Helmingham Herbal and Bestiary, ca. 1500, Yale Center for British Art, f. 15v.

Featured on PDR in the collection Medieval Illustrations of Bonnacons

When it comes to self-defense, skunks and spitting cobras have nothing on the bonnacon. If threatened, it fled. While fleeing, it defecated. Violently. According to Pliny the Elder, the excrement voided the animal’s body with such explosive force that it could hit targets more than a football pitch away. Contact with its dung was said to burn like a kind of fire, scorching hunting dogs and anyone not equipped with protective gear. (There is some uncertainty whether the weapon was liquid or gaseous, super-heated or acidic.)

Bonnacon

Date

ca. 1500

From

Helmingham Herbal and Bestiary


Underlying Rights

Public Domain Worldwide

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights


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Image Size

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