

The unicorn continues to hold a place in popular culture. The Bible also describes an animal, the re'em, which some translations render as unicorn. An equine form of the unicorn was mentioned by the ancient Greeks in accounts of natural history by various writers, including Ctesias, Strabo, Pliny the Younger, Aelian, and Cosmas Indicopleustes. In medieval and Renaissance times, the tusk of the narwhal was sometimes sold as a unicorn horn.Ī bovine type of unicorn is thought by some scholars to have been depicted in seals of the Bronze Age Indus Valley civilization, the interpretation remaining controversial. In encyclopedias, its horn was described as having the power to render poisoned water potable and to heal sickness. In the Middle Ages and Renaissance, it was commonly described as an extremely wild woodland creature, a symbol of purity and grace, which could be captured only by a virgin. In European literature and art, the unicorn has for the last thousand years or so been depicted as a white horse-like or goat-like animal with a long straight horn with spiralling grooves, cloven hooves, and sometimes a goat's beard. The unicorn is a legendary creature that has been described since antiquity as a beast with a single large, pointed, spiraling horn projecting from its forehead. Qilin, Re'em, Indrik, Shadhavar, Camahueto, Karkadann The gentle and pensive maiden has the power to tame the unicorn, fresco by Domenichino, c.
