art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar

For / : a , I guess 😂
Cambridge University Library Kk.4.25 (Didactic miscellany, containing a and other texts), f. 89r
England, c.1230
https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-KK-00004-00025/165

art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar

#TwoForTuesday, here is a #leopard nursing 2 cubs, on top of a #bear also nursing 2 cubs!
From Fol. 115v of BnF Lat. 16169 (Albertus Magnus, De animalibus), Paris, mid 14th c.
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b85409542/f232
#medieval #bestiary

bevanthomas, to random

The phoenix is one of the most iconic symbols of immortality and rebirth - the bird that dies in a burst of fire and then rises from its own ashes. In some versions, the phoenix just spontaneously combusts, but in others it builds and lights its own funeral pyre.
🎨 Friedrich Bertuch

bevanthomas,
bevanthomas, to random

The gulon is a legendary monster of the Scandinavian arctic with a dog's size and body, a cat's head and claws, and a fox's tail. The gulon is so gluttonous that once it's full, it will squeeze itself between two trees to vomit up its food, so it can start killing and eating again.

bevanthomas,
bevanthomas, to random

Medieval bestiaries say mother pelicans sometimes accidentally kill their chicks in anger. Then the horrified pelican weeps over the corpses for three days, after which she slices her own side, spills her blood on the chicks, and in dying returns them to life.

bevanthomas,

Image of pelicans from a medieval bestiary.

This self-sacrifice was used by the medieval authors as a metaphor for Christ, who referred to the "pelican in her piety.

lonehorizons, to RPG

Dear every American RPG content creator,
It’s not BEASTiary, it’s BESTiary.
Thank you.

appassionato, to books
@appassionato@mastodon.social avatar

The Modern Bestiary: A Curated Collection of Wondrous Wildlife

A quirky collection of Earth’s most compelling animals who give mythical creatures a run for their money
The Modern Bestiary: A Curated Collection of Wondrous Wildlife mirrors the medieval tradition of an encyclopedia of incredible beasts, only this charming book with ornamental illustrations features 100 real animals who are stranger than fiction.

@bookstodon




bevanthomas, to random

Medieval scholars believed ravens don't feed their chicks until their black feathers grow, so the parents recognize them. Before that, the chicks just drink dew. An allegory for how teachers shouldn't reveal inner mysteries until students are ready to listen.

bevanthomas,
TuijaAinonen, to medievodons

'Vespertiliones' from the Peterborough Psalter and Bestiary

Happy Halloween

c. 1300
CCCC MS 53, f. 202r
https://parker.stanford.edu/parker/catalog/canvas-cafa66712e22327816ef2c2bfce5bd50
@medievodons

ClaireFromClare,
@ClaireFromClare@h-net.social avatar
projectseahorse, to random

One of our initiatives to "save " is our project - iSeahorse. This October we celebrate it's 10th Anniversary 😃

Read more about it here: https://projectseahorse.org/iseahorse-celebrates-10-years-of-seahorse-community-science/

ClaireFromClare,
@ClaireFromClare@h-net.social avatar

to the Fediverse @projectseahorse!
I have a sighting for , recorded a while ago... have you seen any of these recently?

@medievodons @histodons - any other favourite historic ?

https://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/record.asp?MSID=8797&CollID=8&NStart=4751

Harley 4751, f.68r

JackTheCat, to environment
@JackTheCat@mastodon.scot avatar

If cockroaches now have a measurable shelf life then the rest of us are well and truly f**ked. 🙄

https://mastodon.scot/@raincat/111177640624188356
raincat - A Litter Bestiary: cockroach

rlcj, to animals
@rlcj@mstdn.social avatar

Got up close and personal these beauties today. Mid- wall , Martley . Exquisite stag, fox, and hare in the tradition. I also recommend the and the wolf.

Running fox, red ochre on cream plaster. Great bushy tail and classic stylised trees.
Running hare, red ochre paint on cream plaster. Remains of stylised flowers.

Virginicus, to random
raincat, to LateStageCapitalism
@raincat@mastodon.scot avatar
raincat,
@raincat@mastodon.scot avatar
raincat,
@raincat@mastodon.scot avatar
raincat,
@raincat@mastodon.scot avatar
raincat,
@raincat@mastodon.scot avatar
raincat,
@raincat@mastodon.scot avatar

(Meta - Evolutionary Theory) After Man: A Zoology of the Future - Douglas Dixon - 1981 (speculativeevolution.fandom.com)

While this isn't cover news, in the spirit of the sub, I'd like submit the work of Douglas Dixon, who wrote several books, including the bestiary After Man in 1981, about how the animal world would evolve after the end of human civilization. The link above goes to the fandom version of his bestiary.

Demons, Djinns, and Devils of the Medieval Islamic World (www.medievalists.net)

An in-depth analysis of the 12th century work Ajaib al-Makhluqat wa Gharaib al-Mawjudat, or Marvels of Things and Miraculous Aspects of Things Existing by Zakariyya al-Qazwini, and the Arabian and Mesopotamian legends surrounding the djinn.

natania, to random
@natania@mastodon.world avatar

An assortment of some very adorable hedgehogs from illuminated manuscripts, mostly dating from the 14th and 15th c.

Snails and rabbits get a lot of attention, but personally I love the hedgehog. Especially the ones with stuff on their spines.

A standing hedgehog beside a tree, looking left.
A hedgehog, curled up, with a sublet smile. He’s facing right but looking left.

samkalensky, to random

🌟 My Goals for 2023: 🌟

  1. Draw 300+ yokai, 100+ critters. [Currently @ 226 & 74~ Average 8/month]
  2. Finish off Yokai Zine 3 & Critters Zine 1 by fall. [Both are about 85% finished ]
  3. Reach 50 Patrons & $200/month? 👉 https://patreon.com/samkalensky 👈

Its me~
New biz cards for 2023!
Hannya Honnari @samkalensky

art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar

: In the , are usually shown eating human corpses...but #3 is apparently a vegetarian as it's eating a plant instead? 🤷🏻‍♀️

  1. British Library MS 12 F XIII Rochester Bestiary f.15v
  2. Parker Library MS 53 Peterborough Psalter & Bestiary f.191v
  3. Getyt Museum MS Ludwig XV 4 Aviarium/Bestiary f.88r
    See more medieval bestiary hyenas here: https://bestiary.ca/beasts/beastgallery153.htm

Hyena Hyena eating a shrouded corpse in a tomb "The hyena is a dirty beast the braks open tombs to eat the corpses in finds inside. This corpse is wrapped in a shroud, which has not deterred the hyena." Corpus Christi College Parker Library, MS 53 (The Peterborough Psalter and Bestiary), folio 191v https://bestiary.ca/beasts/beastgallery153.htm
Hyena Hyena eating a plant "The hyena is a dirty beast that breaks open tombs to eat the corpses it finds there. In this very unusual illustration the hyena is eating a plant instead of a corpse." Getty Museum, MS. Ludwig XV 4 (Aviarium / Bestiary), folio 88r

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