Tuesday, December 26, 2006

THE LIVER BIRDS



The Liver bird is the symbol of the city of Liverpool, England.
The word "liver" in the name of the bird rhymes with "driver", rather than sounding like first two syllables of the city's name (which is pronounced as in the body organ).
What species?
The bird's species has long been the subject of confusion and controversy.
The earliest known use of a bird to represent the then town of Liverpool is on its corporate seal, dating from the 1350s, which is now in the British Museum. The bird shown is generic, but the wording of the seal contains references to King John, who granted the town’s charter in 1207. John, in honour of his patron saint, frequently used the device of an eagle - long associated with St. John. Further indication that the seal was an homage to King John is found in the sprig of broom initially shown in the bird’s beak, broom being a symbol of the royal family of Plantagenet.
By the 17th century, the origins of the bird had begun to be forgotten, with references to the bird as a cormorant, still a common bird in the coastal waters near Liverpool. The Earl of Derby in 1668 gifted the town council a mace "engraved with ...a leaver" - the first known reference to a liver bird by this name. A manual on heraldry from later in the century confuses matters further by assuming this term is related to the Dutch word lefler, meaning spoonbill - a bird rarely found in northern England.
When the College of Arms granted official arms to Liverpool in 1797, they refer to the bird as a cormorant, adding that the sprig in the mouth is of laver, a type of seaweed, thus implying that the bird's appellation comes from the sprig.
The bird thus appears to have originally been intended to be an eagle, but is now officially a cormorant. Many modern interpretations of the symbol are of a cormorant, although several - notably that on the emblem of Liverpool Football Club distinctly show the short head and curved beak more readily associated with a bird of prey.
The modern popularity of the symbol largely dates to 1911, when the Royal Liver Friendly Society built a new headquarters in the heart of Liverpool at the Pier Head, close to the banks of the River Mersey in the heart of Liverpool.
The building - the Liver Building - is probably the best-known building in the city. It is crowned with twin clock towers, each topped with a cormorant-like liver bird designed by Carl Bernard Bartels and constructed by the Bromsgrove Guild. This prominent display of two liver birds rekindled the idea that the liver was a mythical bird that once haunted the local shoreline. According to popular legend, they are a male and female pair, the female looking out to sea, (watching for the seamen to return safely home) whilst the male looks towards the city (making sure the pubs are open). Popular legend also holds that the birds face away from each other as, if were they to mate and fly away, the city would cease to exist.
There is another local saying that, whenever a truly virgin lady passes by the Liver Buildings, the Liver Birds will flap their great wings. There is no record of this ever having happened.
During the early 1970s, The Liver Birds was the name of a popular British sitcom dealing with two young women in Liverpool, a play on the slang term "bird" meaning young woman.



ON JUNE 19, 1911, the Daily Post wrote about the new Liver Building, noting: "The two ornithological artistic effigies will prove a source of much attraction to citizens and strangers, cosmopolitan and otherwise.
"They are of the traditional type, alert, somewhat fierce in aspect, with half outspread wings, guardians of Liverpool and ready symbolically to defend her premier position among the ports of the world."

As almost everyone in the world knows, the most famous pair perch 300ft from the ground atop the Royal Liver Building on the Pier Head. Each one is 18ft high with a wingspan of 24 feet.

1 comment:

Pixie said...

I think that was my favourite building in LP. :)