One
of the most universal monster myths is that of the dragon. The awesome,
reptile-like beasts appear in the folklore of nearly every country. And
the fact that the creature was truly regarded as an actual monster
rather than a myth can be demonstrated in several writings of the day.
Edward Topsell, writing in his Historie of Serpents (1608), commented
that among all the kinds of serpents, there is none comparable to the
Dragon, or that afforded and yielded “so much plentiful matter in
history for the ample discovery of the nature thereof.”
While
examining the “true accounts” of dragons in the folklore and records of
several cultures, one cannot help wondering if there really were
dragon-like monsters prowling the earth, devouring hapless villagers,
receiving periodic sacrifices of young maidens, spreading terror into
the hearts of all, and being thwarted only by courageous knights. For
years, children have been read tales, seen motion pictures, and heard
songs of reluctant dragons, kindly dragons, affectionate dragons, magic
dragons, and timid dragons.
Behind
every myth smolders some spark of truth and reality. A few scientists
hold the theory that a number of dinosaurs might have survived into the
Age of Man. Pick up any book on dinosaurs and it is apparent that a
Tyrannosaurus Rex would have made a terrific dragon in anyone’s legend.
Such a huge reptile thudding about the countryside of early Europe or
Asia could certainly fit even the most dramatic descriptions of a
dragon.
No
theorist favoring the surviving dinosaur solution to dragons claims
that the great reptiles existed in anything approaching abundance. But
even a handful of such ancient monsters existing in isolated lakes and
forested valleys would not have gone unnoticed, even in the sparsely
populated Europe of the Dark Ages. The discovery of even just a few of
these great reptiles would have given rise to a far-reaching legend.
A
more palatable theory is that the ancient historians were actually
describing huge snakes such as the python, which often reaches a length
of more than 30 feet. A number of dragon stories from the Middle Ages
tell how the dragon wound itself about its prey and slowly crushed it.
The
giant snake theory does not account for descriptions of the dragon’s
feet or its ability to walk on all fours, but some species of giant
lizard, such as the Komodo dragon, attains a length of 10–12 feet. The
Komodo presently resides in the East Indies, but in ancient times, it is
possible that St. George and his fellow dragon-killers might have
fought some unknown species of monster lizard in Europe and Asia.
A
third, more believable theory has an adventurer of the Middle Ages
coming upon a cave filled with the bones of a giant cave bear and
mistaking them for the skeletal remains of a dragon. Workmen excavating
earth for a cathedral might even have unearthed the fossil remains of a
dinosaur. It was not until the nineteenth century that scientists
realized that the age of fossil bones often ran into millions of years.
Previously, the skeletons were considered to have been the remains of
some giant creature only recently dead. If, at the time the dragon
legend was flourishing in Europe, a discovery of fossil remains was
unearthed or sighted in a cave, the find would seem to offer conclusive
proof for the existence of dragons. It is likely that the bones of the
mammoth, the woolly rhinoceros, and the giant cave bear were not that
uncommon in early Europe. The tusk of the mammoth was often called for
in the recipes of medieval love potions.
In
the marketplace of the Austrian city of Klagenfurt, there is a statue
of a giant killing a dragon. The dragon’s head has quite obviously been
modeled on the skull of a woolly rhinoceros. The connection can be
proven by the fact that old records note the discovery of a “dragon’s
skull” in Klagenfurt in the sixteenth century, 30 years before the
statue was constructed. The skull has been preserved all these years by
the city fathers and can be identified today as that of the Ice Age
rhinoceros.
Delving Deeper
Carrington, Richard. Mermaids and Mastodons. London: Arrow Books, 1960.
Heuvelmans, Bernard. On the Track of Unknown Animals. New York: Hill and Wang, 1958.
Mackal, Roy P. A Living Dinosaur? In Search of Mokele-Mbembe. New York: E. J. Brill, 1987.
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