Medieval Animals Gallery
jojosspookyadventure
scumbag cereal
ソロモンの悪夢
forgirl
tamedlust
busty half-lioness‘Hours of Joanna the Mad’, Bruges 1486-1506BL, Add 18852, fol. 381r
interlinear weaselLuttrell Psalter, England ca. 1325-1340British Library, Add 42130, fol. 49v
mess-of-emptiness:Duomo di San Moderanno, Italy, 9th centuryby Sharmanka Kinetic Theatre
met-medieval-art:Relief Frieze via Medieval ArtMedium: Pinewood with traces of polychromyRogers Fund
creation of the mammalsGreat Canterbury Psalter, Canterbury c. 1176-1200BnF, lat. 8846, fol. 1r
war elephantbestiary, England 12th centuryBL, Add 11283 fol. 4r
professorerudite:This is from Codex Manesse, but it reminds me of Erec and Eninde by Chretien de Tro
chouettealunettes:Animals seems to have a lot of fun in that medieval fables collection ! BnF : http
batbeaver‘Hours of Joanna the Mad’, Bruges 1486-1506.BL, Add 18852, fol. 150r
army of bearsDiebold Schilling the Elder, Spiezer Chronik, Bern 1484-85Bern, Burgerbibliothek, Mss.h
goatsuckerJacob van Maerlant, Der Naturen Bloeme, Utrecht, ca. 1340-1350Den Haag, Koninklijke Biblio
arthistorycq:“April” from the Creation EmbroideryLocation: Gerona, Spainc. 1100
apocalyptic menagerieBeatus of Liébana, Commentaria in Apocalypsin (the ‘Beatus of Saint-Sever
Noah’s ArkBeatus of Liébana, Commentaria in Apocalypsin, Spain or France 12th centuryMancheste
standing foxBeatus of Liébana, Commentaria in Apocalypsin (the ‘Beatus of Saint-Sever’), Saint-Sever
lionsBeatus of Liébana, Commentaria in Apocalypsin (the ‘Beatus of Saint-Sever’), Saint-Sever before
snake eaterBeatus of Liébana, Commentaria in Apocalypsin (the ‘Beatus of Saint-Sever’), Saint-Sever
animal geometryBeatus of Liébana, Commentaria in Apocalypsin (the ‘Beatus of Saint-Sever’), Saint-Se
strider stagpsalter, England ca. 1220BL, Harley 5102, fol. 82r
historiated:Cloister capital with foliage and animal masks from the Abbey of Saint Pierre at Moissac
burning tailsKriegsbuch, Franconia ca. 1500.Universitätsbibliothek Erlangen-Nürnberg UER MS.B 26, fo
moorbay:Detail from an ivory panel -Cordoba, Spain ~10th-11th centuryhttp://moorbay.tumblr.comVisit
The fiery farts of the BannaconFirst described in the 1st century AD by Pliny the Elder in Naturalis
gryffon and grehond‘The Tudor Pattern Book’, England ca. 1520Bodleian Library, MS. Ashmo
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