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The captured crocodile

Image credit: Griffith Institute, University of Oxford

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This photograph, taken by Henri Béchard sometime in the 1870s, shows a group of men and boys gathered around a crocodile they have captured, securing it in a network of ropes. But the scene is not quite what it appears to be at first sight. On closer examination, the unusually docile crocodile is, in fact, not a live specimen. The reptile is likely an example of taxidermy, used here as a prop for dramatic effect. The stuffed crocodile may have belonged to the young men posing in the photograph or hired by Béchard for the purpose.

Griffith Institute, University of Oxford

Oxford

Title

The captured crocodile

Date

1870–1879

Medium

gelatin silver print

Measurements

H 26.8 x W 37 cm

Accession number

Béchard photo 19

Acquisition method

gift, unknown date

Work type

Photograph

Signature/marks description

H. BéchardNo. 19 La Chasse au Crocodile (Nubie)

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Griffith Institute, University of Oxford

Sackler Library, 1 St John Street, Oxford, Oxfordshire OX1 2LG England

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