13 Secrets From the Ravenmaster at the Tower of London
BY CHRISTINE COLBY JANUARY 19, 2018
Christopher Skaife is a Yeoman Warder at the Tower of London, an ancient fortress that has been used as a jail, royal residence, and more. There are 37 Yeoman Warders, popularly known as Beefeaters, but Skaife has what might be the coolest title of them all: He is the Ravenmaster. His job is to maintain the health and safety of the flock of ravens (also called an “unkindness” or a “conspiracy”) that live within the Tower walls. According to a foreboding legend with many variations, if there aren’t at least six ravens living within the Tower, both the Tower and the monarchy will fall. (No pressure, Chris!)
Skaife has worked at the Tower for 11 years, and has many stories to tell. Recently, Mental Floss visited him to learn more about his life in service of the ravens.
1. MILITARY SERVICE IS REQUIRED.
All Yeoman Warders must have at least 22 years of military service to qualify for the position and have earned a good-conduct medal. Skaife served for 24 years—he was a machine-gun specialist and is an expert in survival and interrogation resistance. He is also a qualified falconer.
Skaife started out as a regular Yeoman Warder who had no particular experience with birds. The Ravenmaster at the time "saw something in him," Skaife says, and introduced him to the ravens, who apparently liked him—and the rest is history. He did, however, have to complete a five-year apprenticeship with the previous Ravenmaster.
2. HE LIVES ON-SITE.
As tradition going back 700 years, all Yeoman Warders and their families live within the Tower walls. Right now about 150 people, including a doctor and a chaplain, claim the Tower of London as their home address.
3. BUT HE’S HAD TO MOVE.
Skaife used to live next to the Bloody Tower, but had to move to a different apartment within the grounds because his first one was “too haunted.” He doesn’t really believe in ghosts, he says, but does put stock in “echoes of the past.” He once spoke to a little girl who was sitting near the raven cages, and when he turned around, she had disappeared. He also claims that things in his apartment inexplicably move around, particularly Christmas-related items.
4. THE RAVENS ENJOY SOME UNUSUAL SNACKS.
The birds are fed nuts, berries, fruit, mice, rats, chicken, and blood-soaked biscuits. (“And what they nick off the tourists,” Skaife says.) He has also seen a raven attack and kill a pigeon in three minutes.
5. THEY GET A LULLABY.
Each evening, Skaife whistles a special tone to call the ravens to bed—they’re tucked into spacious, airy cages to protect them from predators such as foxes.
6. THERE’S A DIVA.
One of the ravens doesn’t join the others in their nighttime lodgings. Merlina, the star raven, is a bit friendlier to humans but doesn’t get on with the rest of the birds. She has her own private box inside the Queen’s House, which she reaches by climbing a tiny ladder.
7. ONE OF THEM HAS EARNED THE NICKNAME “THE BLACK WIDOW.”
Ravens normally pair off for life, but one of the birds at the Tower, Munin, has managed to get her first two mates killed. With both, she lured them high atop the White Tower, higher than they were capable of flying down from, since their wings are kept trimmed. Husband #1 fell to his death. The second one had better luck coasting down on his wings, but went too far and fell into the Thames, where he drowned. Munin is now partnered with a much younger male.
8. THERE IS A SECRET PUB INSIDE THE TOWER.
Only the Yeoman Warders, their families, and invited guests can go inside a secret pub on the Tower grounds. Naturally, the Yeoman Warder’s Club offers Beefeater Bitter beer and Beefeater gin. It’s lavishly decorated in police and military memorabilia, such as patches from U.S. police departments. There is also an area by the bar where a section of the wall has been dug into and encased in glass, showing items found in an archaeological excavation of the moat, such as soldiers’ discarded clay pipes, a cannonball, and some mouse skeletons.
9. … AND A SECRET HAND.
The Byward Tower, which was built in the 13th century by King Henry III, is now used as the main entrance to the Tower for visitors. It has a secret glass brick set into the wall that most people don’t notice. When you peer inside, you’ll see it contains a human hand (presumably fake). It was put in there at some point as a bit of a joke to scare children, but ended up being walled in from the other side, so is now in there permanently.
10. HE HAS A SIDE PROJECT.
Skaife considers himself primarily a storyteller, and loves sharing tales of what he calls “Victorian melodrama.” In addition to his work at the Tower, he also runs Grave Matters, a Facebook page and a blog, as a collaboration with medical historian and writer Dr. Lindsey Fitzharris. Together they post about the history of executions, torture, and punishment.
11. THE TOWER IS MUPPET-FAMOUS.
2013’s Muppets Most Wanted was the first major film to shoot inside the Tower walls. At the Yeoman Warder’s Club, you can still sit in the same booth the Muppets occupied while they were in the pub.
12. IF YOU VISIT, KEEP AN EYE ON YOUR MONEY.
Ravens are very clever and known for stealing things from tourists, especially coins. They will strut around with the coin in their beak and then bury it, while trying to hide the site from the other birds.
13. … AND ON YOUR EYES.
Skaife, who’s covered in scars from raven bites, says, “They don’t like humans at all unless they’re dying or dead. Although they do love eyes.” He once had a Twitter follower, who is an organ donor, offer his eyes to the ravens after his death. Skaife declined.
This story first ran in 2015.
Should the ravens leave the Tower of London, the tower will crumble and fall — and the kingdom with it. Or so the legend says. And the kingdom had a rather close call recently.
Legendary status
The Tower of London is one of the city's most recognizable attractions, with its sprawling green grounds, majestic White Tower, neatly dressed Beefeaters and Crown jewels.
But it is the ravens that really run the show.
They are specifically bred for lifetime duty at the tower, keeping Britain safe from harm — a role held by a select six-pack of the black birds since the deeply superstitious King Charles II ordered it during his reign in the 1660s.
Skaife, otherwise known as ravenmaster Chris, is a specially trained Yeoman Warder or "Beefeater." Just six people have held the position, earning the chance to wear a special ravenmaster badge on the arm of their famous uniform.
"First thing in the morning, I'll come down here [and] make sure the ravens are OK," Skaife says. "Make sure they're healthy, feed them, clean them, just general maintenance of looking after them — as you would with any normal pet."
But the ravens — Erin, Rocky, Gripp, Muninn, Jubilee and Merlin — are far from being normal. In addition to the importance of their responsibility and their superstar status, they draw a crowd of four million people a year.
Bringing ancient tradition to a modern stage
The impact that the ravens have on tourism doesn't go unnoticed. It's part of the reason why the tower, operated by Historic Royal Palaces, recently renovated the birds' quarters, moving them from their modest homes to a brand new, bespoke habitat.
The open-concept pad took two years to complete and opened at the end of last year. It was designed by London architectural firm Llowarch Llowarch, in consultation with the ravenmaster and aviary specialists at the London Zoo.
The modern accommodations allow the ravens to spend all day and night in a habitat much like what they might encounter in the wild.
Though the ravens can freely explore the tower's grounds during the day, they return to the enclosure at night. One wing of each bird is trimmed to prevent the ravens from straying too far. The tower had another close call in 2013, when a fox killed two of the prized birds just before they were due to be locked up for the night.
Nicola Llowarch, the architect who headed the project, says that a focus on tourism and educational outreach was at the forefront of the design process.
"The main aspect was to expand the visitor experience," says Llowarch, noting research shows the ravens are one of the Top 3 attractions at the tower, along with the Crown jewels and the Beefeaters.
"So that was a prerequisite: to provide this accommodation and to address the public," she adds. "With the previous [accommodation], there was no attempt at working with the ravens as a public attraction."
Ravenmaster Skaife is also eager to introduce the historic attraction to a modern audience. His popular Twitter page — where he shares photos, videos and facts about the ravens, their daily routine and their history — has more than 12,000 followers.
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