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PHYSIOLOGUS , the title usually given to a collection of some fifty Christian allegories much read in theSee also: middle ages, and still existing in several forms and in about a dozen Eastern and Western See also: languages
.
As nearly all its imagery is taken from the animal See also: world, it is also known as the Bestiary
.
There can, be hardly a doubt about the See also: time and general circumstances of its origin
.
Christian teachers, especially those who had a leaning towards Gnostic speculations, took am See also: interest in natural See also: history, partly because of certain passages of Scripture that they wanted to explain, and partly on account of the divine See also: revelation in the See also: book of nature, of which also it was See also: man's sacred duty to take proper See also: advantage
.
Both See also: line's of study were readily combined by applying to the interpretation of descriptions of natural See also: objects the allegorical method adopted for the interpretation of Biblical texts
.
Now the early Christian centuries were anything but a See also: period of scientific research
.
Rhetorical accomplishments were considered to be the' chief See also: object of a liberal See also: education, and to this end every kind of learning was made subservient
.
Instead of See also: reading See also: Aristotle and other naturalists, See also: people went' for information to See also: commonplace books like those of Aelian, in which scraps of folk-See also: lore, travellers' tales and fragments of misapprehended science were set forth in an elegant See also: style
.
Theological writers were not in the least prepared to question the worth of the marvellous descriptions of creatures that were current in the See also: schools on the faith of authorities vaguely known as " the history of animals," " the naturalists," and " the naturalist " in the singular number (4vvco)t5yos):1 So they took their notions of See also: strange beasts and other marvels of the visible world on See also: trust and did their best to make them available for religious instruction
.
In some measure we find this practice adopted by more than one of the Fathers, but it was the Alexandrian school, with its pronounced taste for symbolism, that made the most of it
.
See also: Clement himself had declared that natural lore, as taught in the course of higher Christian education according to the See also: canon of truth, ought to proceed from " cosmogony " to " the theological idea," 2 and even in the little that is See also: left of the See also: works of See also: Origen we have two instances of the proceeding in question
.
And yet the fact that these reappear in the Physiologus would not suffice to stamp the See also: work as a series of extracts from Alexandrian writings, as See also: parallels of the same kind can he adduced
1 Origen, Sel. in Jerm xvii
.
II, ev rf wept ~46v iaTOplp.; Epiphan . ,Adv. haer. i . 3, p . 274 (ed . D . Petay.), 6'n ¢ao v of 4uQaabyoL; Origen, See also: Horn. xvii., in Gen. xliv
.
9, "nam physiologus de catulo leonis scribit."
2 Strom., iv. p: 564 (ed
.
See also: Potter), 7J See also: gas KaTa See also: rap rigs 8.av9etas Kav6va yvworudjs wapa56aews ¢vowAoyia, µaXMv &l Ero,reia, iK rot, wept sov,Noyovtas if prrjra1 X6-you, tm%vSE hvaliaivovaa Ew2 rb Beohoyucbv e15os.from See also: Epiphanius (loc, cit.) and Ephraem Syrtis (Opp
.
Syr. ii 17, 130)
.
See also: Father Cahier would even trace the book to See also: Tatian, and it is true that that heresiarch mentions a writing of his own upon animals
.
Still, the context in which the See also: quotation occurs makes it evident that the subject-See also: matter was not the nature of particular See also: species nor the spiritual lessons to be See also: drawn therefrom, but rather the place occupied by animal beings in the See also: system of creation
.
On the other See also: hand, the opinion of See also: Cardinal Pitra, who referred the Physiologus to the more orthodox though somewhat See also: peculiar teaching of the Alexandrians, is fully See also: borne out by a close examination of the irregularities of See also: doctrine pointed out in the Physiologus by Cahier, all of which are to be met with in Origen
.
The technical words by which the See also: process of allegorizing is designated in the Physiologus, like ip,unveta, Bewpta, avaycwyi, liXXrryopta, are See also: familiar to the students of Alexandrian exegesis
.
It has, moreover, been remarked that almost all the animals mentioned were at home in the See also: Egypt of those days, or at least, like the See also: elephant, were to be seen there occasionally, whereas the structure of the See also: hedgehog, for instance, is explained by a reference to the See also: sea-porcupine, better known to See also: fish-buyers on the Mediterranean
.
The fables of the See also: phoenix and of the conduct of the See also: wild ass and the ape at the time of the equinox owe their origin to astronomical symbols belonging to the See also: Nile country.3 In both chapters an See also: Egyptian See also: month is named, and elsewhere the See also: antelope bears its Coptic name of " antholops."
That the substance of the Physiologus was borrowed from commentaries on Scripture4 is confirmed by many of the sections opening with a text, followed up by some such See also: formula as " but the Physiologus says." When zoological records failed, Egypto-Hellenic ingenuity was never at a loss for a fanciful invention distilled from the text itself, but which to succeeding copyists appeared as See also: part of the teaching of the See also: original Physiologus
.
As a typical instance we may take the chapter on the See also: ant-lion—not the See also: insect, but an imaginary creature suggested by See also: Job. iv. r1
.
The exceptional See also: Hebrew for a See also: lion (layish) appeared to the Septuagint translators to See also: call for a See also: special rendering, and as there was said to exist on the Arabian See also: coast a, lion-like animal called myrmex " (see See also: Strabo xvi
.
774', Aelian, N.A., vii
.
47) they ventured to give the compound noun " myrmekoleon." After so many years the commentators had lost the See also: key to this unusual
See also: term, and only knew that in See also: common See also: Greek " myrmex " meant an ant
.
So the text " the myrmekoleon See also: bath perished for that he had no nourishment " set them pondering, and others reproduced their meditations, with the following result: " The Physiologus relates about the ant-lion: his father hath the shape of a lion, his See also: mother that of an ant; the father liveth upon flesh, and the mother upon herbs
.
And these bring forth the ant-lion, a compound of both, and in part like to either, for his fore part is that of a lion, and his See also: hind part like that of an ant
.
Being thus composed, he is neither able to eat flesh like his father, nor herbs like his mother; therefore he perisheth from inanition "; the moral follows
.
At a later period, when the See also: Church had learnt to look with suspicion upon devotional books likely to provoke the scoffing of some and
See also: lead others into See also: heresy, a work of this kind could hardly meet with her approval
.
A See also: synod of See also: Pope See also: Gelasius, held in 496, passed censure, among others, on the " See also: Liber Physiologus, qui ab haereticis conscriptus est et B
.
Ambrosii nomine signatus, apocryphus," and evidence has even been offered that a similarSee also: sentence was pronounced a century before
.
Still, in spite of such See also: measures, the Physiologus, like the Church History of See also: Eusebius or the Pastor of See also: Hermes, continued to be read with general interest, and even See also: Gregory the See also: Great did not disdain to allude to it on occasion
.
Yet the See also: Oriental versions, which had certainly nothing to do with the Church of See also: Rome, show that there was no systematic revision made according to the catholic
a Cp
.
Leemans on Horapollo i
.
16, 34
.
Including the Apocrypha
.
See the Icelandic account of the elephant, also a decidedly Alexandrian fragment upon the 1zhpyos, founded upon 4 Mace. i
.
3, which has got into the scholia upon the Odyssey xviii
.
2 (ii
.
533, ed
.
See also: Dindorf, See also: Oxford, 1855)
.
See also: standard of doctrine
.
The book remained essentially the same, albeit great liberties were taken with its details and outward See also: form
.
There must have been many imperfect copies in circulation, from which people transcribed such sections as they found or See also: chose, and afterwards completed their MS. as occasion served
.
Some even rearranged the contents according to the See also: alphabet or to zoological See also: affinity
.
So little was the collection considered as a See also: literary work with a definite text that every one assumed a right to abridge or enlarge, to insert ideas of his own, or fresh scriptural quotations; nor were the See also: scribes and translators by any means scrupulous about the names of natural objects, and even the passages from See also: Holy Writ
.
Physiologus had been abandoned by scholars, and left to take its chance among the tales and traditions of the uneducated mass
.
Nevertheless, or rather for this very reason, its symbols found their way into the rising literature of the vulgar tongues, and helped to quicken the fancy of the artists employed upon church buildings and furniture
.
The history of the Physiologus has become entwined from the beginning with that of the commentaries on the account of creation in See also: Genesis
.
The See also: principal production of this kind in our possession is the Hexaemeron of See also: Basil, which contains several passages very like those of the Physiologus
.
For instance, in the seventh See also: homily the See also: fable of the nuptials of the See also: viper and the conger-See also: eel, known already to Aelian and See also: Oppian, and proceeding from a curious misreading of Aristotle (Hist
.
An. v
.
4, 540 b, Bekk.), serves to point more than one moral
.
Notwithstanding the difference in See also: theology, passages of this kind could not but be welcome to the admirers of the Alexandrian allegories
.
In fact a medley from both Basil and the Physiologus exists under the title of the Hexaemeron of See also: Eustathius; some copies of the first bear as a title Ilepi ¢uoioXo'yias, and in a Milan MS. the " morals " of the Physiologus are ascribed to Basil
.
The See also: Leyden See also: Syriac is supplemented with literal extracts from the latter, and the whole is presented as his work
.
Other copies give the names of Gregory Theologus, Epiphanius, See also: Chrysostom and Isidore
.
As far as can be judged, the emblems of the original Physiologus were the following: (1) the lion (footprints rubbed out with tail; sleeps with eyes open; cubs receive See also: life only three days
after See also: birth by their father's breath); (2) the See also: sun-See also: lizard (restores French Sensuyl le besiiaire d'amours
.
The See also: prose Physiologus was
its sight b looking at the sun); ( the charadrius (Dent', xiv
.
I done into Old High See also: German before 1000, and afterwards into See also: rhyme by g 3) ( in the same idiom; since Von der Hagen (1824) its various forms
have found careful editors among the leading Germanists
.
The Icelandic, in a See also: Copenhagen MS. of the 13th century, was printed by Professor Th
.
See also: Mobius in his Analecta norroena (end ed., 1877) ; at the same time he gave it in German in Dr Hommel's Aethiopic publication
.
Some Anglo-Saxon metrical fragments are to be found in Grein's Bibliothek, vol. i
.
The Provencal (c
.
125o), published in Bartsch's Chrestomathie provencale, omits the "morals,' but is remarkable for its peculiarities of form
.
Before this there had been See also: translations into French dialects, as by Philippe,de Thaun (1121), by Guillaume, " clerc de Normandie," also, about the same period, by See also: Pierre, a clergyman of See also: Picardy
.
All the Old-French materials have not yet been thoroughly examined, and it is far from improbable that some versions of the book either remain to be detected or are now lost past recovery . A full account of the history of the Physiologus should also embrace the subjects taken from it in the productions of Christian See also: art, the parodies suggested by the original work, e.g. the Bestiaire d'amour by See also: Richard de Fournival, and finally. the traces left by it upon the encyclopaedical and literary work of the later middle ages
.
Nearly all the information now obtainable is to be found in the
following works and such as are there quoted: S
.
Epiphanius ad
physiologum, ed
.
See also: Ponce de Leon (with woodcuts) (Rome, 1587);
another edition, with copper-plates (See also: Antwerp, 1588) ; S
.
Eustathii in
hexahemeron commentarius, ed
.
See also: Leo Allatius (See also: Lyons, 1629; cf
.
H
.
See also: van Herwerden, Exercitt
.
Critt., pp
.
180-182, Hague, 1862) ; Physio-
logus syrus, ed
.
O
.
G . Tychsen ( See also: Rostock, 1795) ; Classici auctores,
ed
.
See also: Mai, vii
.
585–596 (Rome, 1835); G
.
Heider, in Archiv
fur Kunde osterreich
.
Geschichtsguellen ii
.
545 seq
.
(Vienna, 1850);
Cahier and See also: Martin, Melanges d'archeologie, &c. ii
.
85 seq
.
(
See also: Paris, 1851), iii
.
2o3 seq
.
(1853), Iv
.
55 seq . (1856) ; Cahier, Nouveaux to kill it); (26) the See also: ichneumon (covers itself with mud to kill melanges (1874), p
.
1o6 seq.; J
.
B
.
Pitra, Spicilegium solesmense 0.1
.
the dragon; another version of No
.
25); (27) the crow (takes but I xlvii. seq., 338 seq., 416, 535 (Paris, 1855); Maetzner, Altengl
.
Sprach-
proben (Berlin, 1867), vol. i. pt
.
I. p
.
55 seq.; J
.
Victor Carus, Gesch
.
der Zoologie (See also: Munich, 1872), p
.
I09 seq.; J . P . N . See also: Land, Anecdota
syriaca (See also: Leiden, 1874), iv
.
31 seq., 115 seq., and in Verslagen
en Mededeelingen der kon
.
Akad. van Wetenschappen, 2nd series,
vol. iv
.
(See also: Amsterdam, 1874) ; Mobius and Hommel in their
(32) the See also: diamond (powerful against all danger); (33) the swallow (brings forth but once; misreading of Aristotle, His'
.
An. v
.
13); (34) the See also: tree called peridexion (protects pigeons from the serpent by its See also: shadow); (35) the pigeons (of several See also: colours; led by one of them, which is of apurple or See also: golden colour); (36) theantelope (or hydrippus; caught by its horns in the thicket); (37) the fire-flints (of two sexes; combine to produce fire); (38) the magnet (adheres to iron); (39) the saw-fish (sails in See also: company with See also: ships) ; (40) the See also: ibis (fishes only along the See also: shore); (41) the See also: ibex (descries a See also: hunter from afar) ; (42) the diamond again (read " carbuncle "t, found only by See also: night) ; (43) the elephant (conceives after partaking of See also: mandrake; brings forth in the See also: water; the See also: young protected from the serpent by the father; when fallen is lifted up only by a certain small individual of its own kind); (44) the See also: agate (employed in See also: pearl-fishing); (45) the wild ass and ape (mark the equinox) ; (46) the See also: Indian See also: stone (relieves patients of the dropsy) ; (47) the heron (touches no dead
See also: body, and keeps to one dwelling-place); (48) the sycamore (or wild fig; grubs living inside the fruit and coming out); (49) the See also: ostrich (devours all sorts of things; forgetful of its own eggs)
.
Besides these, or part of them, certain copies contain sections of unknown origin about the bee, the See also: stork, the See also: tiger, the See also: woodpecker, the spider and the wild boar
.
The Greek text of the Physiologus exists only in See also: late • See also: MSS., and has to be corrected from the translations
.
In Syriac we have a full copy in a 12th-century Leyden MS., published in J
.
P . N . Land's Anecdota syriaca; See also: thirty-two chapters with the " morals " left out in a very late Vatican copy, published by Tychsen; and about the same number in a late MS. of the See also: British Museum (Add
.
25878)
.
In ArmenianPitra gave some thirty-two chapters from a Paris MS
.
(13th century)
.
The Aethiopic exists both in See also: London and Paris, and was printed at See also: Leipzig by Dr Hommel in 1877
.
In Arabic we have fragments at Paris, of which See also: Renan translated a specimen for the Spicilegium solesmense, and another version of thirty-seven chapters at Leiden, probably the work of a See also: monk at Jerusalem, which Land translated and printed with the Syriac
.
The Latin MSS. of
See also: Bern are, after the Vatican glossary of Ansileubus, the See also: oldest of which we know; there are others in several See also: libraries, and printed See also: editions by Mai, Heider and Cahier
.
Besides these, a few fragments of an old `abridgment occur in Vallarsi's edition of See also: Jerome's works (vol. xi. col
.
218)
.
A metrical Physiologus of but twelve chapters is the work of Theobaldus, probably See also: abbot of
See also: Monte Cassino (A.D
.
1022-1035) . From this was imitated the Old- See also: English fragment printed by Th
.
See also: Wright, and afterwards by Maetzner; also the Old-
16; presages recovery or See also: death of patients); (4) the pelican (recalls its young to life by its own See also: blood); (5) the owl (or nyktikorax; loves darkness and solitude) ; (6) the eagle (renews its youth by sunlight and bathing in a fountain); (7) the phoenix (revives from fire); (8) the hoopoe (redeems its parents from the ills of old age); (9) the wild ass (suffers no male besides itselfl; (1o) the viper (See also: born at the cost of both its parents' death); (II) the serpent (sheds its skin; puts aside its venom before drinking; is afraid of man in a See also: state of nudity; hides its See also: head and abandons the rest of its body); (12) the ant (orderly and laborious; prevents stored grain from germinating; distinguishes See also: wheat from See also: barley on the stalk); (13) the See also: sirens and onocentaurs (Isa. xiii
.
21, 22; compound creatures); (14) the hedgehog (pricks grapes upon its quills) ; (15) the See also: fox (catches birds by simulating death) ; (16) the See also: panther (spotted skin; enmity to the dragon; sleeps for three days after meals; allures its prey by sweet odour); (17) the sea-See also: tortoise (or aspidochelone; mistaken by sailors for an See also: island); (18) the See also: partridge (hatches eggs of other birds); (19) the See also: vulture (assisted in birth by a stone with loose kernel); (20) the ant-lion (able neither to take the one See also: food nor to See also: digest the other); (21) the See also: weasel (conceives by the mouth and brings forth by the ear); (22) the unicorn (caught only by a virgin); (23) the beaver (gives up its testes when pursued); (24) the hyaena (a hermaphrodite) ; (25) the See also: otter (enhydris; enters the See also: crocodile's mouth
one See also: consort in its life); (28) the turtle-dove( same nature as No
.
27); (29) the See also: frog (either living on land and killed by rain, or in the water without ever seeing the sun); (3o) the stag (destroys its enemy the serpent); (31) the See also: salamander (quenches fire);
publications quoted above
.
See also Lauchert, Geschichte See also: des Physiologus (Strassburg, 1889) and E
.
- Peters, Der griechische Physiologus and See also: seine orientalischen Ubersetzungen (Berlin, 1898)
.
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