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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: TUM-VAN |
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UNICORN (Lat. unicornis, for Gr. ovoKepws, having one horn; Fr. licorne; Ital. alicorno) , a fabulous beast, usually having the head and body
chief
sharp
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Persepolis
The medieval conception of the unicorn as possessing great strength and fierceness may have been partly due to the fact that in certain passages of the Old Testament (e.g. Num. xxiii. 22; Deut. xxxiii. 17; Job xxxix. 9-ro) the Hebrew word R'em, now translated in the Revised Version " wild ox," was translated in the Septuagint uovbKspws, in the Vulgate unicornis or rhinoceros, and in the Authorised Version " unicorn," though in Deut. xxxiii. 17 it obviously refers to a two-horned animal. The early commentators applied to this beast the classical attributes of the povbepws (e.g. Isidore xii. 2, 12 tells how the unicorn has been known to worst the elephant in combat). There is also the passage in Aelian xvi. 20 which says that though as a rule savage and quarrelsome, even with females, the unicorn at mating time becomes very gentle to his mate, which is supposed to have given rise to the medieval idea that the unicorn is subdued to gentleness at the sight of a virgin, and will come and lay his head in her lap, which is the only means by which he can be caught on account of his swiftness and ferocity. This story is illustrated in the tapestry figured in Plate II. Fig. 10 of EMBROIDERY, also on Pisanello's medal of Cecilia
171 Right Fore Foot of Indian Elephant. U, ulna; R, radius; c, cuneiform; 1, lunar; sc, scaphoid; u, unciform; m, magnum; td, trapezoid; tm, trapezium ; Ito V, first to fifth digit. of the unicorn's horn against poison, which in England remained even in the time of Charles II., though Sir E. Ray Lankester (Science from an Easy Chair, London, rgio, p. 127) mentions that a cup made of rhinoceros horn was then handed over to the Royal Society for experiment, with the result of entirely disproving the superstition. In the court ceremonial of France as late
lore
In heraldry the unicorn was sometimes used as a device (see HERALDRY, where two English families are enumerated who used the unicorn on their arms), but more frequently as a supporter, and subsists to the present day as the left-hand supporter of the royal arms. This position it assumed at the Union, the Scottish royal arms having previously been supported by two unicorns. The origin of these is uncertain. The unicorn first appears (c. 1480), as a single supporter, on two gold coins of James III. of Scotland, hence known as " unicorns " and " half-unicorns " (see Lindsay, Coinage of Scotland, pp. 135137 and plate xiii. figs. 22-27). It is represented in a sitting posture, having round its neck a crown, to which is attached a chain and ring, and holding the shield between its front feet. Seton (Law and Practice of Heraldry in Scotland, Edinburgh, 1863, p. 274, foot-note) suggests that the unicorn as a supporter may have been introduced into Scotland by the marriage of James I. with Jane Beaufort, the Beauforts as dukes of Somerset having used it as such.' However this may be, the unicorn became established by the end of the 15th century. J. A. Smith in " Notes on Melrose Abbey" (Proceedings of Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, ii. 257) describes a table dated 1505 on which are sculptured the royal arms supported by two unicorns. The royal arms are also sup-ported by unicorns on the Great Seals of Scotland from the time of Queen Mary onwards (see Anderson, Diplomata Scotiae, plate lxxxviii. xc. xci.) At the Union, when the unicorn became a supporter of the royal arms both of England and Scotland, a royal crown was added on the head of the unicorn, in addition to the crown with chain and ring round its neck (see Great Seal of James I. and VI. in Anderson, pl. xciii.), but this crown was removed after the Hanoverian succession. In England after the Union the unicorn became the left-hand supporter, but in Scotland, as late
bear the Scottish arms alone, the two unicorns are still kept as supporters.(C. B. P.) End of Article: UNICORN (Lat. unicornis, for Gr. ovoKepws, having one horn; Fr. licorne; Ital. alicorno) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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