The basilisk was considered the most poisonous creature on earth. His appearance was allways a matter of dispute. Early wood-cuts (e.g., in Ulisse Aldrovandi: Serpentum et Draconu Historiae libri duo. – Bologna, 1640). show an animal with a domed body, eight legs, a serpent´s tail and a rooster´s head wearing a crown. But allready Athanasius Kircher (Mundus Subterraneus, Roma, 1678) described his later emanation: the cockatrice. Others considered him a dragon. The antique Romans called him “regulus” or little king, not only because of his crown, but because he terrorized all other creatures with his deadly look and poison. His colour was yellow, sometimes with a kind of blackish hue. Plinius mentioned a white spot on his head, which could be misinterpreted as a diadem or a crown. Others speak of three spikes on his forehead. Most authors agree, that Africa was his homeland. There he was hatched from the egg of an ibis or a black stork. His manifestation as cockatrice was rather associated with a rooster´s egg. |
Regarding his dangerousness three main types were distinguished. The golden basilisk poisoned everything by his mere look. Another with only a golden head terrorized and killed every creature by his evil eye. A sting of the sanguineous basilisk made the flesh fall off the bones of his victim. All three had a deadly breath which could even make rocks crumble. The basilisk took his home in deep wells and rotten cellars or vaults. It is said that mother nature made these creatures seek these remote dwellings in order to spear both humans and other animals from its deadly look.
In 1587 a basilisk killed three persons in Warszawa (Poland). Playing hide-and-seek two children – a boy and a girl, both five years old – intended to hide in an old cellar which had been abandoned for 30 years. When they reached the lowest step they suddenly fell dead on the floor. They were not found before the evening, when they were missed by their mothers. A servant was sent out in search. She really found them, but when she went down into the cellar to waken the apparently sleeping children she was herself struck by death. However, an old woman had noticed her entering the abandoned building. She found them all three lying on the ground. All her shouting remained unanswered. Neighbours came and recovered the corpses with long clasps. The bodies were swollen, and so were their lips and tongues. Their skin had turned to yellow. From these signs some learned persons guessed, that a serpent or rather a basilisk had caused their deaths. |
A poor sinner was found who had been sentenced to death. He was clad in leather clothes draped with mirrors. His eyes were protected by strong glasses. With a candle in one hand and pincers in the other he went down the vault. There after half an hour´s search he found a strange creature of the size of a cock sitting in a crevasse of the wall. It was at once killed when it saw its own image reflected by the mirrors. The man took it with the pincers and brought it up to bright daylight. It was identified as a basilisk with the head of an indian cock but the eyes of a toad. Its body and wings were coloured with yellow, blue, red, and green specks. The long, yellow feet were that of a rooster, but its curved tail resembled that of a snake.
An italian nobleman was killed by a basilisk when he went hunting. For a long time his dog had barked at a heap of stones when his master tried to find out what embarrassed his dog. He found a winged serpent. When he tried to slay her, the serpent spread the wings and blew poisonous breath into his face. At once he fell to the ground and lived just long enough to tell his companions what he had seen.
Sources
- Happel, E.W. (1683-91): Groesste Denkwuerdigkeiten der Welt oder sogenannte Relationes Curiosae. – Reprint, 554 pp., Berlin (Rütten und Loening), 1990.
- Schlieder, W. (1988): Riesaufdrucke. Volkstümliche Grafik im alten Papiermachergewerbe. – 184 pp., Leipzig (VEB Fachbuchverlag).
- Bock, E. (1922): Die Deutsche Graphik. – 354 p., München (Franz Hanfstaengel).
- Schöpf, H. (1988): Fabeltiere. – 167 pp., Graz (Akademische Verlagsanstalt); Lizenzausgabe 1992 für VMA Verlag, Wiesbaden.
As to their birth, here’s a bit more information, quoted from Edward Topsell’s The Historie of Serpents (1608).
For they say that when a Cock groweth old, he layeth a certaine egge without any shell, in stead whereof it is covered with a very thicke skinne, which is able to withstand the greatest force of an easie blow or fall. They say moreover, that this Egge is layd onely in the Summer-time, about the beginning of Dogge-dayes, being not long as a Hens Egge, but round and orbiculer: Sometimes of a dusty, sometimes of a Boxie, sometimes of a yellowish muddy colour, which Egge is generated of the putrified seed of the Cocke, and afterward set upon by a Snake or a Toad, bringeth forth the Cockatrice, being halfe a foot in length, the hinder part like a Snake, the former part like a Cocke, because of a treble combe on his forehead.
Topsell (clearly in the tank for the “these are the same” crowd) goes on to note that their breath is foul and putrid if not pestilential (prolonged exposure will cause death), and recounts how in the ninth century a city suffered from one or another cockatrice, so boom, history is like science, y’all, and that proves that cockatrices exist (note: Pope Leo IV’s prayers killed it, too). On the plus side, no bird, spider, or snake will enter into a house with a cockatrice, so if you can put up with being killed by one, they’re an effective means of pest control. Alternately, you can kill yourself one and have it stuffed. That works, too. However, these things are so toxic that if you were to kill one with a spear and touch the spear point, you would die. Maybe even just the spear itself, hard to say. (Kurt Hartwig, from `Likely Fictions´)