No. In fact i am and there is a whole organization called the Secret and Ancient Society of Dragonolgy. There is also one for monsterologist which Dr. Ernest Drake was also. Me too!
emmafine222@Yahoo.com ( no spam i am only 12 but intelligent when it comes to mythical creatures )
No he only had brothers and sisters, no twin
Ernest Shackleton was knighted and became Sir Ernest Shackleton in 1909.
Ernest Shackleton had three grandchildren. His only child, a daughter named Cecily, had three children, contributing to his legacy. The descendants of Shackleton continue to celebrate his adventurous spirit and contributions to exploration.
"Drake" refers to a male duck. It is also used as a term to describe a male wild duck. In popular culture, "Drake" may also refer to the Canadian rapper, singer, and songwriter, Drake.
A male duck is commonly referred to as a "drake." So the father of a duckling would be a drake.
Dr. Ernest drake was a dragonologist. meaning that he studied dragons.He traveled world round in order to study dragons.He was born 1822 st. Leonard forest Sussex England ,in the same year as the KNUCKER Weasel.As a kid he was fascinated by palaeontology.Palaeontology means the study of prehistoric life.In 1852 he became a first class dragonologist.He owened a store called dr. drake's dragonala.
Brittany, Sussex, England i don't really know for sure. srry For more info. contact me : emmafine222@yahoo.com ( no spam i am only 12 but intelligent when it comes to mythical creatures )
U now Wat forget it the only reason people ask this is if they believe OR to hurt others. Dr. Drake was a dragonologist and he was real
Dragonologist are not real according to 9 year old Chris Sarna. They only exist is the Dragonology.
Bryan Drake's birth name is Bryan Ernest Hare Drake.
he went to cambridge
DR Ernest Drake did in the 1800's.
in London England but what is his postal code?
Add to this please: Ernest Drake, Voldimir Kapusnek,
Dr. Ernest Drake was a dragonologist who travelled around the world to study dragons. Dr. Drake is well known in other areas besides Melbourne. He live in St. Leonards Forest in the United Kingdom. Born in 1822, St. Leonard's Forest, Sussex, England. Ernest Drake is facinated by dragons, and wrote dragonology. He believes that the few dragons that still remain should be very well protected, and has no doubt that there is no such thing. His books were lately found and published, and became the great books we read today. Dr. Ernest Drake was born in 1822 in St. Leonard's Forest in Sussex, England, in the very same year as Weasel, the knucker of St. Leonard's Forest. As a boy he was fascinated by palaeontology, thanks to the fossil mania that had been sparked off by Gideon Mantell's discovery of the Iguanodon tooth near Cuckfield in Sussex. However, when he was eight years old, he had his first encounter with the knucker, thinking it must be some kind of dinosaur remnant. Nobody believed his story until he was fourteen when he met Dragon Master Ebenezer Crook at a meeting of the Sussex Archeological Society. Ebenezer and his wife followed young Drake into the forest, where their dragon-tracking skills led to a second encounter. Ebenezer then explained to Drake the differences between dragons and dinosaurs, and convinced him to study the former. But Drake's parents did not allow him to travel to Bodmin to study with Ebenezer, and he was only able to do so when he graduated from university in 1843. In Bodmin, Drake studied dragonology under Ebenezer Crook for four years before beginning his first round-the-world trip to investigate both dragons and dragonological societies. He finally became a Dragonologist First Class in 1852, enabling him to assume the title of "Doctor of Dragonology" after completing ground-breaking scientific work on the migratory habits of Frost Dragons. Travellling to London, he set up a shop called Dr. Drake's Dragonalia, where he taught dragonology to a few select pupils. His magnum opus was a book called Dragonology, which was initially published on a print run of only 100 copies in 1896, but he also produced several other works related to dragons. All of these books have the recurring themes that dragons ought to become objects of scientific study, and that as they are scarce it is the responsibility of dragonologists to conserve and protect them wherever they may be found. (Dugald A. Steer)
Dr. Ernest Drake was a dragonologist who travelled around the world to study dragons. Dr. Drake is well known in other areas besides Melbourne. He live in St. Leonards Forest in the United Kingdom. Born in 1822, St. Leonard's Forest, Sussex, England. Ernest Drake is facinated by dragons, and wrote dragonology. He believes that the few dragons that still remain should be very well protected, and has no doubt that there is no such thing. His books were lately found and published, and became the great books we read today. Dr. Ernest Drake was born in 1822 in St. Leonard's Forest in Sussex, England, in the very same year as Weasel, the knucker of St. Leonard's Forest. As a boy he was fascinated by palaeontology, thanks to the fossil mania that had been sparked off by Gideon Mantell's discovery of the Iguanodon tooth near Cuckfield in Sussex. However, when he was eight years old, he had his first encounter with the knucker, thinking it must be some kind of dinosaur remnant. Nobody believed his story until he was fourteen when he met Dragon Master Ebenezer Crook at a meeting of the Sussex Archeological Society. Ebenezer and his wife followed young Drake into the forest, where their dragon-tracking skills led to a second encounter. Ebenezer then explained to Drake the differences between dragons and dinosaurs, and convinced him to study the former. But Drake's parents did not allow him to travel to Bodmin to study with Ebenezer, and he was only able to do so when he graduated from university in 1843. In Bodmin, Drake studied dragonology under Ebenezer Crook for four years before beginning his first round-the-world trip to investigate both dragons and dragonological societies. He finally became a Dragonologist First Class in 1852, enabling him to assume the title of "Doctor of Dragonology" after completing ground-breaking scientific work on the migratory habits of Frost Dragons. Travellling to London, he set up a shop called Dr. Drake's Dragonalia, where he taught dragonology to a few select pupils. His magnum opus was a book called Dragonology, which was initially published on a print run of only 100 copies in 1896, but he also produced several other works related to dragons. All of these books have the recurring themes that dragons ought to become objects of scientific study, and that as they are scarce it is the responsibility of dragonologists to conserve and protect them wherever they may be found. (Dugald A. Steer)
Drake is an only child