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<td><center><h3 style="font-size:17px;line-height:20px;padding-left:15px;"> Monstropedia is the ultimate online encyclopedia of monsters in myth, magick and legend</h3></center></td></tr></table> | <td><center><h3 style="font-size:17px;line-height:20px;padding-left:15px;"> Monstropedia is the ultimate online encyclopedia of monsters in myth, magick and legend</h3></center></td></tr></table> | ||
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Welcome to Monstropedia, the original open-source bestiary!
This project has just started and there is little content at the moment. Our current records indicate that there are more than 5000 different monsters to be catalogued... so there is work for everybody! Don't be shy, join us and become a part of our community. At one time, the monster was an important social concept. Monsters were often associated with unknown lands and unknown things. For instance, historically, unexplored areas on maps would be marked "here be dragons..." This connection between monsters and the unknown meant that the monster was an important concept in the Renaissance and the Enlightenment, as Western society began to use science and other academic disciplines to try to understand the unknown. Monsters were seen as scientific puzzles; things science needed to understand. In the Enlightenment, the cabinet of curiosities would often include monsters in amongst the scientific instruments and toys. Similarly, the monstrous was an important concept on aesthetics during the enlightenment, often closely associated with the wondrous and the sublime. If you would like to add to the encyclopedia, you are welcome to become an editor, where you will be able to start to create and edit articles. Help add to Monstropedia in two easy steps...1. Become an editor by signing up2. Learn how to edit with the Really Simple Tutorial If you find Monstropedia useful, please consider donating.
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Featured Article
UnicornDescriptionThe Unicorn is a mythical creature. Strong, wild, and fierce, it was impossible to tame by man. Plinie, the Roman naturalist records it as "a very ferocious beast, similar in the rest of its body to a horse, with the head of a deer, the feet of an elephant, the tail of a boar, a deep, bellowing voice, and a single black horn, two cubits in length, standing out in the middle of its forehead." Also known as : Re’em, Ki-lin, Kirin PowersIt was traditionally believed that only a naked virgin sitting beneath a tree could lure and tame the unicorn, which craves purity. It would be irresistably drawn to the girl and lie down with its head in her lap. While it slept, the hunter could capture it. If, however, the girl was merely pretending to be a virgin, the unicorn would tear her apart. Throughout the mythology of the unicorn, its horn, the alicorn, was believed to have great medicinal powers. In Ctesias’ writings, the dust filed from the horn was supposed to protect against deadly diseases if mixed into a potion. Or, if you drank from the hollowed horn, you would be protected against any poison. Often, a narwhale tusk was sold as an alicorn, and it was commonly ground up and used for its magical properties. SymbolismIts white coloring made it a natural symbol for purity, chastity and virginity. The horn of the unicorn was the weapon of the faithful and of Christ. The mythological unicorn was a symbol of chivalry with qualities befitting this status, proud and untamable. In heraldry, a unicorn is depicted as a horse with a goat's cloven hooves and beard, a lion's tail, and a slender, spiral horn on its forehead. Whether because it was an emblem of the Incarnation or of the fearsome animal passions of raw nature, the unicorn was not widely used in early heraldry, but became popular from the fifteenth century. Though sometimes shown collared, which may perhaps be taken in some cases as an indication that it has been tamed or tempered, it is more usually shown collared with a broken chain attached, showing that it has broken free from its bondage and cannot be taken again. It is probably best known from the royal arms of Scotland and the United Kingdom: two unicorns support the Scottish arms; a lion and a unicorn support the UK arms. The arms of the Society of Apothecaries in London has two golden unicorn supporters.
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