The guide resembles London Zoo guides of the time.
I haven't had time to read any of these posts in depth
That is an impressive collection. I am surprised about the 102 species of amphibians. It is far higher than the collection of @ 45 species at Chemnitz a few years ago.Day 40: Zoo-Aquarium Berlin (1975) - Granulated Poison Frog
January 1st 1975 - total of 1362 species held, c.10,390 individual animals held
Sponges and Jellyfish - 23 species, 294 individual animals
Worms, Sea-squirts and Echinoderms - 18 species, 226 individual animals
Crustaceans - 19 species, 149 individual animals
Insects - 128 species, c.5,400 individual animals
Arachnids - 63 species, c.180 individual animals
Molluscs - 34 species, 666 individual animals
Freshwater Fish - 525 species, c.2,000 individual animals
Saltwater Fish - 144 species, c.560 individual animals
Amphibians - 102 species, c.300 individual animals
Lizards - 95 species, 205 individual animals
Snakes - 80 species, 141 individual animals
Tortoises and Turtles - 105 species, 216 individual animals
Crocodilians - 26 species, 53 individual animals
Day 41: Le Parc des Felins (2007) - For A Successful Visit (English-language)
![]()
Page count: 34 (including interior front and rear covers)
Photographs: N/A
Illustrations/diagrams: 64
Layout: Introduction and history of collection, followed by children's book on cat species reproduced verbatim, concluding with visitor rules and guidelines.
Map: Fold-out map located within inner rear cover.
A fairly unusual item this time round; this guidebook - issued by Parc des Felins shortly after it first opened - somewhat strains the definition, comprising for all intents and purposes an existing French children's book on the various cat species of the world, reprinted with a small amount of accompanying material focusing on the zoological collection being presented on the inner front cover, inner rear cover and back cover. This also means that - for obvious reasons - this post will cover the main body of the "guidebook" in only the briefest terms!
![]()
As can be seen above, the inner front cover of this item contains a short account relating to the background of Parc des Felins - which as noted, had only recently opened at the time of publication - and the general aims and intentions of the collection going forward. Considering how little information is otherwise presented within this guidebook relating to the collection in question, the fact that it provides more historical and background information than many items published by more long-standing and weighty zoological collections is actually quite a pleasant surprise.
![]()
The main body of this guidebook, as noted, comprises an English-language reprint of a 1998 children's book published in France under the name Les Félins; some of the text content is noted to have been translated and scientifically-updated by the curator of Parc des Felins, but otherwise I believe it is presented more or less "as is" when compared to the original book. The contents are pretty high-quality for a children's book, not condescending to the reader or dumbing-down the information presented, and as such I think that this is precisely the sort of book I would have thoroughly enjoyed when growing up; although the main body of the text does not provide any scientific names, the index at the rear contains a complete and comprehensive list of every taxon mentioned within the text (every species recognised at the time of publication, alongside selected subspecies) giving both the common and scientific name for each. There are only two real issues with the content of this book - firstly, the various taxa discussed within are not arranged by taxonomic relationships, geographic location or even the habitat in which they live, but rather (somewhat strangely) the pattern of their coat! As such, the contents are divided into sections for "Striped-fur Felines", "Plain-coat Felines", "Spotted-fur Felines", "Dot-spotted Felines" and "Domestic Cats" - not only is this somewhat awkward to read, but moreover the division of taxa into a given category is not always consistent or logical; for instance, Pallas Cat is listed as a "Striped-fur Feline" despite fitting much better into the second category, whilst the significantly blotchier and stripier Andean Cat is listed as a "Dot-spotted Feline". The second major issue with the content of this book is the quality of the illustrations throughout - some are pretty good, and easily-recognisable as the species at hand, but many resemble the artistic equivalent of the infamous Marbled Cat taxidermy mount at Melbourne Museum!
![]()
After the book concludes, the fold-out interior back cover contains a rather detailed and high-quality map of the Parc des Felins site, labelling the exhibits both in alphabetical order and by the geographic origin of the taxa held within, and with the general layout and relative size of the exhibits and enclosures clearly visible. As such, this is definitely a much better map than one would initially expect on first encountering this guidebook, and realising that it holds only a tangential connection to the collection for which it was published; it even contains one notable surprise for the observant zoo enthusiast, listing as it does Black-footed Cat among the taxa exhibited - although I was aware that Les Félins d´Auneau, the predecessor collection to Parc des Felins, had held the species I was unaware that the species had lived long enough to move to the new site! It is, of course, possible that the Black-footed Cat lived long enough for the guidebook to enter production... but not long enough to ever actually go on-display!
![]()
The final portion of this guidebook comprises, as can be seen above, a selection of visitor rules and guidelines printed on the fold-out external back cover - given how reclusive many cat species are in captivity, requiring patience and persistence from the visitor to a zoological collection, the fact that this segment contains explicit advice regarding this point is another definite point in the favour of this guidebook.
Overall, then, despite the fact that it has less connection to the zoological collection at hand than one would generally hope from a zoo guidebook, I would actually have to say this item is surprisingly good; the information pertaining to Parc des Felins which *is* presented demonstrates a rather high level of detail and quality, and the main body of the text is a genuinely good book in its own right.... the occasionally ridiculous artwork aside. I am unsure whether or not Parc des Felins ever *has* published a true guidebook to the collection, or whether the pamphlets and leaflets which I own elsewhere in my collection represent the extent of their output in this regard, but in the meantime this is a damn good substitute!
When I visited the Exotarium in 1985, I thought the most unusual animal was an ajotle. Despite several visits to its enclosure. I never saw it, nor have I seen an ajotle exhibit since.
When I visited Frankfurt Zoo in 2004 I was most looking forward to the Grzimek House, the Bird House, and the Exotarium (all familiar to me from my zoo books and the IZY). However there was still an entrance fee on the Exotarium so I didn't go in there. I can't remember what the price was - it was probably some small amount, but when travelling even small amounts can seem prohibitive in the moment.
When I visited the Exotarium in 1985, I thought the most unusual animal was an ajotle. Despite several visits to its enclosure. I never saw it, nor have I seen an ajotle exhibit since.
Could be because Frankfurt was one of only 2 zoos in Europe which had Ajotles and the only one which kept the Baslas species. London kept the closely related Five-toed ajotle but that was around 1965.
I think someone has said that to me before (may have been you). All I know about that is that when I went there was an entry fee, so I didn't pay it because I'm an idiot. I had to just make do with seeing a Picathartes in the bird house. Sad face.Interesting - I had actually thought the entrance fee had been dropped in the mid-1990s, so I am somewhat surprised to hear it was retained a decade longer than I realised!
I think someone has said that to me before (may have been you). All I know about that is that when I went there was an entry fee, so I didn't pay it because I'm an idiot. I had to just make do with seeing a Picathartes in the bird house. Sad face.
Actually I almost missed that as well! I had been round the whole zoo (apart for the Exotarium) and was ready to go when I suddenly realised I hadn't seen the Bird House yet - and then I couldn't find it! I can't remember now what the problem was but something to do with the entrance being hidden or not obvious in some way. That would have been a major blow.Swings and roundabouts thenodds are that you missed nothing in the Exotarium quite as unusual or special as the Rockfowl, so I reckon you still got the best end of the deal!
Not animal related, but interesting, I noted both on the map from this guide and previously the provision for lawn tennis and also the terminus of a horse tramway. The Bristol Zoo guide map provided previously also showed considerable provision for lawn tennis. It is interesting to reflect that people used to head off for a day at the zoo with tennis racquet in hand (or maybe they could hire gear on the spot?).Day 43: Zoo Berlin (1901) - Flamingo and Toucan
![]()
![]()
Page count: 112 (including several pages of advertisements at rear of guidebook)
Photographs: 24 black-and-white photographs.
Illustrations/diagrams: 3 ornate illustrations used as de-facto "chapter headings" at key points
Layout: Comprehensive walkthrough account of collection.
Map: Fold-out at rear of guidebook
Another of the particular highlights of my guidebook collection today, and the first published at Zoo Berlin during the 20th century; this is a rather fragile item, which has been carefully and methodically repaired at some point in the past in what appears to have been a professional job, with a number of damaged or missing pages having been replaced near-seamlessly barring an absence of age-related discolouration, and the spine having been reinforced. Relatively unusually, I know more detail about the provenance of this item than is usually the case when purchasing second-hand guidebooks online, and therefore have a reasonably-good idea of who may have originally paid for the repairs in question; I obtained this particular guidebook - after several years searching for a copy of the 1901 edition - by bidding online during the most recent of the semi-regular auctions held by Dr Klaus Schüling, the German academic publisher and antiquarian book dealer of whom I have spoken in the past. Along with the "usual" material, around 100 auction lots comprised a selection of items from the estate of the recently-deceased guidebook collector Michael Amend - known by many names over the decade he was a member of this community, most notably @Zebraduiker and @Bib Fortuna - including this particular guidebook.
![]()
As I have noted previously, the font used in these earlier guidebooks published by Zoo Berlin is very ornate and difficult to read, especially for someone not particularly fluent in German to begin with, but is nonetheless rather attractive to look at and rather accentuates the overall "feel" of the book as a whole. As with the 1899 guidebook which immediately preceded the publication of this particular edition, the guidebook more or less comprises a comprehensive walkthrough account of the collection, with a detailed historical account relating to the development of the collection over the half-century since it had first opened; given the fragility of both items, the fact that (as I discussed previously) my copy of the 1899 guidebook is currently being repaired by my father, and the aforementioned difficulty in parsing the typeface within both items, I have not as yet been able to translate anything more than scattered sentences from this historical discussion, let alone work out whether or not the discussion here differs at all from that found in the earlier guidebook. However - again as I have mentioned in the past - I am gradually trying to get to grips with the archaic typeface in question, and improve my general level of fluency in reading German full-stop, as uld very much like to be able to translate the historical information within for the reference and general interest of the wider Anglophone zoo enthusiast community!
![]()
Unfortunately, due to the extremely-tight replacement binding, along with the fragility of the pages themselves making me loathe to handle the guidebook too roughly, it proved too difficult for me to scan the interior pages of this guidebook as I usually would; therefore I have taken digital photographs of selected pages. This is less-than-ideal, naturally, given the difficulty in producing a consistent level of focus and lighting when holding the guidebook open with one hand and using the camera in the other - but short of omitting any interior images, this is nonetheless the best course of action available.
The main body of the guidebook, as can be seen in the surrounding images, comprises a methodical and detailed walkthrough account of the collection, detailing all major exhibits and houses and providing copious information on the species held within, much as was the case in the 1899 guidebook of which I have already spoken. However, one major difference between this guidebook and its predecessor is that, whilst the 1899 edition was copiously illustrated throughout, this edition contains very few illustrations indeed; merely three decorative title banners located at the start of the guidebook itself, before the discussion of the bird house, and before the discussion of the elephant house. However, the level of detail within this guidebook as regards the descriptions of the exhibits and the species held within is once again extremely high. For whatever reason, the taxonomic names listed within these species accounts are presented in a significantly more legible typeface, and therefore it is reasonably easy to piece together a list of those taxa discussed within the guidebook; although nowhere near a comprehensive list of the species collection at the time of publication, these accounts nonetheless are significantly more complete than those found in the majority of modern-day guidebooks. At the time of publication, the species collection at Zoo Berlin included a number of taxa which are now extinct - such as Javan Tiger, Glaucous Macaw and Schomburgk's Deer - as such the exhibit and species accounts represent a highly-significant document of zoo history.... quite apart from the fact that the Zoo Berlin described here is a collection which, a little over a generation later, would be all-but-destroyed by the ravages of war.
![]()
Beyond here, the guidebook presents several pages showing a wide range of black-and-white photographs taken at the zoo, both of some of the most notable structures and buildings throughout the collection, and select species displayed within; this was the first time that photographic material was present within one of the guidebooks published at Zoo Berlin, and established a general format which would be followed for almost thirty years. As I noted previously, the landscape of the zoo would change completely during WWII, with the vast majority of the houses and exhibits described within this guidebook destroyed or severely damaged; as such, the photographs presented here are possibly one of the most interesting aspects of the entire guidebook, representing as they do a key record of these structures and exhibits at their height. Therefore, it strikes me as appropriate to reproduce some of the most interesting of these images before briefly touching on those photographs provided of species held at the time of publication.
![]()
![]()
![]()
The first of these images shows the old Elephant House; although completely destroyed during WWII, the pagoda for Indian Rhinoceros currently being constructed at Zoo Berlin has been specifically designed to homage the overall aesthetic of this structure, albeit at a significantly larger scale. Similarly, the Elephant Gate visible in the second of these photographs is *not* the structure which is now present at the entrance to the collection - which represents a late 1980s construction intended to belatedly replace the original gate, which again was lost during the ravages of the war. The final image shows the largest - and most ornate - of the houses and stables located within the deer complex at the zoo; I am fairly certain that this particular structure did not survive the war, even as a destroyed shell, as it appears to have completely disappeared from those collection maps released in the years immediately following WWII, although several of the houses within this area not only survived relatively intact but were still present at Zoo Berlin and still in use as deer housing into the last decade.
Perhaps the most interesting of the photographic spreads depicting a variety of the species displayed within the collection at the time of publication is the below image; not only are modern-day oddities such as African Forest Elephant and Bush Pig present, but moreover the iconic image of the Schomburgk's Deer located within the Zoo Berlin collection in the opening years of the 20th century is published here for - as far as I have been able to determine - the very first time. This photograph is often claimed online to have been taken in 1911, even elsewhere on Zoochat; one wonders where this claim originates, given the fact that the presence of this photograph within not only this guidebook but several of the editions which would follow over the course of the next decade provides conclusive proof that the truth is otherwise.
![]()
The guidebook concludes - as do the vast majority of the Zoo Berlin guidebooks from the opening decades of the 20th century - with a highly-detailed and frankly gorgeous fold-out map of the collection; these fold-out maps all follow the same layout and design across different editions, which vastly increases ease-of-reference when examining them and attempting to observe the way in which Zoo Berlin developed and grew over these pivotal decades. As such, these maps represent not only an attractive and interesting item of aesthetic and artistic merit, but also a highly valuable resource for the zoo historian, or indeed anyone with an interest in Zoo Berlin.
![]()
I suspect I have left a vast amount of scope for questions and feedback this time round - for instance, if anyone wants me to give more detail about the species held in a given exhibit, or which members of a given taxonomic group are listed within the guidebook, I would be more than happy to oblige! In the meantime, it goes without saying that this is one of the greatest treasures in my guidebook collection, one of the most interesting and valuable both as a zoological document and a historical record, and an extremely high-quality book which I have spent many an hour poring over in detail.
Not animal related, but interesting, I noted both on the map from this guide and previously the provision for lawn tennis and also the terminus of a horse tramway. The Bristol Zoo guide map provided previously also showed considerable provision for lawn tennis. It is interesting to reflect that people used to head off for a day at the zoo with tennis racquet in hand (or maybe they could hire gear on the spot?).