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[[Image:Bergen-market.jpg|right|thumb|400px|{{#ifexist:Template:Bergen-market.jpg/credit|{{Bergen-market.jpg/credit}}<br/>|}}Whale meat and fish on sale at a market in Bergen, Norway.]]
[[Image:Bergen-market.jpg|right|thumb|400px|{{#ifexist:Template:Bergen-market.jpg/credit|{{Bergen-market.jpg/credit}}<br/>|}}Whale meat and fish on sale at a market in Bergen, Norway.]]
'''Whaling''' refers to the hunting of [[whale]]s for their blubber (meat) and oil. Today, whaling remains part of the cultures of [[Japan]], [[Norway]] and [[Iceland]], and in addition some aboriginal communities also hunt whales.
'''Whaling''' refers to the hunting of [[whale]]s for their blubber (meat) and oil. Today, whaling remains part of the cultures of [[Japan]], [[Norway]] and [[Iceland]], and in addition some aboriginal communities also hunt whales.
==History, Spain, Norway and Iceland==
By 1650 Europeans had already been whaling for the better part of a thousand years, with hunters from the Basque region of northern Spain taking the lead.
As early as 1611 the 50,000+ bowhead whales resident between the east coast of Greenland and the island of Spitzbergen were the subject of intensive commercial hunting effort by Dutch, German, and British whalers. By 1911 the bowheads were nearly extinct.  The discovery in 1848 of the rich stock of bowhead whales in the Bering Strait region sparked an oil rush that resulted in more than 2,500 annual whaling cruises to the area between 1848 and 1899.<ref> Robert C. Allen, and Ian Keay, "Bowhead Whales in the Eastern Arctic, 1611-1911: Population Reconstruction with Historical Whaling Records." ''Environment and History'' 2006 12(1): 89-113. Issn: 0967-3407 </ref>
==History, U.S. and Canada==
==History, U.S. and Canada==
American whaling's origins were in New England, especially Cape Cod, Massachusetts and nearby cities. The oil was in demand chiefly for lamps. Hunters in small watercraft pursued right whales from shore. By the 18th century, whaling in Nantucket had become a highly lucrative deep-sea industry, with voyages extending for years at a time and with vessels traveling as far as South Pacific waters. During the [[American Revolution]], whaling went into an economic downswing, just like other American blue-water enterprises. In the 1780s, the industry began to prosper, using bases on the mainland such as New Bedford. Whalers took greater economic risks to turn major profits: expanding their hunting grounds and securing foreign and domestic workforces for the Pacific. Ultimately, American entrepreneurs created a mid-nineteenth-century version of a global economic enterprise. This was the golden age of American whaling. From the Civil War through the early twentieth century, the American whaling industry—faced with new, crippling economic competition at home and overseas, along with diminishing numbers of whales—spun towards extinction.<ref> Dolin (2007)</ref>
American whaling's origins were in New England, especially Cape Cod, Massachusetts and nearby cities. The oil was in demand chiefly for lamps. Hunters in small watercraft pursued right whales from shore. By the 18th century, whaling in Nantucket had become a highly lucrative deep-sea industry, with voyages extending for years at a time and with vessels traveling as far as South Pacific waters. During the [[American Revolution]], the British navy targeted American whaling ships as legitimate prizes, while in turn many whalers fitted out as privateers against the British. Whaling recovered after the war ended in 1783 and the industry began to prosper, using bases on the mainland such as New Bedford. Whalers took greater economic risks to turn major profits: expanding their hunting grounds and securing foreign and domestic workforces for the Pacific.  Investment decisions and financing arrangements were set up so that managers of whaling ventures shared their risks by selling some equity claims but retained a substantial portion due to moral hazard considerations. As a result, they had little incentive to consider the correlation between their own returns and those of others in planning their voyages. This stifled diversity in whaling voyages and increased industry-wide risk.<ref> Eric Hilt, "Investment and Diversification in the American Whaling Industry." ''Journal of Economic History'' 2007 67(2): 292-314. Issn: 0022-0507 </ref>
 
When a lookout spotted the spray of a distant whale, the captain immediately lowered small wooden boats. When one of the 30-foot boats got alongside the 60-foot beast, its boatsteerer threw a harpoon (whalers called it an "iron") deep into the animal's flesh. It the job of the boatheader to actually kill the whale when it tired from swimming and thrashing.  The sailors towed the animal back to their ship and secured its carcass to the vessel's side. They stripped off the animal's blubber and then boiled it on deck in large iron pots set over fires in brick stoves, called tryworks. The processes of "cutting in" and "trying out" a whale could take several days and nights of nonstop work.
 
Whale oil was vital in illuminating homes and businesses throughout the world in the 1800s, and served as a dependable lubricant for the machines powering the Industrial Revolution. Baleen (the long keratin strips that hang from the top of whales' mouths) was used by manufacturers in the United States and Europe to make consumer goods such as buggy whips, fishing poles, corset stays and dress hoops.
 
New England ships began to explore and hunt in the southern oceans after being driven out of the North Atlantic by British competition and import duties. Ultimately, American entrepreneurs created a mid-19th-century version of a global economic enterprise. This was the golden age of American whaling.  
 
An early winter in the north Pacific in September 1871 forced the captains of an American whaling fleet in the Arctic to abandon their ships. With 32 vessels trapped in the ice and provisions insufficient to weather the nine-month winter, the captains ordered the abandonment of the ships and the three million dollars' worth of property carried on board but in the process saved the lives of over 1,200 people.<ref> Julie Baker, "The Great Whaleship Disaster of 1871." ''American History'' 2005 40(4): 52-58. Issn: 1076-8866 Fulltext: [[Ebsco]]</ref>
 
 
From the Civil War through the early 20th century, the American whaling industry—faced with new, crippling economic competition at home and overseas, along with diminishing numbers of whales—spun towards extinction.<ref> Dolin (2007)</ref>


Whale hunting became an important industry in [[Newfoundland and Labrador]] around 1900.  At first slow whales were caught by men hurling harpoons from small open boats. Mechanization copied from Norway brought in cannon-fired harpoons, strong cables, and steam winches mounted on maneuverable, steam-powered catcher boats. They made possible the targeting of large and fast-swimming whale species that were taken to shore-based stations for processing. The industry was highly cyclical, with well-defined catch peaks in 1903–05, 1925–30, 1945–51, and 1966–72, after which world-wide bans shut it down.<ref> Anthony B. Dickinson and Chesley W. Sanger, ''Twentieth-Century Shore-Station Whaling in Newfoundland and Labrador'' (2005).</ref>
Whale hunting became an important industry in [[Newfoundland and Labrador]] around 1900.  At first slow whales were caught by men hurling harpoons from small open boats. Mechanization copied from Norway brought in cannon-fired harpoons, strong cables, and steam winches mounted on maneuverable, steam-powered catcher boats. They made possible the targeting of large and fast-swimming whale species that were taken to shore-based stations for processing. The industry was highly cyclical, with well-defined catch peaks in 1903–05, 1925–30, 1945–51, and 1966–72, after which world-wide bans shut it down.<ref> Anthony B. Dickinson and Chesley W. Sanger, ''Twentieth-Century Shore-Station Whaling in Newfoundland and Labrador'' (2005).</ref>


==History, Japan==
After a hiatus of 70 years, in 1999, the Makah tribe, in Washington State caught and killed a 30-foot California gray whale. In capturing the whale the Makah revived their whaling practices and revitalized of this tradition that has made them and the related Nuu-chah-nulth tribe unique as whale hunters in North America. Soon the Nuu-chah-nulth people made a similar decision thereby reaffirming their identity as a whaling people and providing a symbol for tribal resiliency, adaptability, and cultural survival.<ref> Charlotte Cote, "The Whaling Indians: Legendary Hunters." ''American Review of Canadian Studies.'' 36#1 (2006) pp 177+. [http://www.questia.com/read/5016986138?title=The%20Whaling%20Indians%3a%20Legendary%20Hunters online edition]</ref>
==History, Norway and Iceland==
 
==History, Japan and Australia==
Th Japanese industry depended on the transfer of whaling technology, including equipment and techniques, from Norway from the late 19th century until the 1930s.<ref>Eldrid Mageli,  "Norwegian-Japanese Whaling Relations in the Early 20th Century: a Case of Successful Technology Transfer." ''Scandinavian Journal of History'' 2006 31(1): 1-16.  </ref> 
 
Wolfe (2006) traces the rise of Australia's interest in the Antarctic in the 19th and the first half of the 20th centuries, examining the efforts of individuals, private companies, and later the Australian government to promote and develop an Antarctic whaling industry. The market for whale products, the imperatives of politicians in Australia and abroad, the geography of both Australia and Antarctica, and the character of the Australian population helped to shape this ambition. Of equal importance were the effects of wars and economic depressions. In the end it was a failed ambition. Preoccupied with other priorities, Australia failed to understand and engage with the complexity of the international whaling industry. Swept aside by Japan and other whaling nations, Australia had few choices but to turn its back on Antarctic whaling. Instead, the country's political and economic resources were focused on developing a shore whaling industry on its own coasts.<ref> Adam Wolfe, "Australian Whaling Ambitions and Antarctica." ''International Journal of Maritime History'' 2006 18(2): 305-322. Issn: 0843-8714 </ref>
 
==International politics==
==International politics==
Transnational environmental actors played the central  role in defining and instituting an international norm of antiwhaling, symbolized in the passage of the moratorium on commercial whaling in 1982. This moratorium signaled a rejection of previously held attitudes toward the use of whales as natural resources and the embracing of a protectionist, hands-off approach. Support for this new stance, however, was not forthcoming from pro-whaling states Japan, Norway, and Iceland. Japan at first objected to the moratorium, then went into compliance, and then decided on the resumption of limited commercial whaling. While the Japanese government views the whaling dispute as a threat to resource security and also a danger to interstate respect for differences in custom and cuisine, the need to be perceived as a responsible member of international society exercises a major influence on the formation of Japan's whaling policy, conditioning its rule compliance and prohibiting the independent action pursued by other pro-whaling states.<ref> Amy L. Catalinac, and Gerald  Chan, "Japan, the West, and the Whaling Issue: Understanding the Japanese Side." ''Japan Forum''  2005 17(1): 133-163. Issn: 0955-5803 Fulltext: [[Ebsco]]</ref>


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
* Andrews, Roy Chapman. ''All About Whales.'' (1954).  
* Andrews, Roy Chapman. ''All About Whales.'' (1954).  
 
* Dickinson, Anthony B. and Sanger, Chesley W.  ''Twentieth-Century Shore-Station Whaling in Newfoundland and Labrador.'' 2005. 254 pp. 
 
* Dolin, Eric Jay. ''Leviathan: The History of Whaling in America'' (2007) 480 pp. [http://www.amazon.com/Leviathan-History-Eric-Jay-Dolin/dp/0393060578/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1207596886&sr=8-2 excerpt and text search]
* Dolin, Eric Jay. ''Leviathan: The History of Whaling in America'' (2007) 480 pp. [http://www.amazon.com/Leviathan-History-Eric-Jay-Dolin/dp/0393060578/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1207596886&sr=8-2 excerpt and text search]
*  Henke, Janice S.  "'Seeing Green': An Anthropological Perspective on the Process of International Conflict in the Whaling Issue." PhD dissertation State U. of New York, Buffalo 2005. 302 pp.  DAI 2006 66(8): 2982-A. DA3185355 
Fulltext: [[ProQuest Dissertations & Theses]]
* Mageli, Eldrid. "Norwegian-Japanese Whaling Relations in the Early 20th Century: a Case of Successful Technology Transfer." ''Scandinavian Journal of History'' 2006 31(1): 1-16. Issn: 0346-8755 Fulltext: [[Ebsco]]
* Mawer, Granville Allen. ''Ahab's Trade: The Saga of South Seas Whaling.'' (1999) 418pp
* Stoett, Peter J. ''The International Politics of Whaling'' (1997) [http://www.questia.com/read/57120862?title=The%20International%20Politics%20of%20Whaling online edition]  
* Stoett, Peter J. ''The International Politics of Whaling'' (1997) [http://www.questia.com/read/57120862?title=The%20International%20Politics%20of%20Whaling online edition]  
* Webb, Robert Lloyd. ''On the Northwest: Commercial Whaling in the Pacific Northwest, 1790-1967'' (1988) [http://www.questia.com/read/98023943?title=On%20the%20Northwest%3a%20Commercial%20Whaling%20in%20the%20Pacific%20Northwest%2c%201790-1967 online edition]
* Webb, Robert Lloyd. ''On the Northwest: Commercial Whaling in the Pacific Northwest, 1790-1967'' (1988) [http://www.questia.com/read/98023943?title=On%20the%20Northwest%3a%20Commercial%20Whaling%20in%20the%20Pacific%20Northwest%2c%201790-1967 online edition]
* Wolfe, Adam. "Australian Whaling Ambitions and Antarctica." ''International Journal of Maritime History'' 2006 18(2): 305-322. Issn: 0843-8714


==Footnotes==
==Footnotes==

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Whale meat and fish on sale at a market in Bergen, Norway.

Whaling refers to the hunting of whales for their blubber (meat) and oil. Today, whaling remains part of the cultures of Japan, Norway and Iceland, and in addition some aboriginal communities also hunt whales.

History, Spain, Norway and Iceland

By 1650 Europeans had already been whaling for the better part of a thousand years, with hunters from the Basque region of northern Spain taking the lead.

As early as 1611 the 50,000+ bowhead whales resident between the east coast of Greenland and the island of Spitzbergen were the subject of intensive commercial hunting effort by Dutch, German, and British whalers. By 1911 the bowheads were nearly extinct. The discovery in 1848 of the rich stock of bowhead whales in the Bering Strait region sparked an oil rush that resulted in more than 2,500 annual whaling cruises to the area between 1848 and 1899.[1]

History, U.S. and Canada

American whaling's origins were in New England, especially Cape Cod, Massachusetts and nearby cities. The oil was in demand chiefly for lamps. Hunters in small watercraft pursued right whales from shore. By the 18th century, whaling in Nantucket had become a highly lucrative deep-sea industry, with voyages extending for years at a time and with vessels traveling as far as South Pacific waters. During the American Revolution, the British navy targeted American whaling ships as legitimate prizes, while in turn many whalers fitted out as privateers against the British. Whaling recovered after the war ended in 1783 and the industry began to prosper, using bases on the mainland such as New Bedford. Whalers took greater economic risks to turn major profits: expanding their hunting grounds and securing foreign and domestic workforces for the Pacific. Investment decisions and financing arrangements were set up so that managers of whaling ventures shared their risks by selling some equity claims but retained a substantial portion due to moral hazard considerations. As a result, they had little incentive to consider the correlation between their own returns and those of others in planning their voyages. This stifled diversity in whaling voyages and increased industry-wide risk.[2]

When a lookout spotted the spray of a distant whale, the captain immediately lowered small wooden boats. When one of the 30-foot boats got alongside the 60-foot beast, its boatsteerer threw a harpoon (whalers called it an "iron") deep into the animal's flesh. It the job of the boatheader to actually kill the whale when it tired from swimming and thrashing. The sailors towed the animal back to their ship and secured its carcass to the vessel's side. They stripped off the animal's blubber and then boiled it on deck in large iron pots set over fires in brick stoves, called tryworks. The processes of "cutting in" and "trying out" a whale could take several days and nights of nonstop work.

Whale oil was vital in illuminating homes and businesses throughout the world in the 1800s, and served as a dependable lubricant for the machines powering the Industrial Revolution. Baleen (the long keratin strips that hang from the top of whales' mouths) was used by manufacturers in the United States and Europe to make consumer goods such as buggy whips, fishing poles, corset stays and dress hoops.

New England ships began to explore and hunt in the southern oceans after being driven out of the North Atlantic by British competition and import duties. Ultimately, American entrepreneurs created a mid-19th-century version of a global economic enterprise. This was the golden age of American whaling.

An early winter in the north Pacific in September 1871 forced the captains of an American whaling fleet in the Arctic to abandon their ships. With 32 vessels trapped in the ice and provisions insufficient to weather the nine-month winter, the captains ordered the abandonment of the ships and the three million dollars' worth of property carried on board but in the process saved the lives of over 1,200 people.[3]


From the Civil War through the early 20th century, the American whaling industry—faced with new, crippling economic competition at home and overseas, along with diminishing numbers of whales—spun towards extinction.[4]

Whale hunting became an important industry in Newfoundland and Labrador around 1900. At first slow whales were caught by men hurling harpoons from small open boats. Mechanization copied from Norway brought in cannon-fired harpoons, strong cables, and steam winches mounted on maneuverable, steam-powered catcher boats. They made possible the targeting of large and fast-swimming whale species that were taken to shore-based stations for processing. The industry was highly cyclical, with well-defined catch peaks in 1903–05, 1925–30, 1945–51, and 1966–72, after which world-wide bans shut it down.[5]

After a hiatus of 70 years, in 1999, the Makah tribe, in Washington State caught and killed a 30-foot California gray whale. In capturing the whale the Makah revived their whaling practices and revitalized of this tradition that has made them and the related Nuu-chah-nulth tribe unique as whale hunters in North America. Soon the Nuu-chah-nulth people made a similar decision thereby reaffirming their identity as a whaling people and providing a symbol for tribal resiliency, adaptability, and cultural survival.[6]

History, Japan and Australia

Th Japanese industry depended on the transfer of whaling technology, including equipment and techniques, from Norway from the late 19th century until the 1930s.[7]

Wolfe (2006) traces the rise of Australia's interest in the Antarctic in the 19th and the first half of the 20th centuries, examining the efforts of individuals, private companies, and later the Australian government to promote and develop an Antarctic whaling industry. The market for whale products, the imperatives of politicians in Australia and abroad, the geography of both Australia and Antarctica, and the character of the Australian population helped to shape this ambition. Of equal importance were the effects of wars and economic depressions. In the end it was a failed ambition. Preoccupied with other priorities, Australia failed to understand and engage with the complexity of the international whaling industry. Swept aside by Japan and other whaling nations, Australia had few choices but to turn its back on Antarctic whaling. Instead, the country's political and economic resources were focused on developing a shore whaling industry on its own coasts.[8]

International politics

Transnational environmental actors played the central role in defining and instituting an international norm of antiwhaling, symbolized in the passage of the moratorium on commercial whaling in 1982. This moratorium signaled a rejection of previously held attitudes toward the use of whales as natural resources and the embracing of a protectionist, hands-off approach. Support for this new stance, however, was not forthcoming from pro-whaling states Japan, Norway, and Iceland. Japan at first objected to the moratorium, then went into compliance, and then decided on the resumption of limited commercial whaling. While the Japanese government views the whaling dispute as a threat to resource security and also a danger to interstate respect for differences in custom and cuisine, the need to be perceived as a responsible member of international society exercises a major influence on the formation of Japan's whaling policy, conditioning its rule compliance and prohibiting the independent action pursued by other pro-whaling states.[9]

Bibliography

  • Andrews, Roy Chapman. All About Whales. (1954).
  • Dickinson, Anthony B. and Sanger, Chesley W. Twentieth-Century Shore-Station Whaling in Newfoundland and Labrador. 2005. 254 pp.
  • Dolin, Eric Jay. Leviathan: The History of Whaling in America (2007) 480 pp. excerpt and text search
  • Henke, Janice S. "'Seeing Green': An Anthropological Perspective on the Process of International Conflict in the Whaling Issue." PhD dissertation State U. of New York, Buffalo 2005. 302 pp. DAI 2006 66(8): 2982-A. DA3185355

Fulltext: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses

  • Mageli, Eldrid. "Norwegian-Japanese Whaling Relations in the Early 20th Century: a Case of Successful Technology Transfer." Scandinavian Journal of History 2006 31(1): 1-16. Issn: 0346-8755 Fulltext: Ebsco
  • Mawer, Granville Allen. Ahab's Trade: The Saga of South Seas Whaling. (1999) 418pp
  • Stoett, Peter J. The International Politics of Whaling (1997) online edition
  • Webb, Robert Lloyd. On the Northwest: Commercial Whaling in the Pacific Northwest, 1790-1967 (1988) online edition
  • Wolfe, Adam. "Australian Whaling Ambitions and Antarctica." International Journal of Maritime History 2006 18(2): 305-322. Issn: 0843-8714

Footnotes

  1. Robert C. Allen, and Ian Keay, "Bowhead Whales in the Eastern Arctic, 1611-1911: Population Reconstruction with Historical Whaling Records." Environment and History 2006 12(1): 89-113. Issn: 0967-3407
  2. Eric Hilt, "Investment and Diversification in the American Whaling Industry." Journal of Economic History 2007 67(2): 292-314. Issn: 0022-0507
  3. Julie Baker, "The Great Whaleship Disaster of 1871." American History 2005 40(4): 52-58. Issn: 1076-8866 Fulltext: Ebsco
  4. Dolin (2007)
  5. Anthony B. Dickinson and Chesley W. Sanger, Twentieth-Century Shore-Station Whaling in Newfoundland and Labrador (2005).
  6. Charlotte Cote, "The Whaling Indians: Legendary Hunters." American Review of Canadian Studies. 36#1 (2006) pp 177+. online edition
  7. Eldrid Mageli, "Norwegian-Japanese Whaling Relations in the Early 20th Century: a Case of Successful Technology Transfer." Scandinavian Journal of History 2006 31(1): 1-16.
  8. Adam Wolfe, "Australian Whaling Ambitions and Antarctica." International Journal of Maritime History 2006 18(2): 305-322. Issn: 0843-8714
  9. Amy L. Catalinac, and Gerald Chan, "Japan, the West, and the Whaling Issue: Understanding the Japanese Side." Japan Forum 2005 17(1): 133-163. Issn: 0955-5803 Fulltext: Ebsco

See also