Hunting law
The hunting law should not be confused with the hunting law . It is the habit- regulated, free claim of a hunter to parts of the game he has killed . It is a behavior that was and is exercised differently in different regions and times.
In the past, the Great Hunting Law was part of the remuneration of a hired professional hunter . It consisted of the small Hunter right and the head, the carrier (neck) including a proposal to the third rib, the ceiling and the Feist , or white (subcutaneous fat and visceral fat). In wild addition to the jowls , but without a head. Nowadays the practice of the Great Hunters' Law is no longer common.
Anyone who breaks up (digests) the hunted piece of game deserves the right to hunt . It includes the sound (tongue, heart, liver, lungs, spleen, kidneys). A possible hunting trophy is also counted as a hunter's right.
The game does not belong to the hunter right but is the practice of hunting entitled to (tenant or owner), who (according to the usual practice) it to the hunter for free or in return for payment or recycled left to his own advantage. The intestines of the animal are partly food , especially the tongue, liver, heart, kidneys, also the brain and lungs. Other parts of the hunting law that are not used as food are often used as animal feed (e.g. for the hunting dog).
See also
literature
- Ilse Haseder , Gerhard Stinglwagner : Knaurs Großes Jagdlexikon , Augsburg 2000, ISBN 3-8289-1579-5
- Carl Zeiß, Fritz Dobschova: Lexicon of the hunter's language and other subject areas of the hunt, Vienna 1992, ISBN 3-7039-0011-3