Yazid, who is incredibly unpopular with Muslims today. He has a very bad reputation. So the Shia
hate him because he is the guy who kills Hussein, who is the grandson of Muhammad at the Battle of
Karbala in Iraq. And Sunni Muslims hate him because he is seen as drunkard. He burns down the Kaaba.
He does all kinds of terrible things.
And so he's seen as a very bad caliph after the four righteously guided caliphs who kick everything off, according to tradition.
And the thing that sums up how bad a caliph Yazid is, is that he has a monkey, a favorite monkey, who he calls Abu Qais.
And he would enter him into horse races.
Horse races.
Yeah, although Abu Qais would ride a donkey.
As a jockey, presumably.
As a jockey.
So he's riding a donkey and all the other guys are riding horses.
Yeah.
And when he dies, it's said that Yazid ordered everyone in Syria to mourn him.
And again, this thing that the monkey should be given a proper formal burial.
So he's kind of wrapped up in a white shroud and laid to rest.
And there is a hadith, which is in the great collection of hadiths by Tabiri, where there
is this ringing statement, cursed be the man who becomes our caliph while keeping as his
closest friend, a monkey. so it's less than for
all of us that's on my thing i really think there is crikey yes crikey and people who listen to our
episode on baghdad may remember that zubaydah the favorite wife of harun al-rashid also had a monkey
and so i think it's possible that the reason why Muslim scholars are so hostile to monkeys
is perhaps because it has a hint of the Roman about it.
Oh, right.
Nice.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
Seems exotic and sort of decadent.
Maybe.
Is that it?
Kind of Caesarist.
Yes, exactly.
Because the Emmaids were accused again of aping the Caesars, of wanting to be like a Caesar.
Very good, Tom.
Very good.
You can never employ that pun too much, I think, in this episode.
It's the Mojus, isn't it, really?
It is the Mojus, exactly. All right. That's good. Monkeys in antiquity. Would you like
a more modern monkey?
Yeah, I would. Particularly because I know what you've got.
So we're both shows our own monkeys, and I thought I'd go in quite big, come out fighting
as it were, Tom. So we are in London in the 1820s, and this is the life and career of a monkey called Jacko Macaco.
It's an excellent name.
And he's a macaque, is he?
Well, we're going to come to this, Tom.
There's a lot of mysteries about Jacko Macaco,
which I think goes to the heart of being a historian,
because his story ultimately is one about the unknowability of the past.
So to get into his story,
we could turn, for example,
to Pictures of Sporting Life and Character,
1860 by William Pitt Lennox.
And he has a section in this.
So in this book,
it's all about sort of the days of the Regency and the bull baiting and cock fighting
and stuff that went on.
And Giacomo Cacco is in this book.
And William Pitt Lennox says,
you know, like a lot of top sportsmen,
he started at the bottom
and worked his way up.
So he fought in the Chick Lane
and Tottenham Court Road pits,
the fighting pits.
Are these quite kind of low grade?
This is sort of National League,
Vanarama League,
or whatever it's called.
There he was known as the Hoxton Ape.
And then he fought his way up
and he was finally sold
to the Real Madrid
or the Wolverhampton Wanderers,
a fight sort of entrepreneurs, who was a guy called Charles Aistrop,
who ran the Westminster Pit, which I will explain in due course.
And this is the kind of the Molyneux of...
Exactly so, Tom.
Now, Charles Aistrop actually told a different story himself.
So this is the unknowability of the past.
Charles Aistrop said that Jacko had once belonged to a sailor
and they'd had a fight, Jacko and the sailor, about a saucer of milk.
Jacko had bitten off three of the sailor's fingers.
The sailor sold him to a silversmith from Hoxton called Carter.
Under fool's pretence, he said he was very meek and mild.
Carter had to buy himself a sheet of iron to use as a shield
when he approached Jacko, because jacko was so fierce and eventually
he tired of being attacked by his own pet he took him to a field and set a dog on him to try and get
rid of him but jacko defeated the dog that's the obvious way to get rid of a monkey isn't it and a
second dog that is so regency and so carter thought aha and so he sold him to the westminster
pit now just before we get onto the westminster pit a quick reflection about jacko and his his name and his appearance so his name gonna be a
lot of jackos and jacks in this podcast i have to say i think i've got about six of them and i've
got one the sense is that this is probably a generic name at the time first of all jacko
specifically was probably a generic name for a lemur. So lemurs were called Jakko.
But also there's a slight sense of he's come from the sea,
and people from the sea, of course, were called Jaktars.
And as for Makako, Makako was a generic name at the time applied particularly to macaques, but also to monkeys more broadly.
Cockneys in the east end of London would call any monkey Makorka.
Indeed, there's some evidence
that Jacko Macaco
may actually just be a generic name
that you'd call any monkey
Jacko Macaco
but it wasn't that he became so famous
that
we don't know
we just don't know
this is the unknowability isn't it
it's the unknowability exactly
but do we know what he is
is he a macaque
well
some people say a baboon
some people say a mandrill
or a gibbon
a mandrill but presumably not gibbon with a mandrill.
But presumably not a bonobo.
No, because they're very peaceful.
Yeah.
He was so well known.
He was the Cristiano Ronaldo of his day.
So he's so well known that there are etchings of him in the British Museum.
There's one by Thomas Landseer, which shows him with a muzzle and pointed ears.
And people think that therefore he's probably a rhesus macaque.
Anyway, so he's gone to the Westminster Pit.
Now, to give you a sense of the Westminster Pit, it's very near the palace of westminster in london so it has the parliament
it was at its peak of popularity when hundreds if not thousands of people would come to watch
these bouts in the 1820s it would have badger baiting monkey baiting bull baiting its biggest
star was as that's a chap he's actually a dog called Billy
Billy was famous
for killing rats Tom
in October 1822
he killed 100 rats
in 6 minutes
and 25 seconds
100 rats
wow
think of that
goodness
so what do they just
kind of keep rats in cages
and let them out
well there was controversy
some people said
actually a lot of the rats
had been poisoned beforehand
because of course
there's huge amounts of money changing hands and all this. Of course, of course. Yeah. So betting
syndicates and things. It's betting syndicates. So Jacko is going into this very high pressure
environment. When he is billed, when people say they've got the Hoxton Ape, big star, rising star,
better than Billy, quite a lot of the sort of the swells, know dandies and people would come to watch so bigger
and bigger money there are adverts preserved from the time this one here jacko was open to
challenges from any dog in england for 100 guineas so he's taking on dogs does he take on the dog
he's killed all the rats no i don't think he does that's a different class differently yeah
differently no but he will take on dogs twice his weight. So Jacko is about 12 pounds in weight.
That's about five and a half kilograms.
And he will fight a dog of up to double that.
Now we know about his style because Lennox describes it in his book.
His mode of attack, he says, was first to present his back or neck to the dog
and to shift and tumble about until he could lay hold on the arm or chest
when he ascended to the windpipe, clawing and biting away,
which usually occupied him
for a minute and a half
and it said
after every bout
the monkey exhibited
a frightful appearance
being deluged with blood
but it was that
of his opponent alone
so he's got a
he's got a good ring record
we think he overcame
14 different opponents
and his advert
that advert that I quoted
says of him
he has fought
some of the best dogs
of the day
including his combat with the wonderful bitch Puss of Tea Cribs His advert, that advert that I quoted, says of him, he has fought some of the best dogs of the day,
including his combat with the wonderful bitch Puss of Tea Cribs and the famed Oxford One.
We don't know who the famed Oxford One is.
Now, there is a suspicion of foul play that hangs over this.
There's a splendid fellow called George Charles Grantley Fitzharding Barkley.
He sounds a swell.
He was a Whig MP.
Tell him, he was a Whig.
And a great enthusiast for sport.
He wrote a memoir and he says in his memoir,
I believe that the dogs were injured first.
Right.
Again, to rig the matches.
Because the spectacle of a monkey killing a dog would be more dramatic and interesting to people.
Right.
And a lot of analysts, top analysts said a monkey cannot kill a dog.
A macaque will not defeat a top quality dog. This is rigged.
And so entire fortunes are being lost as a result.
Correct. So the most famous bout is the one that I alluded to there. It's the bout against Puss, who was owned by Tom Cribb.
And he's confusingly a dog. Puss is confusingly a dog. And I've actually, I have to apologize to some people because I was telling people about this last week and I had only scanned the reading
so I thought Puss was a cat.
So I've been telling people publicly
that Jack O'Macaco had a climactic bout against a cat.
Not the case.
Well, I think there's a lesson there
for any young historians listening to this.
Yes, read your sources properly.
Don't go public with your research until you've properly...
No, exactly.
So Puss belonged
to a guy called tom crib who was himself a remarkable person he was the all england boxing
champion and he was the fellow tom who defeated tom molyneux in oxfordshire in 35 rounds in 1810
the famous fight held in the middle of nowhere against a former american slave was that in
hapshire i thought it was in haps, wasn't it? Shennington Hollow.
I think there are multiple such fights,
to be honest with you.
So Puss, he belonged to Tom Cribb anyway,
who's this retired sporting star himself.
Was he now running a pub or something?
Exactly.
Now Puss is a dog that doesn't exist anymore.
He's not a bull terrier.
He's a bull and terrier,
which is a slightly different thing.
And their great fight seems to have happened in June 1821.
There was £50 at stake.
A lot of money, actually, in the early 1820s.
Yeah, fortune.
And our account comes from a guy who was the MP for Galway called Richard Martin,
who was an old Horavian, an abolitionist, and a notorious do-gooder.
But Horavians love torturing animals, don't they?
Because that's what they did instead of playing sport.
They go and torture cats.
At school, they went around beating cats to death.
Yeah.
But obviously this Richard Martin has been deeply affected by this
because he becomes, as part of being MP for Galway,
he's a passionate campaigner against cruelty to animals.
He campaigned particularly against bull baiting and cock fighting,
so much so that George IV nicknamed him Humanity Dick.
Now, he makes reference to this great fight
in the House of Commons a year later.
He's introducing a prevention of cruelty to animals bill,
and he says the Jacko Macaco Puss Fight
is the nadir of British cruelty to animals
and he says
the fight lasted
for half an hour
the dog
had its carotid artery
severed
bleeding
and Jacko's jaw
was torn off
oh god
and he
lingered for two more hours
and then died
very sad
now the guy
who owned the Westminster pit
went ballistic
when he heard this
he said this was
an absolute lie
he said actually Jacko defeated puss in two and a half minutes and Now, the guy who owned the Westminster pit went ballistic when he heard this. He said this was an absolute lie.
He said, actually, Jacko defeated Puss in two and a half minutes,
didn't kill Puss.
Puss was defeated, but lived to tell the tale.
And that Jacko actually died 15 months later of an unrelated illness.
And Mr. Aistrop from the Westminster pit said, listen, I've had Jacko stuffed.
He is on the mantelpiece of a Mr. Shaw of Mitcham Common.
And this would not be possible if his jaw had been ripped off.
I mean, that's something that it would be nice to see, wouldn't it?
Is famous stars being stuffed after their death.
And donated to the grounds that they adorned.
Yeah.
I would love to see that, Tom.
Wouldn't you like that?
Would you like to see Jack Grealish at Villa Park?
We'd all love to see Grealish back at Villa Park.
Yes.
Yes.
But a stuffed zombie.
Yeah.
Well, Ian Botham, of course, whose nickname was Guy the Gorilla.
Right.
You'd like to see him stuffed and put up in Taunton.
Definitely.
So anyway, that is the story of Jack O'Macaco.
And we don't have much insight into his inner life, I think it's fair to say, Tom.
But I think he's a lovely window into the sporting world of George IV England. Yeah.
I think in the episode we did on public schools, we talked about how organisations were set up to stop cruelty to animals before cruelty to children.
Yeah.
And I have to say that hearing that, you can kind of see why.
Well, Humanity Dick was an absolutely key figure in setting up the Society for the Protection of Cruelty to Animals, later the Royal Society, but not at the time because George IV thought this was...
George IV was contemptuous.
He thought it was wokery. He thought it was madness.
Woke tosh.
Total woke tosh. Who wouldn't want to see a dog killing a hundred rats?
Well, I'm a big fan of Humanity Dick.
Okay.
Bless him. So is that it? Is that Jack and Macaco? That's the story of Jack and Macaco. And I think the lesson, Tom, is the mysteriousness of the past.
Because we just don't know where he came from, what kind of monkey he was, if he was indeed a monkey.
How he died.
How he died.
I mean, there were even that guy with six names who was the son of the Earl of Barclay.
He said the fight with Puss was a complete con.
In his memoirs, he says, I was looking very closely.
And before the fight began tom crib the
former boxer was cradling puss's head in a mysterious way oh yeah and i believe he cut puss
before it started to make the bout last longer and maybe to win a little bit of money yeah and
so on and so forth our executive producer jack davenport used to work as a sports journalist
wasn't he yeah he worked in the boxing world.
So he may have insights into all this that we just can't even pretend to have.
Well, we should ask him and maybe mention it on the bonus.
Yeah.
But I think, I mean, what that again suggests rather like the thing on the monkeys with the Roman garrison is the ability to identify with monkeys and to admire them and perhaps even, Dominic, to love them.
Yeah. So it's obviously a branch of the entertainment industry,'t it sport it is but so is cinema you've got a cinematic
monkey so i just thought it would be interesting to look at the role that monkeys and particularly
apes and specifically chimpanzees have played in hollywood and also in tv because a bit like
rintintin the dog who we mentioned in History's Top Dogs,
who became a big Hollywood star, chimpanzees were featuring in Hollywood shorts right from
the beginning. So in 1916, there was a famous Hollywood chimpanzee couple called Napoleon and
Sally who starred in a whole number of shorts. And there was one that came out in 1916 where
Napoleon is called up to the army and Sally follows him and there was one that came out in 1916 where napoleon is called up to the army
and sally follows him and there's a big battle and it all ends happily and i haven't actually
seen this film but the account i read of it it said yeah it ends with sally eating a banana
oh so that's kind of cheery but there's also on a darker note and again this is about the
unknowability of the past there's an orangutan so this is the first mention of an
orangutan who is he's called pierre and he is a film star in austria so the viennese film industry
no um he'd been trained for motion picture work according to the various newspapers that cover
this and he i'm quoting reportedly nursed a grudge against a brutal trainer for a long time
and when the opportunity arose that they were alone together high in a tree strangled the trainer and threw his body to the ground what was the
trainer showing up in the tree i don't know dominic because i have googled and googled and
googled this and this is all that i can find and basically it's a single sentence that is reproduced
in multiple american newspapers yeah and i know nothing more about it. Oh, tantalising, Tom.
Tantalising.
Yeah.
So again, I mean,
if we have any,
maybe any Austrian listeners,
anyone in Vienna
who were au fait with
orangutan specialists.
Again, please let us know.
But of course,
there have been
some very famous stars
who have acted
opposite apes.
Clint Eastwood, of course.
Yeah, Clint Eastwood.
Yeah.
But also our old friend, Dominic. Roll Reagan. Eastwood. Yeah, but also our old friend Dominic.
Roll Reagan.
Roll Reagan.
Yeah.
So Bedtime for Bonzo,
in which he's opposite a chimp.
Bonzo was played by Peggy.
Right.
So that came out in 1951.
But the following year,
Bonzo goes to college.
Confusingly, Peggy has been replaced
and is placed by a chimpanzee
called Bonzo.
No!
What are the chances?
I spent hours trying to work out was this a coincidence
was he named after bonzo i don't know anyway crikey but dominic yeah i said they didn't just
appear in films they also appeared in tv and probably the most famous one is it was a baby
chimp called scatter and scatter appeared um in memphis on a TV channel there, a show called Scatter's World.
And it was obviously a kind of downmarket version of the Mickey Mouse Club.
So you could join the Scatter Club.
But the problem is that Scatter grows up and starts to become a little bit aggressive.
Oh, no.
And there's quite a lot of throwing of fecal matter,
which obviously I guess the children would love.
I mean, they're not going to put this out.
The parents wouldn't love it.
And so they need to find a new home.
So the guy who interestingly is a fake colonel,
he's a bogus colonel in Memphis.
So he turns to another bogus colonel in Memphis,
Colonel Tom Parker,
because he knows that Elvis is very keen on having animals and is kind of
developing a zoo in Gracelands. And so he gives Scatter to Elvis and Elvis adores Scatter. And
Scatter basically has the run of Gracelands. He's ripping down curtains. He's throwing his poo
around, all that kind of stuff. He's chasing the housemaids. If Elvis throws parties and people have sloped off to a bedroom
to get up to what they get up to,
Scatter will burst in and start throwing poo at them.
And he's an upskirter.
If a woman comes in with a skirt,
he will run up and flip the skirt up and peer up inside.
Oh my word, that's bad behaviour.
Which Elvis finds hilarious.
Right, yeah.
Yeah, it's very bad behaviour.
So Scatter is a difficult character, I think.
And so much so that in the end he vanishes from Graceland
and there are conflicting accounts about what happened.
So one says that he's banished by Elvis to a climate-controlled room
where he dies of a broken heart.
Oh, Tom.
Because he's missing the king, as you would.
That's sad, That is sad.
And another one is that
he bites a maid
and the maid then poisons him.
Crikey.
That's very Shakespearean.
So...
Yeah.
Yeah.
Great drama.
But again, Dominic,
I mean, as you said,
it's the unknowability of the past.
I mean, I guess there's a serious point
that monkeys are sufficiently interesting
that people note them
and tell stories about them.
But they're not so interesting that people trouble to actually find stories about them, but they're not so
interesting that people trouble to actually find out what genuinely happened. Do you think?
Yeah, I think that's true because a dog, you know, if a king had a dog, the dog wouldn't
even show up in the sources at all. People wouldn't think to record it. Whereas a chronicler
might say of somebody, he had a monkey, but then we wouldn't know where the monkey came from or
what happened to the monkey, would we? But Elvis' human associates, we know all about them.
I mean, everybody who's ever met him has been chronicled.
And Tom, is there a well-known star who's obsessed with Elvis
and emulates Elvis who has a monkey of his own?
There is.
And this, of course, we've talked about Jacko.
So here is another Jacko, but confusingly, this Jacko is the human.
So, of course, it's Michael Jackson.
I hadn't thought of that. Very good.
And Michael Jackson is directly inspired by the example of elvis and having scatter and so michael jackson says that
he wants to have a little baby chimp and this chimp comes from a texas research facility it's
only eight months old and michael jackson of course calls him bubbles and in 1988 when michael
jackson moves into neverland neverland
ranch so very graceland again bubbles goes with him and he sleeps in a crib in jackson's room
supposedly he wears a nappy what our american listeners would call a diaper he sits at the
dining table he comes with michael jackson into his private cinema to watch films and he sits there snacking on candy
yeah which can't be good for the diaper is it no and he becomes I think much more than Scatter
becomes a part of Elvis's image I mean Bubbles becomes a really important part of Michael
Jackson's image oh totally I don't think of Scatter when I think of Elvis but I do think of
Bubbles as an emblematic of Michael Jackson's weirdness and infantilism. Yeah, so I think Michael Jackson would be pleased about that
because I guess he was wanting to trump the king.
Yes.
So you're right that there is this kind of infantilizing thing.
So he goes to Japan and has tea with the mayor of Osaka
and takes bubbles with him.
And the three of them kind of sit there.
And the mayor of Osaka says,
well, I've never had tea with a chimpanzee before.
And he can't come to Britain because the quarantine laws won't permit it.
So that's very sad.
But I think there are all kinds of stories told about Bubbles that it's hard to know whether they're true.
And that reflects the fact that Michael Jackson's oddness is such that it kind of encouraged all stories. So there's stories that Bubbles had his own bodyguard, that Michael Jackson had taught
him to moonwalk, that Michael Jackson was doing a duet with Freddie Mercury and kept
asking Bubbles what he thought.
And Freddie Mercury was so pissed off that he stormed off.
Yeah, I think this is actually true because I think that track was subsequently released
after Freddie Mercury's death. But Bubbles a bit bit like scatter because this is what chimpanzees do
you know he grows up he becomes aggressive he gets into the whole kind of throwing poo at the
housemaids thing this running thing that the housemates in rock stars palaces hate yeah
chimpanzees basically and so eventually he has to be retired so 2003 bubbles is sent off to a pet
trainer in 2005 he is sent to a sanctuary for apes in florida where he stays to this day still
alive yeah that's nice so i looked up the site yeah the website for the center for great apes
website because you can sponsor him it's not under an alias or something no he's there as bubbles and um that all these kind of various apes and they describe them and if you
want to you can sponsor them and it says of bubbles that he will occasionally spit water or throw sand
with amazing accuracy at strangers just to see how they react yeah so he's still a bit of a funster
but bubbles caregivers consider him to be artistic gentle and shy and i think this is really sad
he often will turn his back when he sees a camera oh so yeah he's traumatized by paparazzi ruined by
yeah his experience of fame yeah that's what fame does to you tom sad story but not as sad as jack
mccack see tom you're projecting there we don't know that Jacko Macacko... But it's a possibility he had his jaw ripped
off. I mean, I know he might
not have done, but he got stuffed.
Yeah, that's all true. Our animal
rights listeners will be horrified by
this conversation. We should probably move
on before our audience completely plummets.
Join us after the break
for more exciting historical monkeys.
See you then.
I'm Marina Hyde.
And I'm Richard Osman.
And together we host The Rest Is Entertainment.
It's your weekly fix of entertainment news, reviews,
splash of showbiz gossip,
and on our Q&A we pull back the curtain on entertainment
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Hello, welcome back to our episode on history's top monkeys.
We've had a fair few, but Dominic, we've got more top monkeys.
We've got them.
Yeah, we do.
So I thought what we would do now is we're a cosmopolitan podcast.
I think we haven't done a lot of South African history on The Rest is History.
I think we should.
And I've got a couple of South African monkeys that I think are extraordinary characters, Tom.
So we mentioned in the first half that our executive producer, Jack Davenport, is called Jack.
And I've actually got two more monkeys, both called Jack.
So one is Jack the Signalman.
I'll just mention him quite briefly.
Jack the Signalman is a baboon.
Oh, brilliant to get a baboon on the show.
Yeah, great to get a baboon on the rest of his history.
He worked for the Cape Town to Port Elizabeth Railway.
When you say he worked?
In the 1880s as well.
So he belonged to a man called James Wide.
James Wide was nicknamed Jumper
because he used to jump between the railway carriages.
And one day he mistimed his
jump oh no he lost both his legs oh dear so he bought this monkey this baboon to help him as a
carer the baboon would push him around in a trolley and he taught the baboon jack how to use the
signals now according to the the periodical the railway Tom, who knew from 1908, James White, quote, trained the baboon to such perfection that he was able to sit in his cabin stuffing birds, etc.
Deep water.
While the animal, which was chained up outside, pulled all the levers and points. Now, one day, somebody saw this on the railway,
and they complained to the railway authorities.
And they sent, the Cape Town supporters of the railway sent an investigator
called George B. Howe.
And he wrote in his report,
Jack knows the signal whistle as well as I do at every one of the levers.
It was very touching to see his fondness for his master.
As I drew near, they were both sitting on the trolley,
the baboon's arms around his master's neck, the other stroking wide's face.
So it's quite a touching story.
He was officially employed by the railway.
He was paid 20 cents a day and half a bottle of beer a week.
And it is said that in nine years with the railway, he never made a single mistake.
So there's a lesson there for Britain's railways, Tom.
Yes.
So the government could just sack
everyone involved
on the railways
and bring in baboons.
Exactly.
I mean, I was wondering
how people on the trains
felt about this.
Disturbed.
This guy complained
to the authorities.
But if you're on a train
and you're approaching
a point that's operated
by a baboon,
I'd feel a bit nervous.
I mean, I don't want
to seem baboonist. No. But in a sense, Tom, aren't we always getting trains operated by a baboon i'd feel a bit nervous i mean i don't want to seem baboonist no
but in a sense tom aren't we always getting trains operated by apes i mean in a very real sense we
are yes i guess we are i mean i'm doing a podcast with a load of apes right now i mean so are you
yeah so anyway i really wanted to focus on another south african baboon because south africa is very
strong in this department and this is a chap called Corporal Jackie.
When you say chap, do you mean a baboon?
Yeah, he's a baboon.
But I'm inclusive in my language.
He lived on a farm in South Africa with a chap called Albert Marr who looked after him.
And Albert Marr was drafted in 1915,
was conscripted to go to the Great War.
And he took Jackie, his baboon, with him, and he became a mascot for the 3rd South African
Infantry Regiment, who were from the Transvaal.
Is he very like the Romans?
Very like the Romans, because he was given a cap, his own rations, he was given a paybook,
and I've got all this from the South African Military History website, the Observation
Post, so a big shout out to them.
Jackie wore his uniform with some panache
he was also known to light up a cigarette or pipe for his pals he had a sharp salute for any officer
passing him he'd stand at ease when commanded to do so placing his feet apart and hands behind his
back in the military style and at the mess table he used a knife and fork and a teacup in the proper
manner and i have to say to people if you google corporal jackie he looks hilarious
because he's just this baboon looking completely nonplussed where it's military because in planet
of the apes the soldiers of the orangutans aren't they yeah but it might be slightly similar i guess
so yes he saw a lot of action so he first saw action at the somme in 1916 he and albert mar
lived to tell the tale Then they were sent to
Egypt and Albert Maher was shot in the shoulder in Egypt. And Jackie was with him and Jackie
licked the wound while others went to get help. And he wasn't scared. He didn't run away.
No. Well, there's a terrible story coming up. So they went back to France and they were in
France in the trenches and there was a huge explosion in the trenches and some shrapnel
hit Jackie
in the leg and arm
and stretcher bearers came
and he was trying
to sort of burrow
into the ground
to escape more firing.
How awful.
He wouldn't allow himself
to be taken away
by the stretcher
but eventually they did
and the doctor was so,
you know,
he's kind of working
patching up all these people
that they bring a baboon in.
He obviously made an impression
on the doctor
because he wrote an account of it
and he said
it was a pathetic sight
the little fellow
carried by his keeper
lay moaning in pain
the man crying his eyes out
in sympathy
you must do something for him
he saved my life in Egypt
he nursed me through dysentery
the baboon was badly wounded
the left leg hanging
with shreds of muscle
another jagged wound
in his right arm
they gave him chloroform
they had a big debate will this kill him but they gave him chloroform. They had a big debate, will this kill him,
that they gave him chloroform.
He lapped up the chloroform as if it had been whiskey,
and he was well under in a remarkably short time.
It was a simple matter to amputate his leg with scissors,
and then I cleaned the wounds and dressed them as well as I could.
So Corporal Jackie has lost his leg.
It's out of the chloroform, whatever.
He wakes up.
They send them back to England to convalesce, him and Albert Marr.
He's a tremendous celebrity in England.
He marches.
He doesn't march.
He hops, presumably.
In the Lord Mayor's show, the Lord Mayor's parade, Tom.
He ends up raising money.
They go around the country raising money for the Red Cross.
People were paid half a crown each to shake Jackie by the hand.
And five shillings. If you paid five shillings,
you got to kiss him.
So people are paying this.
They raise a lot of money.
They go back to South Africa.
And again, he was present.
He hopped through another parade,
a peace parade in Church Square, Pretoria,
on the 31st of July, 1920.
He was given a medal,
and they went back to their family farm.
There's a sad coda to this story though.
Both Ma and Jackie were a bit affected by shell shock.
And actually in May,
1921,
there was a tremendous storm over the veldt of the high veldt,
Tom,
and a great crash of thunder.
And Jackie obviously thought this was the return of kind of the Germans.
He had a heart attack and died.
Oh, dear.
I was going to ask about shell shock.
Yeah.
I had not realized that baboons could get shell shock.
Well, why wouldn't they?
If other apes can get shell shock, Tom.
Yeah.
So he's a very impressive character, I think, Corporal Jackie.
Yeah.
He doesn't seem to have taken part in fighting, but he's...
Tending to the men.
He's tending to the men and keeping their spirits up.
And saluting and everything.
Yeah. And eating his rations with a knife and fork and generally behaving i think very well good well i mean i like to think there's a kind of bond between him
and the unknown macaque in the pyrenees yeah that's nice it's a nice link yeah so these have
all been very inspiring stories stories that are all about the bond between human and ape or monkey or whatever.
But my next story is a darker one. So we're in the Napoleonic Wars and we are in Hartlepool,
which is in County Durham. Tom, I know where this is going.
And the good people of Hartlepool, fishermen mostly, They look out to sea and there they observe a French ship.
A storm is brewing. The French ship gets dashed against the rocks. Everyone drowns,
except for a single survivor. And this survivor is a monkey. And again, pursuing the military
theme, or in this case, a nautical theme, the monkey is in a French uniform. So he's kind of
dressed in a Marine's uniform. And this
alarms the locals who have never seen a monkey and indeed have never seen a French person.
Well, this is the thing. How would you know?
Exactly. And so they assume that this strange creature in the military uniform,
that this is what the French look like.
Hairy.
Talking strange gibberish.
Ill-groomed.
Not speaking English. So they assume that he must be a spy.
And all the fishermen gather around on the beach
and they start interrogating the monkey.
And of course, the monkey can't answer their questions.
And this simply confirms for them that he's a spy.
Yeah, you can't take chances, Tom.
And a Frenchman.
Yeah.
And so they hang the monkey.
And from this point onwards,
the people of Hartlepool are known as monkey hangers.
Now, listeners may be wondering, is this story actually true?
Or is it invented by their near neighbours?
Don't do this, Tom.
Come on, don't do this.
Well, I mean, who knows, Dominic?
Who knows?
A very similar story is told about a number of isolated fishing communities along the
length of Britain.
So there's one in Cornwall, there's one in Scotland. I mean, same kind of thing. And there is a song that is very popular
in the music halls of Britain in the mid-19th century, sung by a guy called Ned Corvin.
Should I sing it for you? I think everybody would enjoy that, not just me.
In former times, mid-war and strife, when French invasion threatened life,
and all was armoured to the knife. The fisherman hung
the monkey. Oh, Durham, Durham, Durham, Durham, Durham, Durham, Durham, Durham, Durham. That's
nice, Fitz. Can you guess what the next line is? Is it Durham, Durham, Durham, Durham, Durham? It is
Durham, Durham, Durham, Durham, Durham, the fisherman hung the monkey. Oh, and so it goes on for quite a
while and I won't sing anymore. And I think it is a generally held theory that
actually this story emerges from the song rather than the other way around.
Oh, how interesting that is. The story was created to explain the song.
Yeah, I think the idea for the song came first.
But there is a massive twist to this story, isn't there, about Hartlepool and monkeys?
There is a massive twist because actually this monkey who gets hanged not only becomes a real character, but becomes the first ape in this episode to win political office.
Yes, indirectly I think it's fair to say.
And the story begins on the 31st of October 1999 with Hartlepool United Football Club.
Again, this kind of link between monkeys and sport, also a kind of running
theme. And the football club want a mascot and they decide, well, let's have a monkey,
this hanged monkey. And so they call the monkey Hangus. So H apostrophe, Angus, Hangus. And they
employ various people to play this mascot. And the key figure in this story, a historic figure,
is the second guy who wins the chance to play Hengist.
This is a man called Stuart Drummond, who is a local from Hartlepool.
He's studied foreign languages.
He's worked on cruise ships.
So he's a man of the world.
And he's very excited at the opportunity.
He's a big Hartlepool fan.
He dresses up as Hengus every week he gambles around
on the pitch he is twice escorted by the police out of the ground for having simulated sex oh no
once with a steward and once with an inflatable doll
and when Hartlepool are playing Chester yeah away so they're at Chester Hengus is asked to
perform the halftime lottery draw
and he gets so into his role that he pulls all the tickets out of the tumbola throws up the air
and walks away without picking a winner so very authentic yeah very authentic monkey behavior
he's really in character it's method yeah yeah and so he's tremendously popular he's probably
britain's most popular football mascot and a source of great pride, not just to the fans of Hartlepool United, but the whole city.
So when in 2002, this is when the Blair government is very keen on directly elected mayors
and Hartlepool decides that, yeah, we'll go for it. We'll have a directly elected mayor.
And so Hengist wants to run for mayor, Hengist, a.k.a. Stuart Drummond.
And he's told that he can't enter the mayoral race as Hengist.
He has to do it as Stuart Drummond.
But he campaigns dressed as the monkey the whole way through.
And he does it as a stunt.
Yeah.
It's a couple of things because it's a stunt for the football club.
But also, when Tony Blair introduced elected mayors, there was a lot of public antipathy to it, wasn't there? Because a lot of people thought, oh, it's an extra layer of government. We don't need it. It's expensive. And there was a lot of public antipathy to it wasn't there because a lot of people thought oh it's an extra layer of government we don't need it it's expensive and there was a sort of protest
against yes so the whole thing has been pushed by peter mandelson who is tony blair's kind of
svengali eminence greece yeah and he's the mp for hartlepool so he's very much in favor of it so it's
a kind of a peter mandelson against local government embroil you're going on yeah the
chairman of harley pool united you're right he thinks this is a tremendous stunt so he puts the money up because you have to
you have to pay a deposit if you're running to be an MP and if you don't get sufficient votes
and you lose it so he puts the money up for that and it is done as a stunt so the campaign slogan
is vote for hangers he gives the monkeys right and there isn't much of a manifesto but one of
them is that every school child in the town will have a banana yeah but there are some kind of
serious elements so they're very keen on promoting sports facilities so they want to improve sports
facilities for people generally in the town there's a local sports center that's threatened
with closure and also they want to cut the number of councillors and the local government so again
that's the kind of idea that it's a kind of anti-government thing, really. And amazingly, he beats the Labour
candidate by 500 votes. And Mandelson is furious and takes Stuart Drummond to one side, calls him
a disgrace, says he's made the whole town a laughingstock. And I think Stuart Drummond somehow
reveals that he speaks French and German. And then Peter Mandelson suddenly thinks, oh, actually, this is a guy who will raise our profile on the international stage and suddenly turns around and says it's tremendous for Hartlepool.
And he's tremendous.
You know, he's a great success.
He makes a great fist of it.
He won three terms.
Yes, he did.
He did.
And Labour is so cross at always losing that eventually the councillors convene a referendum to abolish the
directly elected mayor so hangus is the only the only mayor yeah yeah the one and only elected
mayor i'm just looking at the headline in the northern echo monkey is mayor the national post
in canada reports it monkey wins mayoralty, regains human form.
But again, it's this theme, isn't it, of kind of the permeability of humans and apes and monkeys and things.
Well, actually, that's a beautiful link, actually, Tom, into the next little monkey story that I had.
Because I think there is a kind of, it's the idea of the slippage, isn't there, between the yeah of monkey and human so 1964 an art gallery in gothenburg exhibited four paintings by the french avant-garde artist pierre brasso and it was quite well
reviewed so the gutterberg posten sent rolf anderberg its top critic and anderberg wrote
brasso paints with powerful strokes but also with clear determination his brush strokes twist with
furious fastidiousness he's an artist who performs with the delicacy of a ballet dancer and um it was
therefore embarrassing for when it turned out that these paintings had been done by somebody
called peter who was a four-year-old chimpanzee from uh boros zoo in uh in sweden and this was a hoax that had been constructed by
a journalist called daca axelson who was a journalist at gothenburg's tabloid newspaper
the good books tidning and so they must have very much enjoyed basically fooling the broadsheet the
posh broadsheet apparently what happened was that he persuaded the zookeeper to give peter
some paint and a brush.
Peter initially ate the paint.
Very surrealist.
But eventually it was persuaded to smear it onto the canvas.
Now, apparently, I read at the Museum of Hoaxes website, Tom, top quality research, that Peter had a load of bananas with him.
And the more bananas he ate, the more creative and the more progressive
his artistic vision became.
A Swedish art investor
actually bought one of these pictures
for the equivalent of about £500.
I mean, were they good?
No, they're terrible.
But actually, do you know what?
It's the 1960s.
So, you know, who can tell?
The critic, to be fair,
Rolf Anderberg, who had praised them,
said when it was revealed,
he said,
they're still the best pictures
in the exhibition
yeah that's funny
and it made me think about
so the most famous
artistic monkey
these days
is a painting
rather than an artist
do you remember the story
of the
Eke Homo
in Borjas
yes
the thing of Jesus
which was restored
by an elderly lady
a 1930s fresco
and she basically
turned him into a monkey
so that's probably the most famous artistic monkey there was another um chimpanzee that
actually impressed picasso and this i think was sponsored by desmond morris oh very good who wrote
the naked ape yes so desmond morris was an amazing guy he was a surrealist painter i mean he was a
friend i think with picasso but he was also mean, he was friends, I think, with Picasso.
But he was also, I think he was the keeper of the mammals at London Zoo and a primatologist.
I mean, his book, The Naked Ape, which I think was published in 1967, a very 60s book.
It's very groovy, isn't it?
It is.
It's all about how earlobes are erogenous.
It is, but it's very, people diss it now.
But the introduction, there are 193 living species of monkeys and apes.
192 of them are covered with hair.
The exception is a naked ape self-named Homo sapiens.
This unusual and highly successful species spends a great deal of time examining his higher motives
and an equal amount of time studiously ignoring his fundamental ones.
He's proud that he has the biggest brain of all the primates,
but attempts to conceal the fact that he also has the biggest penis.
Yes.
So the highest ratio of penis size to body mass of any primate, apparently.
Yes.
Very exciting.
So Desmond Morris, I mean, like a lot of 60s stuff,
it's kind of sex obsessed, isn't it?
Yeah.
Well, he says that humans are naked because it enhances tactile pleasure.
Is that his claim?
Yeah.
And he says that the human breast is rounded because it enhances sexual pleasure or something.
I mean, it's so 60s.
Because it comes out in 1967, I think, doesn't it?
I think it's fair to say that feminist critics have a strong dislike for The Naked Ape.
Not unreasonably.
But I think it was an interesting book.
And it's very much of its time.
Because thinking of
human beings
as essentially animals
is no better than
any other animal
and the
as it were
the bestial impulses
in the human soul
that's a very 1960s
post second world war
kind of
fascination
and he
Desmond Morris
like Bubbles
is still alive
is he?
yeah
he lives in Ireland
so two characters
from this podcast
are still with us
yeah
and may well both be listening
to the rest of the history
right now
be nice to think
wouldn't it
yeah
so actually
mention of Desmond Morris
brings us to our final ape
and the most important
and actually not an ape
it's a monkey
it's orangutan
isn't it
orangutan
so that's an ape
okay I'm not
I'm primatologist
I think everyone
can tell by now
so Jenny was an orangutan in London Zoo in the late 1830s.
The London Zoo was the world's oldest scientific zoo,
founded famously by Sir Stamford Raffles, Tom,
the founder of Singapore.
And Jenny had arrived from Borneo at the end of 1837.
A sailor called Mr. Moss sold her for £150.
She was probably three years old
and she was put in a...
All the animals in those days
were kept indoors.
So she was kept
in a heated giraffe's house.
She wore human clothing
and she drank tea.
So very Corporal Jackie behaviour.
And in March 1838,
the 28th of March,
she has a very well-known visitor.
And it's the same person that you began this podcast with, Tom.
So we're bookending it.
Beautifully constructed episode.
It is Charles Darwin.
So Charles Darwin, he's come back from the Beagle expedition two years earlier,
and he's been writing in his notebooks thoughts about evolution,
about the possible links between humanity and other primates for
about 12 months or so. And he writes to his sister about this first encounter with Jenny.
He describes her in human terms. So the keeper offers her an apple. She threw herself on her
back, kicked and cried like a naughty child. She looked very sulky. The keeper says, Jenny,
if you stop bawling and being a good girl, I'll give you the apple.win says she certainly understood every word of this and like a child she had great work to
stop whining she at last succeeded and then got the apple now orangutans at that point are pretty
unknown to europeans they have been a mystery about at 1600s it was a dutch doctor called
jacobus bontius who went to java and about orangutans, the wild man of the woods, you know, that kind of stuff.
And naturalists had often said, gosh, they are very similar to humans.
You know, they've been really unsettled by them, actually.
So Linnaeus, when he did his classification, he had put orangutans and other apes in the same genus as humans.
Rousseau, not a friend of the rest of history, I would say, Rousseau,
he said, could they be a race of genuinely wild men?
In other words, are they basically human?
Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, kind of pioneer of evolutionary thinking in some ways,
he said, could they be the ancestors of humans? Are these our ancestors
who have somehow been preserved? And all of these ideas are clearly knocking around Darwin's brain.
And he comes back. He keeps coming back. That's the fascinating thing to the zoo, to look at Jenny.
We know from his notebooks, he says, he describes her always as a child. And he says,
she can do things like groom herself. She can tools he's really struck by her emotions so he's convinced that she's jealous he says she will
make peevish noises if she sees other people getting attention she shook the cage and knocked
her head against the door because she could not get out jealous of attention to other and then
the thing that is most struck by they give her a, or he gives her a mirror. And he says,
she was astonished beyond measure looking in this mirror. And Darwin was convinced that she
recognized herself. She stuck out her lips like kissing to the glass. She put her hand over the
glass. She rubbed it. She put her body in different kinds of positions, admiring herself in the glass.
All of this is
massively playing on his mind. He's got multiple notebooks, and this is one called Notebook C,
and he writes in this after visiting Jenny. Let man visit orangutan in domestication,
hear expressive wine, see its intelligence when spoken to, as if it understands every word said,
see its affection, see its passion and rage, sulkiness and very actions of despair,
and then let man boast of his proud preeminence.
Man in his arrogance thinks himself a great work,
worthy of the interposition of a deity,
more humble and I believe true
to consider him created from animals.
There you go.
And there you have it.
Yeah.
So Jenny died from an illness a year later, 1839,
and was replaced, the cynicism of zoos was replaced
by another orangutan called Jenny,
who wasn't visited by Darwin,
but was visited by Queen Victoria.
But that last point that Darwin makes,
that's obviously the real fascination, isn't it?
Yeah.
That we see ourselves looking back at us.
Yeah.
It's a brilliant way of contextualizing our own kind of boastful narcissism if you've ever been to a zoo i actually
i'm transfixed by watching gorillas and chimps and all that kind of thing because precisely for
that reason because they are so human or rather we are so ape-like well we are apes yeah yeah
exactly exactly well brilliant domin. Thanks very much.
So those are history's top monkeys.
Yeah. And apes. Of that there can be no doubt, Tom.
We hope you've enjoyed it,
and we'll be back next week to look at
more history of apes. More apes.
But specifically, Homo sapiens. Alright. Bye-bye.
Bye-bye.
I'm Marina Hyde and I'm Richard Osman
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