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Aldrovandi — Monstrous Fowl Engraving from the Ornithologiae, Bologna 1640

Sale price  €375,00 EUR Regular price  €495,00 EUR

A remarkable teratological woodcut from Ulisse Aldrovandi's Serpentum, et Draconum Historiae Libri Duo (History of Serpents and Dragons), published posthumously in Bologna in 1640. The principal image — Gallus monstruosus cauda anguina, the "monstrous cock with a serpent's tail" — depicts a horned, bearded rooster suspended by its feet from a perch, its long scaled tail coiling away and terminating in a small tubercle. Aldrovandi presents the creature in his accompanying text as a reported monstrous birth "observed near a tropic," not as a mythological beast — though the figure sits unmistakably in the visual lineage that produced the basilisk and the cockatrice.

The leaf is printed on both sides. The verso carries a second striking woodcut, Bufo monstrificus cauda anguina — the "monstrous toad with a serpent's tail" — together with two smaller subsidiary figures: a caterpillar with a serpentine tail, gifted to Aldrovandi by the Bolognese naturalist Ovidio Montalbano, and a broad-bodied serpent with a compressed tail.

A note on display: as the leaf is printed on both sides, only one face can be framed at a time. Buyers framing the cock as the principal display will be supplied free of charge with a high-resolution archival print of the toad verso, allowing both subjects to be enjoyed together.

Translation of plate text:

  • Gallus monstruosus cauda anguina — "Monstrous cock with a serpent's tail."
  • Bufo monstrificus cauda anguina — "Monstrous toad with a serpent's tail."
  • Eruca cauda anguina, prona & supinè picta, ab Excellentiss. D. Ouidio Montalbano inuenta, & nobis dono data — "A caterpillar with a serpent's tail, depicted from above and below, discovered by the most excellent Don Ovidio Montalbano and given to us as a gift."
  • Serpens latissimi corporis cauda compressa — "A serpent of very broad body, with a compressed tail."

The accompanying Latin text (translated): "If any animal in any part is to be reckoned among monsters, doubtless this is to be counted — a cock, horned, bearded, with a serpentine tail, at the extremity of which is a kind of tubercle, observed near a tropic, where the tail adheres to the body."

Aldrovandi (1522–1605) was among the most influential naturalists of the late Renaissance, and his Serpentum et Draconum Historiae remains a cornerstone of early herpetological and teratological literature — a work where empirical observation, hearsay, and the marvellous still sit on the same page.

Title:  Monstrous Fowl Engraving
Publication:  Ornithologiae (volumes I-III of the Opera Omnia)
Provenance:  Eduardo Obejero Urquiza library, with bookplate. Acquired through Trillium Antique Prints & Rare Books, August 2025.
Dimensions:  Approximately 9.5 by 14 inches

Product Description

A remarkable teratological woodcut from Ulisse Aldrovandi's Serpentum, et Draconum Historiae Libri Duo (History of Serpents and Dragons), published posthumously in Bologna in 1640. The principal image — Gallus monstruosus cauda anguina, the "monstrous cock with a serpent's tail" — depicts a horned, bearded rooster suspended by its feet from a perch, its long scaled tail coiling away and terminating in a small tubercle. Aldrovandi presents the creature in his accompanying text as a reported monstrous birth "observed near a tropic," not as a mythological beast — though the figure sits unmistakably in the visual lineage that produced the basilisk and the cockatrice.

The leaf is printed on both sides. The verso carries a second striking woodcut, Bufo monstrificus cauda anguina — the "monstrous toad with a serpent's tail" — together with two smaller subsidiary figures: a caterpillar with a serpentine tail, gifted to Aldrovandi by the Bolognese naturalist Ovidio Montalbano, and a broad-bodied serpent with a compressed tail.

A note on display: as the leaf is printed on both sides, only one face can be framed at a time. Buyers framing the cock as the principal display will be supplied free of charge with a high-resolution archival print of the toad verso, allowing both subjects to be enjoyed together.

Translation of plate text:

  • Gallus monstruosus cauda anguina — "Monstrous cock with a serpent's tail."
  • Bufo monstrificus cauda anguina — "Monstrous toad with a serpent's tail."
  • Eruca cauda anguina, prona & supinè picta, ab Excellentiss. D. Ouidio Montalbano inuenta, & nobis dono data — "A caterpillar with a serpent's tail, depicted from above and below, discovered by the most excellent Don Ovidio Montalbano and given to us as a gift."
  • Serpens latissimi corporis cauda compressa — "A serpent of very broad body, with a compressed tail."

The accompanying Latin text (translated): "If any animal in any part is to be reckoned among monsters, doubtless this is to be counted — a cock, horned, bearded, with a serpentine tail, at the extremity of which is a kind of tubercle, observed near a tropic, where the tail adheres to the body."

Aldrovandi (1522–1605) was among the most influential naturalists of the late Renaissance, and his Serpentum et Draconum Historiae remains a cornerstone of early herpetological and teratological literature — a work where empirical observation, hearsay, and the marvellous still sit on the same page.

Details

Engraver: Bolognese workshop
Title: Monstrous Fowl Engraving
Publication: Ornithologiae (volumes I-III of the Opera Omnia)
Medium: Original woodcut engraving
Provenance: Eduardo Obejero Urquiza library, with bookplate. Acquired through Trillium Antique Prints & Rare Books, August 2025.
Dimensions: Approximately 9.5 by 14 inches
Rarity: Single-leaf Aldrovandi ornithological plates with strong visual content are collected by ornithology and history of science buyers.

Significance

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