A cage is an enclosure often made of mesh, bars, or wires, used to confine, contain or protect something or someone. A cage can serve many purposes, including keeping an animal or person in captivity, capturing an animal or person, and displaying an animal at a zoo.[1]

Spherical cage containing watermelons in Russia

Construction

edit

Since a cage is usually intended to hold living beings, at least some part of its structure must be such as to allow for the entry of light and air. Thus some cages may be made with bars spaced closely together for the intended captive to slip between them, or with windows covered by a mesh of some sort.

Animal cages

edit
 
A cage designed to contain small animals

Cages often used to confine animals, and some are specially designed to fit a certain species of animal. One or more birds, rodents, reptiles, and even larger animals of certain breeds are sometimes confined in a cage as pets.

Animal cages have been a part of human culture since ancient times. For example, an Ancient Greek vase dated to 490 B.C. depicts a boy holding a possibly domesticated rabbit on his lap, with a cage with an open door in the background.[2] The biblical Book of Jeremiah refers to a tribe being like "cages full of birds",[3] and the Book of Ezekiel describes the capture of a lion in which the captors "pulled him into a cage and brought him to the king of Babylon".[4]

The different laws governing the keeping of animals in captivity generally provide for the size of cages or minimum equipment, depending on the species, whether for transport or for breeding. Swiss legislation, for example, defines minimum absolute internal dimensions for pet cages, but the Swiss Animal Protection organization (PSA) states that even if these dimensions comply with the law, they are far from being in line with the needs of species. It is therefore necessary in practice to provide a much higher vital space to ensure the well-being of the occupants.[5]

Animal protection associations have often argued for improving transport conditions in cages and for bans on battery cages, especially for egg-laying hens. The European legislation is constantly changing, but consumer behavior also influences breeding conditions.[6]

Trapping

edit

Cages also serve as a trapping tool.[7] This is a common and illegal purpose of the cage, as poaching is illegal itself. These type of cages are used to trap an animal, or hold them for a certain period of time. U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt used a cage himself to capture a bear, as the cage serves a purpose for capturing large animals.

Human cages

edit
 
Gibbet at Forte di San Leo

Punishment

edit

In history, prisoners were sometimes kept in a cage. During the Vietnam War they were referred to as "tiger cages".[8] Captives would sometimes be chained up inside into uncomfortable positions to intensify suffering. In medieval England, King Edward punished Robert the Bruce by having two of his female supporters encaged in public.

Safety

edit

Entertainment

edit

Cages are used in various forms of entertainment to create excitement from the sense that the entertainers are trapped in the cage. For example, cage dancing "refers to a scantily-clad feminine dancer, perhaps wearing a mini-skirt or hot- pants, and (supposedly) trapped inside of a hanging bird cage".[9] Cage fighting involves two combatants, usually engaging in mixed martial arts, inside a cage-like structure, and "conjures up the image of two combatants trapped in a cage, trading vicious blows as the audience bays for blood".[10] In Australia, a ban on the use of "cage-like enclosures" at such events was lifted in 2014.[10] Steel cages are also one of the oldest form of enclosures used in professional wrestling. The first "steel cage match" of any kind took place on June 25, 1937 in Atlanta, Georgia.[11] This match took place in a ring surrounded by chicken wire, in order to keep the athletes inside, and prevent any potential interference.[12]

Homes

edit

Engineering

edit
  • Rebar cages used in reinforced concrete
  • Cage (bearing) – a component of a rolling-element bearing
  • Gabion – a cage filled with coarse gravel or rock for use in civil engineering, road building, military applications and landscaping
  • Mine cage – similar to an elevator, for a shaft mine
  • Cage, a separated enclosure in a computer colocation centre
  • Faraday cage – an enclosure used to block electric fields

Other uses

edit
  • Batting cage – an enclosure for baseball batting practice
  • Bottle cage – a bicycle bottle holder
  • Cage crinoline – a type of crinoline petticoat
  • Cage trolley - used for transporting goods
  • Fruit cage - used to protect fruit bushes from been eaten by birds

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "A Cage-Free Zoo is Coming to Western Sydney". Broadsheet Sydney.
  2. ^ Judith M. Barringer, The Hunt in Ancient Greece (2002), p. 79, 230.
  3. ^ Jeremiah 5:27.
  4. ^ Ezekiel 19:9.
  5. ^ Achat de cages pour animaux de compagnie sur Internet[permanent dead link], feuille d'information de la Protection Suisse des Animaux-PSA.
  6. ^ Œufs : que change la nouvelle réglementation pour les poules pondeuses ? Archived 2012-01-23 at the Wayback Machine, publié par Fabienne Broucaret, January 5, 2012, Neo-planete Archived 2012-06-28 at the Wayback Machine.
  7. ^ "Hawaii gets federal boost to prevent invasive snake from destroying native wildlife". KHON.
  8. ^ "What's Goin' On? Vietnam Reflections". Huffington Post. September 30, 2017.
  9. ^ Tom L. Nelson, One Thousand Novelty and Fad Dances (2009), p. 46.
  10. ^ a b Tomazin, Farrah (November 8, 2015). "Ultimate Fighting Championship takes advantage of cage-fight ban lift". The Age.
  11. ^ "History of the Steel Cage". Atlanta Journal and the Atlanta Constitution. Retrieved 2010-04-18.
  12. ^ Mejia, Carlos (2007-08-08). "25 Moments That Changed WWE History". WWE. Retrieved 2007-11-28.
edit
  •   Media related to cages at Wikimedia Commons
  •   The dictionary definition of cage at Wiktionary