Nicolaes
de Bruyn's mystifying engraving from 1594, depicting a wide range of
readily-identifiable insects, plus what can only be described as a truly
bizarre 'locust dragon' (public domain)
As a fervent
browser of bestiaries, illuminated manuscripts, and other sources of antiquarian
illustrations portraying a vast diversity of grotesque, extraordinary beasts
that ostensibly bear no resemblance or relation to any species known to
science, I am rarely surprised nowadays by any zoological depictions that I
encounter in such sources. A few days ago, however, I was not just surprised
but also thoroughly bemused – bewildered, even – by a truly remarkable picture that I happened to
chance upon online.
I had been idly
cyber-surfing in search of interesting animal images to add to one or other of
my two Pinterest albums, when I came upon the engraving to which this present
ShukerNature article is devoted, and which opens it above. Yet in spite of my
experience with antiquarian images, I had never before seen anything even
remotely like the exceedingly bizarre creature occupying much of the left-hand
side of this engraving, and its overt strangeness was such that with no further
ado I immediately set forth on a quest to uncover whatever I could find out
concerning it, and, in particular, to determine what on earth (or anywhere else
for that matter!) it could possibly be.
The first pieces
of information that I obtained were the identity of the person who had produced
this baffling artwork, and its original source. The person was Nicolaes de
Bruyn (1571-1656), a Flemish engraver, and as can be seen on this engraving,
the date of its production was 1594. Although he is best known for his many
biblically-themed engravings and his large engraved landscapes reproducing
designs and paintings by other artists, he produced approximately 400 works in
total, including a number that featured animals.
The original source
of this particular engraving was a series of prints by de Bruyn that depicted
various flying creatures. The series was entitled Volatilium Varii Generis
Effigies ('Pictures of Flying Creatures of Varied Kinds'), was prepared by
de Bruyn in Antwerp, and was first published by Ahasuerus van Londerseel
(1572-1635) of Amsterdam. It was subsequently reissued (with van Londerseel's
name neatly trimmed off!) by Carel Allard in 1663 (or shortly after – there are
conflicting accounts concerning this detail).
The
complete engraving by de Bruyn again, his fantastical locust dragon sharing it
with a wide range of accurately-portrayed insects (public domain)
What I find so
intriguing about de Bruyn's engraving is the juxtapositioning of a fantastical
monster in every sense of the term (more like a dragon, in fact, than any real
beast), with a number of different types of insect whose depictions are so accurate,
so natural, that they readily compare with well-executed 21st-Century
equivalents and whose types can be easily identified. Thus, they include long-horned
bush crickets, dipteran flies, a ladybird, a panorpid scorpionfly, a large moth,
and a narrow-waisted polistid-like wasp (plus a dragonfly, located just below and to the left of the narrow-waisted wasp, and which I neglected to name-check when I originally posted this article here on ShukerNature).
Yet what if the
monster is itself an insect – or is at least intended to represent one? After
all, it does possess six legs (albeit ones bearing no resemblance to those of
real insects), four wings (ditto), a pair of bristly moth-like antennae, and
a long curling butterfly-reminiscent proboscis. But if so, what insect could it
be, especially with such a curious fishtail-like abdominal tip or tail, and why has it
been portrayed in such a nightmarish, wholly inaccurate fashion, especially
when all of the others are so life-like in appearance?
In addition, its wings pose further problems when attempting to reconcile this creature with an insect. For as ShukerNature reader Ruth Bryant has saliently noted to me, rather than having two wings on each side of its body like real four-winged insects, it has instead been portrayed by de Bruyn with three wings on one side - the near side - of its body and one on the other, far side. Of course, it may be that de Bruyn's monster actually has three wings on each side but has been depicted by him with the other two far-side wings being entirely hidden by the near-side ones. Yet even if so, this is still anomalous, because there are no known six-winged insects (or other organisms) anyway. True, certain forms of primitive fossil four-winged insect did bear a pair of anterior lobes upon their first thoracic segment that were veined like wings, but these lobes were not real wings because they were stiff and immobile.
In addition, its wings pose further problems when attempting to reconcile this creature with an insect. For as ShukerNature reader Ruth Bryant has saliently noted to me, rather than having two wings on each side of its body like real four-winged insects, it has instead been portrayed by de Bruyn with three wings on one side - the near side - of its body and one on the other, far side. Of course, it may be that de Bruyn's monster actually has three wings on each side but has been depicted by him with the other two far-side wings being entirely hidden by the near-side ones. Yet even if so, this is still anomalous, because there are no known six-winged insects (or other organisms) anyway. True, certain forms of primitive fossil four-winged insect did bear a pair of anterior lobes upon their first thoracic segment that were veined like wings, but these lobes were not real wings because they were stiff and immobile.
Comparison
of de Bruyn's unrealistically-depicted locust dragon (top) with a realistic
depiction of a locust (bottom) (public domain)
A copy of de Bruyn's perplexing
engraving is housed in the collections of Amersterdam's celebrated Rijksmuseum,
and when I accessed their record for it (click here)
I was nothing if not startled by the record's claim that the engraving's
mystery monster is meant to represent a locust! (The locust species in question
is presumably the infamously destructive Old World desert locust Schistocerca
gregaria.) Needless to say, however, I've certainly never seen a locust
that looks like this, and the Rijksmuseum's record for the engraving contains
no clues regarding the raison d'ĂȘtre for its surreal portrayal here.
The only other site
encountered by me that offers any thoughts on the matter is Strange Science
(click here to see its entry for this engraving). Here, its author notes that in her book Curious
Beasts (2013), Alison E. Wright, a curator of prints and drawings at the
British Museum, has stated that this image "offers particular insights
into the hazards of copying" (an example of it is held in the museum's art
collections). In other words, de Bruyn may not have based his engraving upon an
actual locust specimen that he had personally seen, but had instead either
relied upon a verbal description of one that he had then interpreted extremely
imperfectly in visual form, or had simply copied an inaccurate earlier depiction
of a locust. In my opinion, however, both of these options are untenable when
applied to de Bruyn.
This is because,
as noted earlier here, quite a proportion of de Bruyn's other artworks are
biblical in theme. And as plagues of locusts were certainly a biblical
occurrence, and are referred to in the Bible's text, one would therefore expect de
Bruyn to be familiar with the appearance of this insect. The most famous
biblical locust plague was the Eighth Plague of Egypt, sent by God as a curse
upon Pharaoh, and documented as follows in the Book of Exodus 10: 12-20:
[12] And the Lord said unto Moses, Stretch out thine hand over
the land of Egypt for the locusts, that they may come up upon the land of
Egypt, and eat every herb of the land, even all that the hail hath left.
[13] And Moses stretched forth his rod over the land of Egypt, and the Lord brought an east wind upon the land all that day, and all that night; and when it was morning, the east wind brought the locusts.
[14] And the locusts went up over all
the land of Egypt, and rested in all the coasts of Egypt: very grievous were
they; before them there were no such locusts as they, neither after them shall
be such.
[15] For they covered the face of the
whole earth, so that the land was darkened; and they did eat every herb of the
land, and all the fruit of the trees which the hail had left: and there
remained not any green thing in the trees, or in the herbs of the field,
through all the land of Egypt.
[16] Then Pharaoh called for Moses
and Aaron in haste; and he said, I have sinned against the Lord your God, and
against you.
[17] Now therefore forgive, I pray
thee, my sin only this once, and intreat the Lord your God, that he may take
away from me this death only.
[18] And he went out from Pharaoh,
and intreated the Lord.
[19] And the Lord turned a mighty
strong west wind, which took away the locusts, and cast them into the Red Sea;
there remained not one locust in all the coasts of Egypt.
[20] But the Lord hardened Pharaoh’s
heart, so that he would not let the children of Israel go.
In any case,
even without the specific biblical art link, locust plagues were sufficiently
well known in de Bruyn's day for there surely to be no likelihood that he
would be unfamiliar with this insect's appearance. Also, readily identifiable
depictions of desert locusts date back thousands of years, exemplified by
various portrayals in certain ancient Egyptian sites, such as the following
one:
Readily
identifiable locust depiction from a hunt mural in the grave chamber of Horemhab
(the last pharaoh of ancient Egypt's 18th Dynasty), dating from
c.1422-1411 BC (public domain)
Moreover, as
shown by his portrayals of long-horned bush crickets in the same engraving, de
Bruyn was eminently capable of rendering the basic orthopteran
(grasshopper/cricket) form with meticulous accuracy.
Consequently, I
feel that we need to look elsewhere for a satisfactory solution to the mystery
of why he should have included a veritable locust dragon amid an array of
skilfully-depicted, readily-recognisable insect forms.
Close-up
of a realistically-portrayed locust about to take flight, showing how very different its
wings are from those of de Bruyn's locust dragon (public domain)
Of course, in
more religious, less secular times, locust plagues were traditionally seen as
punishments sent by God in response to humanity's misdeeds. So might it be that
de Bruyn purposefully devised his locust dragon to serve as a demonic-looking personification
of such divine intervention? Or, alternatively, could it be that its presence
in the engraving was actually indicative of a much more light-hearted state of
mind relative to its artistic creator?
Not so long ago
here on ShukerNature I posted an article of mine dealing with snail-cats and
other illuminated manuscript marginalia of the zoomythological variety (click here).
In it, I noted that the preponderance of bizarre, comical, and sometimes
thoroughly outrageous monsters and impossible hybrids portrayed in the margins
of medieval tracts by monks and other illustrators often had no relevance
whatsoever to the text, and seemed to have been included for no good reason at
all – other than simply to relieve the tedium experienced by the illustrators
during the long periods of time required to copy or create such manuscripts,
and that these marginalia monsters frequently were deliberately subversive
or humorous, thereby helping to lighten their creators' moods.
Might the locust
dragon of de Bruyn owe its origin to a similar reason – a wry joke perpetrated
amidst what was otherwise a relatively dry, technical art commission? Certainly,
its weird appearance cannot be due to ignorance on the part of the medieval
illustrators, because there are several notable illuminated manuscripts in existence
containing accurate portrayals of locusts.
A
plague of locusts depicted in a bible produced by Nuremberg-based printer/publisher
Anton Koberger in 1483 (public domain)
Over 400 years
has passed since de Bruyn created his anomalous locust dragon, so we may never know the answer. Yet if nothing
else, this entomological enigma – one that, despite its implausible morphology,
was nevertheless drawn with Bruyn's typical flair and imbued with vibrant
vitality – remains a wonder, and one that I am very happy to have rescued from
centuries of obscurity and introduced at last onto the global cryptozoological
stage.
If anyone
reading this ShukerNature blog article has any additional information
concerning its subject, I'd greatly welcome any details that you'd care to post
here.
To
discover plenty of other strange and spectacular dragon forms, be sure
to check out my recent book Dragons in Zoology, Cryptozoology, and Culture.
ReplyDeleteDear Karl, I was wondering if, in a related vein, why Taz of Warner Bros. cartoons is so wildly incongruous with the real Tassie Devil, Sarcophilus harrisii?
Apaprently, the Warner Bros cartoonists derived their inspiration for Taz not only from the Tasmanian devil species but also from devils of other kinds, so Taz's horn-like tuft of hair above each ear is derived from horned demonic devils and his spinning mode of locomotion is derived from dustdevil whirlwinds.
Delete
ReplyDeleteDear Karl, I was wondering if, in a related vein, why Taz of Warner Bros. cartoons is so wildly incongruous with the real Tassie Devil, Sarcophilus harrisii?
Apparently, the Warner Bros cartoonists derived their inspiration for Taz not only from the Tasmanian devil species but also from devils of other kinds, so Taz's horn-like tuft of hair above each ear is derived from horned demonic devils and his spinning mode of locomotion is derived from dustdevil whirlwinds.
DeleteHe is so far removed from the species I cannot fathom why they just didn't say it was a 'Furred Devil'! I'm a zoologist from Australia, and I can verify Tasmanian Devils have rounded ears, a black coat with a white V mark on the chest, move in the characteristic marsupial bounding gait, and don't have their tongue slobbering all over the place! ;O
DeleteTaz has rounded ears, it's the hair above them that is pointed. But I suppose they liked the name, Tasmanian devil, which sounded exotic and mysterious back then. Also, if you're looking for morphological verisimilitude in animated animals, you'll be sorely disappointed, lol - viz, a blue-plumaged roadrunner, a pink-furred puma (Snagglepuss, years before the Pink Panther was ever thought of), a six-tentacled squid (Squiddly Diddly), a bright blue bipedal dog (Huckleberry Hound), etc etc, lol.
DeleteOne more time! :)
ReplyDeleteI'm guessing Hummingbird moth with wings in motion.:
https://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRvMh_47-5NaO_KkeqeqjbzB2naoRyNUaCKbElUOc1R9-rLj1HU
Ah, ya beat me! The fluffy antennae and the curled probosis are dead giveaways.
DeleteThe narrow waisted wasp is a dragonfly not a wasp....surely dragonflies fly over ponds in Western Europe.Wasps have stingers dragonflies don't. It:s amazing how Warmer Bros.over dramatised the Tasmanian Devil ,& how some believe that inaccurate depiction in the 21st century,a good article.
ReplyDeleteThe insect that I refer to as a narrow-waisted wasp IS a narrow-waisted wasp - it is just to the right of and slightly above the dragonfly. As an enthusiastic entomologist from my earliest childhood days, I've seen far too many odonatans and hymenopterans to confuse the two, lol.
DeleteThe other night, I was photographing a Luna Moth and got some great closeups. Most remarkable in the photos are the "furry" antennae, large body and spots on the wings. This immediately came to mind when reading your article about the insectile anomaly in the engraving. Perhaps the artist was "inspired" by a Luna Moth (and perhaps a lizard) to create a unique species for his book that nobody will ever see, thus making him the only soul ever to have seen one. Just a thought.
DeleteThe body has something of the look of a chrysalis about it. Perhaps it is a short-sighted rendering of a moth or butterfly emerging?
ReplyDeleteDe Bruyn's 'locust dragon' reminds me of the Cantabrian legend about the miniature demonic horse-like dragonfly critters known as Caballucos del Diablu ("little horses of the devil"), could be worth a follow up
ReplyDeletethere are things called 'locusts' in the biblical book of Revelation that are quite distinct from the insect, perhaps it's a reference to one of those? they're not really described as looking like that critter is though. maybe it's a sort of a joke/play on words, where he's put a 'locust' next to these accurate looking insects?
ReplyDeleteI know this is an old post, but just to add a bit of lateral thinking, I can imagine that it's a hypothetical creature. The point possibly being to provide a new perspective on insects and how alien they are compared to terrestrial vertebrates. A picture asking 'What if vertebrates had an insect body plan. What would they look like?' or 'See how bizarre the insect body plan is if applied to a vertebrate'.
ReplyDeleteI immediately idenified with this because for whatever reason I found myself thinking 'What if bees had vertebrate features? How terrifying would that be?' A big long fleshy tongue, rotated toothed mandibles, soft eyeballs and clawed feet...
It also looks like some stage in the evolution of Dr Zoidberg
The image of the locust-dragon looks like it may have been inspired by the antlered sea-snail that you talk about here. Just cover the wings and body with a big shell, and replace the antlers with moth antennae, and you have the creature illustrated in Ambroise Paré's book.
ReplyDeleteAll creatures readily identifiable except for one... I came here straight from the Pictish Beast page. Bit of a coincidence. :) This characteristic always reminds me of the Egyptian depiction of a sauropod I saw before. I still haven't the foggiest idea how to start looking for that. I had a little look today and got my previous comment about it on this blog in the first page of results. Ah... I didn't imagine it (and it is a palette, not a stela). I'll post more somewhere more appropriate.
ReplyDeleteYou will be interested to know that this image has been copied many times. See "Monstrous Creatures and Diverse Strange Things": The Curious Art of Jan van Kessel the Elder, a 2012 PhD dissertation, in particular pages 98-99 and illustrations pages 274-276 https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/handle/2027.42/94089
ReplyDeleteRe the meaning of the locust dragon. It has not to be taken as material but as symbolic, given it is an image of clairvoyant observation. Dragon is the image for demonic or adverse powers, working against the normal good development of humanity in its evolution.
ReplyDeleteRudolf Steiner explains how the symbolism of the Book of Revelation can be understood only in terms of clairvoyant observation. Re the locust plague: In astral clairvoyant observation a class of human beings lacking the 'I' principle appear as etheric locusts with a human face. This is a plague for the developing humanity, as these human physical bodies are used by adverse beings (or demons) who appear in mass in the current population, they have a soul but not an 'I'-consciousness. Hence it's like an 'infiltration' into humanity. Such infiltration is also subject even in popular media, see the movie Invasion of the body snatchers. More reading on eg https://anthrowiki.at/Heuschreckenmenschen and https://anthrowiki.at/Ichlose_Menschen. The references of the Steiner lectures can be researched as they also exist in English translation.