![]() ![]() With much of the world still a mystery at this time, little distinction was drawn between real and imagined beasts.Įlizabethan texts featured in the display present accounts of the Elephant, the Lamia, the Bison, the Phoenix, the Manticora, the Beaver, the Gorgon, the Rhinoceros and the Cockatrice side by side as inhabitants of the natural world. The exhibition also shows how myths, perpetuated by traveller’s tales, were a colourful feature of 16 th-century atlases and encyclopaedias. Published in 1489, when the European Witch Craze that would last until the mid-18 th century was gaining pace, Molitor’s work was commissioned to investigate the danger posed by witches.Ī remarkable 43 editions of the book were printed – an indicator of the scale of public interest in witches – and its ideas and illustrations helped to construct and develop the idea of the witch in public consciousness. Other highlights include Ulrich Molitor’s On Witches and Soothsayers. The rare books, magic scrolls and magnificently illuminated manuscripts on display depict wonders of the human imagination including witches, werewolves, angels and demons. ![]() ![]() Pontoppidan’s important work in the history of the sea monster is just one of the highlights of a new exhibition at St John’s College exploring what items from the Library’s Special Collections can tell us about belief in the real existence of mythical beasts and supernatural beings and the role such creatures have played in heraldry, literature, art and non-fiction. The publication of the work and its translation into English has been linked to a substantial increase in the number of reported sea monster sightings and is believed to have influenced the way people interpreted unusual things they saw in the waves. After being hit, the terrifying creature – with a horse-like head and tentacles extending out of the water – dived into the deep and disappeared.Įrik Pontoppidan used Ferry’s account and other sworn testimonies from credible sources to argue for the real existence of sea monsters in his Natural History of Norway published in 1753. Naval officer Lawrence de Ferry claimed to have shot a sea serpent while sailing off the coast of Norway in 1746. A witchcraft treatise published in the initial stages of the European Witch Craze sworn testimony as to the real existence of sea serpents and Elizabethan woodcut illustrations showing werewolves and unicorns as part of the natural world: With Halloween around the corner, St John’s is putting the mythical beasts and supernatural beings from its Special Collections on display as part of the Festival of Ideas 2017. ![]()
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