’s woodcut of a Chillingham bull :
The Wild Cattle of Chillingham (1867, oil on canvas). According to earlier publicity material produced by the Chillingham Wild Cattle Association, Chillingham cattle bear some similarities to the extinct ancestral species
aurochs,
Bos primigenius primigenius, based upon
cranial geometrics and the positioning of their horns relative to the skull formation. They further claim that Chillingham cattle may be direct descendants of the primordial ox "
which roamed these islands before the dawn of history". It is now considered much more likely that they are descended from medieval husbanded cattle that were impounded when Chillingham Park was enclosed. Bones from the present-day herd have been used for comparative purposes by
zooarchaeologists, contrasting changes resulting from natural selection in a wild herd (Chillingham) against those from
selective husbandry. Nonetheless, much remains unknown about their origin. However, the traditional view that these cattle have an unbroken line of descent, without intervening domestication, from the wild-living aurochs was already being called into question in the 1800s.
Simon Schama described the famous contemporary woodcut by
Thomas Bewick as "an image of massive power ... the great, perhaps the greatest icon of British natural history, and one loaded with moral, national and historical sentiment as well as purely zoological fascination". The first written record of the herd dates from 1645, but the Chillingham herd is claimed by some to have been in this site for at least seven centuries. Before the 13th century, this breed is claimed to have "roamed the great forest which extended from the North Sea coast to the Clyde estuary" according to the Countess of Tankerville. During the 13th century, the King of England licensed
Chillingham Castle to become "castellated and crenellated" and a
drystone wall may well have been built then to enclose the herd. At that time, there was particular concern about
Scottish marauders, which explains also the massive build-up of fortification of the nearby
Dunstanburgh Castle at the same time. The wall that visitors see at Chillingham was built in the early 19th century to enclose the of Chillingham Park. As of 2022, the cattle have to roam and the rest of the ground is woodland or farmland. ==Genetics==