Ichneumon (medieval zoology)

In medieval literature, the ichneumon or echinemon was the enemy of the dragon.[1] When it sees a dragon, the ichneumon covers itself with mud, and closing its nostrils with its tail, attacks and kills the dragon. The ichneumon was also considered by some to be the enemy of the crocodile and the asp, and attack them in the same way. The name was used for the "pharaoh's rat", mongoose, or Egyptian mongoose, which attacks snakes; it can also mean "otter".

Etymology

Ichneumon means "tracker" in Greek. Cockatrice, a name for another mythical beast, derives from calcatrix, a Latin translation of this. The Ichneumon was one of the few who can look at a cockatrice without turning to stone.

References

  1. Patricia Cox Miller (2001). The Poetry of Thought in Late Antiquity: Essays in Imagination and Religion. Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-1488-3.

Sources

In 18th-century English poet Christopher Smart's "Jubilate Agno", the poet praises his cat, Jeoffry, "For he killed the Ichneumon-rat very pernicious by land."


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