Unicorns, griffins, and hydras were more than just imaginary beasts for the early explorers and settlers. They inhabited the edges of the world and were verified by eyewitness accounts and, in the case of the hydra, by physical evidence. First-hand accounts and tangible samples "proved" the existence of the creatures.
The depiction of the griffin is a curious one. Looking up at the Spanish Conquistador, amidst the violence of the scene, the griffin by be allegorically representing the guardian of the gold. At the same time, since so many new creatures had been documented, in addition to those described in antiquity, it may very well be the case that the griffin, too, was thought to be real.
- John Ogilby. America. London: John Ogilby, 1671. McGregor 129
- The calmly factual description of Unicorns roaming the woods of the New York Canadian border, including feeding and mating habits, could hardly be doubted by Europeans learning of a new world filled with other wonders.
- Bartolome de las Casas. Narratio regionum Indicarum per Hispanos qvosdam deuastatarum verisima. Francofvrti: Theodori de Bry, 1598. McGregor 33
- This little griffin inhabiting a world of torture and destruction is the least frightening “monster” depicted by de Bry in his propagandistic illustrations showing the “Black Legend” of the Conquistadors.
- Albertus Seba. Locupletissimi rerum naturalium. Vol 1. Amsterdam, 1734-65. Rare Book QH41 .S4 v.1-4
- Perhaps the most remarkable beast in Rauner’s collections is the depiction of Albertus Seba’s specimen of a seven-headed hydra in his collection of natural wonders. He admits in the text to being doubtful at first, but becoming convinced that the specimen was true to nature. To a European collector reared on the classics, a seven-headed hydra would probably have been less questionable than a duck-billed platypus.