Woodcut of the mimick dog,
from Edward Topsell's bestiary, The Historie of Foure-Footed Beastes and
Serpents (1658)
European and Middle Eastern medieval
mythology is populated not only by such famous examples of fabulous beasts as
the dragon, griffin, basilisk, centaur, unicorn, and minotaur, but also by many
lesser-known yet no less fascinating fauna, including a small furry mystery
beast called the mimick dog.
It was also known as the Getulian dog, because
it was said to originate in the Libyan province of Getulia as well as occurring
elsewhere in the Middle East, particularly Egypt. A third name for it is Canis
Lucernarius (Lucernarius is Latin for watch-dog). However, to discover the
origin of its principal name, 'mimick dog', we need to consult the accounts of
this intriguing little creature that can be found in two of the most famous
European bestiaries. Namely, Swiss naturalist Conrad Gesner's five-volume Historiae
Animalium (1551-1558) and English cleric Edward Topsell's The Historie
of Foure-Footed Beastes and Serpents (1658).
According to their commentaries, the mimick
dog is capable of imitating anything that it sees, leading some observers to
assume that it must have been conceived by a monkey (which were often termed
apes in these bestiaries but were clearly monkeys rather than anthropoids).
Moreover, it supposedly resembles a monkey in both wit and disposition, but
differs markedly in morphology. Its face is described as being sharp and black
like a hedgehog's, with a short recurved body, very long legs, shaggy fur, and
a short tail. It is sometimes reared with monkeys, and while doing so it learns
to perform all manner of very pleasing and unusual feats. During the time of the
Graeco-Egyptian writer-scientist Ptolemy (90-c.168 AD), there were apparently
plenty of mimick dogs in Egypt. According to his documentation of them in his
scientific treatise Geography, they had been taught to leap, play, and
dance when music was played, and they even functioned as servants in the homes
of many poor people, where they performed a wide range of tasks for their
masters.
Conrad Gesner, as portrayed
in Vol. 1 of his Historiae Animalium
Any dog whose muddled morphology combined
the face of a hedgehog with the body of a monkey would be a wonder to behold,
but its talent for mimicry set the mimick dog even further apart from the
typical canine creed. Consequently, they were much sought-after by travelling
players and puppeteers, who would train them to participate in their
performances.
One such performance took place during a
public spectacle at Rome, attended by the emperor Vespasian (ruled 69-79 AD) and
the famous Greek biographer Plutarch (46-120 AD) who became a Roman citizen. It
featured an extremely versatile mimick dog that effortlessly imitated the
behaviour and cries of a diverse range of different types of dog and other
animals too. Its pièce de resistance, however, was its own tragic death, after
eating some poisoned bread. During this act, it reeled and staggered to and fro
like a drunken man before falling down to the ground and lying motionless for
quite some time, as if dead. This was followed by its enthusiastic resurrection
from the dead at the end of the play, which it executed with great verve, opening
its eyes, then raising its head and looking around as if waking from sleep,
before standing up and running to its master, its unexpected revival duly delighting
the emperor and the other members of the audience.
Despite its onetime popularity, however, the
mimick dog is largely forgotten today, and even among those few zoologists
aware of its history there is no consensus regarding this strange animal's precise
identity. Indeed, there is no guarantee that it was actually a dog at all.
A colour illustration of the
mimick dog from Fabulous Beasts - written by Alison Lurie, illustrated
by Monika Beisner, and published in 1981 by Jonathan Cape (© Monika
Beisner/Jonathan Cape)
In his book Curious Creatures in Zoology
(1890), John Ashton proposed that it was a poodle, but the animal depicted in a
woodcut of the mimick dog appearing in Topsell's bestiary (in turn copied from Gesner's)
looks nothing like this familiar breed, nor even like some early form of it. In
any case, even the cleverest poodle would experience major difficulties in
adequately carrying out the diversity of tasks habitually performed by human
servants. And needless to say, the suggestion made by some early authorities
that mimick dogs were the product of illicit liaisons between dogs and monkeys
is untenable for basic genetic and taxonomic reasons.
A far more likely explanation for this
furry caricaturist is that the mimick dog was not of the canine persuasion at
all. Certainly, its gift for accurate impersonation and mimicry readily recalls
a monkey. More specifically, its body, long limbs, dense fur, short tail, and
slender muzzle are all consistent with baboons.
19th-Century
engraving of an olive baboon Papio anubis
By the time of Egypt's New Kingdom (16th-11th
Centuries BC), both the sacred baboon Papio hamadryas and the anubis or
olive baboon P. anubis were being imported into Egypt (there was even a
baboon-headed Egyptian deity, Babi – the attendant of Thoth).
19th-Century
engraving of some sacred baboons Papio hamadryas
So too was the Barbary ape Macaca
sylvanus - not an ape but a near-tailless species of macaque monkey, native
to North Africa (including Libya long ago) but renowned for the colony on
Gibraltar, thus making it Europe's only present-day species of monkey (it is
also the only macaque species outside Asia).
A Barbary ape (public domain)
Furthermore, not only were they sometimes
kept in Egypt as pets, these primates were also retained in colonies by
temples, and buried in necropolises. There are also various depictions of these
monkeys acting as servants to humans here, though some portray them carrying
out various unrealistic tasks (for monkeys), so may not be reliable sources of
evidence. Notwithstanding this, trained baboons accompanying travelling
performers journeying northwesterly from Egypt could have reached Greece, Italy,
and elsewhere in Europe (even England, as mimick dogs were indeed present here,
according to Topsell).
Such an identity may also explain the
strange idea that the mimick dog was a simian-canine crossbreed, because
baboons have monkey-like bodies but very dog-like heads. Exemplifying this
latter characteristic are the yellow baboon, referred to scientifically as Papio
cynocephalus (which translates as 'dog-headed baboon'), and the anubis
baboon, named after Anubis, ancient Egypt's wolf-headed god of embalmers and
death. (Incidentally: Anubis was traditionally deemed to be jackal-headed – but
in recent times, Egypt's supposed jackals were revealed to be wolves – a
remarkable zoological discovery documented in my very first ShukerNature post,
click here.)
A statue of Anubis (© Dr Karl
Shuker)
Baboons are easily trained to perform
tricks, they are often kept as intelligent pets, and sometimes have even been
taught to carry out tasks normally reserved for humans. Perhaps the most famous
example was a chacma baboon P. ursinus from the late 19th Century called Jack (died 1890), who worked for
most of his life as a signalman, assisting his crippled human master, James Edwin Wide, to operate
the railway line signals at a small train station in Uitenhage, South Africa. Throughout
his amazing career, which spanned nine years, Jack never made a single mistake; moreover, after passing with ease a stringent series of tests set by the authorities in Cape Town, he was actually given an official employment number by the South African government!
During the 1970s, another baboon was fulfilling the same role at a railway
station near Pretoria, and there was a baboon elsewhere in South Africa whose
farmer owner had trained him as a shepherd!
James Edwin Wide with Jack, the amazing baboon signalman (public domain)
Having said that, however, the creature
depicted in the bestiaries of Gesner and Topsell bears no resemblance to a
baboon. True, medieval illustrations of animals were often notoriously
inaccurate, but it just so happens that Topsell's bestiary also includes a
woodcut of what is instantly recognisable as a baboon, accurately depicting its
dog-like muzzle, short tail, and even its ischial callosities (rough spots on
its protruding buttocks). This provides good reason for believing that the
mimick dog woodcut is not a poor representation of a baboon. Nor does it look
like the Barbary ape. In fact, the bestiaries' mimick dog woodcut does not
recall any type of monkey.
At present, therefore, verification of the
mimick dog as a baboon remains unproven, but perhaps this is fitting. After
all, it would be nothing if not ironic if science quite literally made a monkey
out of a creature best known for apeing around!
This ShukerNature blog post is
expanded and updated from my book The Beasts That Hide From Man.
Excellent article and a very enjoyable read. It's easy to imagine how startling a baboon would look to untravelled, and especially parochial, Europeans. They seem quite intimidating from afar although the last time I saw any was at Knowsley safari park and they were dormant under cold, English rains.
ReplyDeleteI think your suspicions that the mimick dog was such a creature are highly likely to be the truth.