The shadhahvar (© Anthony Wallis)
And now, as they often said on 'Monty Python's
Flying Circus', for something completely different. Some of you may know that I
have been working for quite a time on a companion volume to my bestselling
dragons book, Dragons: A Natural History
(1995). This time, however, the subject is not the dragon, but the unicorn,
surveying its surprisingly numerous varieties and retelling some of its most
famous, and also certain much less familiar, legends and folktales. Now, here for
the very first time anywhere, I am presenting as a CFZ world-exclusive an
excerpt from my unicorns book, unveiling the deadly Persian shadhahvar. I hope
you enjoy it.
THE SINISTER SHADHAHVAR –
PERSIA'S UNICORN SIREN OF THE SANDS.
An excerpt From Chapter 2 of my in-progress book Unicorns: A Natural History.
Despite the unicorn's popular image as a
benevolent, pure-spirited creature, not all of its kin are so benign. Some are
decidedly sinister, but perhaps the deadliest of all is the deceptive
shadhahvar of Persia - an exotic Pied Piper of the unicorn world, whose gentle
demeanour veils a bloodthirsty, malevolent beast waiting to lure the
unsuspecting to their doom...
He had been lost for days in the featureless,
seemingly endless Persian desert, with scarcely any food or water left, so it
would be little wonder if he were indeed beginning to hallucinate. How else
could the lone traveller, roaming far from his European homeland, explain what
he was now hearing? From nowhere, the hot desert air had suddenly filled with
the strains of glorious music, as if the very wind itself were a celestial
flautist, piping dulcet melodies that caressed and calmed, lured and lulled,
sang and soothed, as the weary traveller stumbled onwards. They reminded him of
the zephyr-murmured refrains that would drift from the Aeolian harps in his
boyhood village. Yet the rapturous harmonies that now encompassed him were
infinitely sweeter and stronger - and more mysterious.
Then, abruptly, the traveller saw something that
dispelled even the enigma of this phantom sonata far from his mind - for just
ahead, its neck bowed down gracefully as it drank from a clear, sparkling pool
of water in a small oasis, stood an extraordinary creature. In general outline,
it resembled a deer, but as he watched, the creature raised its head and looked
at him - and to the traveller's amazement, he realised that it was a unicorn!
There, set like a precious stone in the centre of its brow, was a long slender
horn!
As he looked closer, however, the traveller saw
that it was no ordinary horn, and no ordinary unicorn - if such a magical beast
as a unicorn could ever be called ordinary. Long ago, he had once briefly spied
a unicorn in the forests near his home - a creamy-white steed with a
shimmering, spiralled horn upon which shafts of sunlight danced like a bright
animate rainbow. In contrast, the creature standing before him now was pale
brown, matching the sandy hue of the undulating dunes on every side, was
deer-like rather than horse-like, and its horn was even more marvellous than
that of the unicorn he had previously seen.
Eschewing the typical undivided horn of Western
unicorns, it bore no less than 42 slender hollow branches, radiating upwards on
every side, silver in colour and each perforated with tiny holes. And it was
the blustery desert wind blowing through this incredible structure that was
engendering the miraculous melodies still surging all around him! Here, more
tangible but also more unearthly than any mirage, was a veritable siren of the
sands - in the form of an exotic neo-unicorn!
Thoroughly enchanted by these hypnotic sounds and
by the majestic sight of the uncanny desert unicorn, the traveller moved closer,
desperately anxious to learn more about this ethereal beast. And as he did so,
the symphony emerging from its horn grew even louder, its sonorous music
filling his brain with such wonderful visions that he was deafened and blinded
to all thoughts of caution and possible danger. In any case, what danger could
there be from this captivating creature, which gazed at him so innocently,
willing him to draw closer, as it stood unafraid. Soon he was standing before
the appealing, passive beast, and as its seductive harmonies swirled around his
head he was close enough to see how fine the holes were that percolated the
unicorn's horn, and how incredibly sharp the point of every branch was that
diverged from the horn's central column.
Falling to his knees in awe, how blessed the
traveller felt, to have encountered such a glorious entity, and to have
listened to its heavenly rhapsodies. Now he knew how sailors must have felt who
had encountered the bewitching lorelei singing from her rock above the River Rhine,
or the sweet-voiced original sirens - half-woman, half-bird - of ancient Greece. But even as he smiled in rapt delight at such
thoughts, up from the depths of his unconscious mind, straining to be heard
above the enveloping refrains of the unicorn's music, came a single tremor of
alarm, a solitary dissonant note momentarily stilling the mellifluous harmonies
that by now had all but smothered his conscious mind. Beware! Remember what
happened to those lulled by the lorelei's alluring song and the dulcet strains
of the sirens! Death! Theirs is the mesmerising music of Death!
Shocked out of his melody-drugged reverie, the
traveller's head jerked up, and his eyes met those of the desert unicorn - or
shadhahvar, as it is known in this land. But instead of seeing the soft, loving
eyes of the magical creature that he had spied in the forest back home all
those years ago, he found himself staring into a pair of fiery pits in which
the acrid scarlet flames of evil danced and laughed at his horrified gaze. He
drew back, and saw a hideous, mocking leer flit briefly across the lips of the
shadhahvar as they rolled back to reveal a series of savage predatory fangs.
The traveller screamed in fear - but it was too
late. Even as he backed away further, stumbling in his terror, the shadhahvar
lowered its head, lunged forward - and impaled the hapless traveller upon its
deadly horn, its many branches spearing every portion of his body. After a few
moments, it shook its head violently, the gored bloodstained body of the dead
man fell off its horn onto the sand, and the hungry shadhahvar rapidly devoured
his corpse, tearing it to shreds with its long sharp fangs.
Eventually, the shadhahvar moved away, ready to
seek out a new victim elsewhere, leaving behind only a whitened human skeleton
to be swiftly buried by the ever-shifting desert sands. Nothing remained as
testimony of the terrible event that had lately transpired here - nothing
except a single spot of blood, which spread out over a patch of sand like the
petals of a crimson rose. But who has ever encountered a rose in the desert -
that would be as unlikely as a siren of the sands...wouldn't it?
Hello, Mr. Shuker!!!
ReplyDeleteI'm a regular at Nick Redfern's Cryptozoology blog and thought I'd drop you a line over here. Thanks for deciding to do a blog, BTW. You're one of my favorite authors. My favorite of your books is the "Natural History" of Dragons. Total classic.
Question:
Is the Shadhahvar you speak of related to or the same as the Persian Karakdann, which I was "brought up" to believe was the "True" Persian Unicorn??? I'd never heard of the Shahdahvar before.
Thanks again for your contributions to the field.
Wow! What a mesmerizing tale!
ReplyDeleteIt reads like a Clark Ashton Smith fantasy, which would make sense, since CAS was greatly inspired by Middle Eastern and Eastern tales.
Does the Shahdahvar appear in "1001 Nights?"
Hi there, Thanks to both of you for your kind comments.
ReplyDeleteFirstly: no, the karkadann is a completely separate Persian unicorn from the deer-like flute-horned shadhahvar, as it is very bovine or even rhinocerine in form, with a single sharp, unbranched horn and an extremely aggressive, belligerent nature but nevertheless a herbivore. The most astonishing aspect regarding the karkadann is that in spite of its fearsome temper, it can be readily pacified by the most unexpected of sources - the gentle cooing of a turtle dove!
Secondly: as far as I am aware, the shadhahvar does not appear in the 1001 Nights - I read the Burton-translated version a long time ago and have no recollection of this savage flute-horned carnivorous unicorn being mentioned in it. This is sad, really, as it is certainly a mesmerising - in every sense! - creature, so different from the traditional, peaceful, benevolent unicorn of Western legend.
If my unicorns book can receive an offer of publication (ideally by a coffee-table book publisher willing to spend the amount of money required to illustrate it in full colour in the style of my earlier dragons book, because there are some truly spectacular unicorn-inspired works of art out there), I can promise you some even more extraordinary, little-known unicorns - such as a web-footed version, a shaggy-coated version, and even one that resembles a horned hare!
All the best, Karl
Would you be needing any illustrations from me for this upcoming book? I understand you have quite afew unicorn images in your collection, but if there are any you need illustrated, feel free to ask me. I might just draw afew anyhow, and see how they turn out.
ReplyDeleteWarm regards,
Tim
Hi Tim, Yes, I'll be needing pix of some of the more unusual, obscure unicorns, such as the lumbering rhino-like version from the Isle of Skye, so I'd definitely be interested in any illustrations that you could prepare, and can send you in due course the necessary details for them, so thanks as ever for your interest in helping me with this project! All the best, Karl
ReplyDeleteHi Dr. Shuker,
ReplyDeleteI possess an ancient silver Persian Ewer which has a one horned deer type of animal as the theme. Could this be the Shadhahvar? Can I send you a photo to confirm.
Hi there, Yes, I'd be very interested to see a photo of the deer-like creature depicted on your Persian ewer. Please email it to me at my usual address - karlshuker@aol.com - thanks very much. All the best, Karl
ReplyDeleteMay I offer some correction? The last picture does not portray a shadhavar. According to Richard Ettinghausen's "The Unicorn", that's a yahmur, described in Ibn Bakhtishu's "Manafi-I-Hayawan", which is probably not even supposed to be a unicorn. In general, it's unlikely to find shadhavar outside of Islamic bestiaries, since the creature never gained popular recognition. I gathered all verified pictures I could find, in case you're interested: http://karkadann.wikia.com/wiki/Shadhavar
ReplyDeleteHi there, And yet it is clearly one-horned and therefore by definition a type of unicorn ('unicorn' - 'one-horned'), recognising obviously that unicorns are polyphyletic in terms of taxonomy (or would be, if they existed). I'll investigate the yahmur identification, as I haven't heard of this beast before. The multi-branched nature of the horn of the animal in the illustration here is certainly very reminiscent of the shadhahvar.
DeleteI've just checked Ettinghausen's paper, in which he claims that depictions of the yahmur that appear to show it as one-horned are actually depictions of two-horned animals seen in profile, so that the two horns precisely overlap one another to yield the illusion of a single horn. Whereas I can accept this with unbranched horns (I have seen and photographed an addax that was rendered a unicorn when seen side-on, as I have illustrated in a separate ShukerNature article), this wouldn't work with branched horns, as it would be impossible for the branches of the two horns to align perfectly with one another even for an instant. So I'm not happy with that as an explanation for the yahmur. Still, we only have opinions re these early artworks,as only their creators knew for certain what they were illustrating.
DeleteWell, what doesn't work in real life, might easily work in art, especially considering that both the horn and its outline are black. It might simply be that the illustrator had a fancy to draw two horns perfectly overlapping each other. Or I don't know, maybe he wanted to draw a unicorn, even though the scholars, whose books he was working on, never claimed the animal to have only one horn (and in fact other artists drew it with two horns)? Whatever the truth is, I think you'll agree that the creature on the picture is not meant to be a shadhavar.
DeleteOn the contrary, its very distinctive branched horn looks similar to various shadhahvar depictions that I have seen, and I certainly see no reason why it should be entirely confined to Islamic bestiaries.
DeleteDidn't that legend become entangled with the one for siranis, most likely by al-Qazwini from Egypt?
ReplyDelete