The Medieval Bestiary
Very interesting page, like a mix of the esoteric study of medieval zoology, folk-mythology and tales of foreign lands.

http://bestiary.ca/index.html
A very interesting site indeed! I especially enjoyed the illustrations. I found the illustration of the Bonnacon making me chuckle because it seemed like something Napoleon Dynamite might come up with :)
Funny site!
Much nicer than the all black-and-white book that one of my former students brought to me to assist me in salvaging a paper I was working on.
I was always most fond of the basilisk, a beast whose smell alone could kill, as could it's look.

Most enlightening, I think, is the insight into a medieval world view these kinds of things bring.
I have heard it argued that the serpent forms on medieval gospels were an attempt to "bind" the devil.
But my student's dusty old book claimed that the belief at the time was that a serpent when killed, would resurrect at the first light of dawn (connection to Christian resurrection!) and might not have had any evil connotations.

I'll bet I just opened a can of worms didn't I?
Thomas Watt wrote:
But my student's dusty old book claimed that the belief at the time was that a serpent when killed, would resurrect at the first light of dawn (connection to Christian resurrection!) and might not have had any evil connotations.

I'll bet I just opened a can of worms didn't I?

I wouldn't say a can of worms, exactly. A can of snakes, perhaps. ;)

Snakes have been used to symbolize renewal and rebirth since long before Christian times. Just look at the ouroborous. Also, a snake molts its skin, which can be useful to poets for all kinds of eternal return metaphors.

So far as I know, the Judeo-Christian tradition contains the only sweeping generalization of the serpent as evil.

But I agree with all that medieval bestiaries are great fun. I especially like the fact that they contain entries on normal animals as well as fantastic ones. The medieval mind was far more colorful and richer in imagination than we generally give it credit for being.

Out of curiosity, has anyone here heard of the Prester John letter?
That's definitely a very interesting site!

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