Griffin


The griffin, griffon, or gryphon is a legendary creature with the body, tail, and back legs of a lion, and the head and wings of an eagle with its talons on the front legs.

Overview

Because the lion was traditionally considered the king of the beasts and the eagle the king of the birds, by the Middle Ages, the griffin was thought to be an especially powerful and majestic creature. Since classical antiquity, griffins were known for guarding treasures and priceless possessions.
In Greek and Roman texts, griffins and Arimaspians were associated with gold deposits of Central Asia. The earliest classical writings were derived from Aristeas and preserved by Herodotus and Aeschylus, but the physical descriptions are not very explicit. Even though they are sharp-beaked, their being likened to "unbarking hounds of Zeus" has led to the speculation they were seen as wingless.
Pliny the Elder was the first to state explicitly that griffins were winged and long eared. But Apollonius of Tyana wrote that griffins did not have true bird wings, but membranous webbed feet that only gave them the capability of short-distanced flight. Writers after Aelian did not add much new material to griffin lore, except for the later idea that griffins deposited agate stone among the eggs in their nest.
Pliny placed the griffins in Æthiopia and Ctesias in greater India. Scholars have observed that legends about the gold-digging ants of India may have contaminated griffin lore.
In the Christian era, Isidore of Seville wrote that griffins were a great enemy of horses. This notion may have developed from the tradition that horseback-riding Arimaspians raided the griffin gold.

Nomenclature

Etymology

The derivation of this word remains uncertain. It could be related to the Greek word γρυπός, meaning 'curved', or 'hooked'. Greek γρύφ from γρύφ 'hook-nosed' is suggested.
It could also have been an Anatolian loan word derived from a Semitic language; compare the Hebrew כרוב kərúv.

Persian names

In the modern Persian language, the griffin has come to be called šērdāl, meaning 'lion-eagle'. However, the practice of referring to ancient Iranian griffin objects or monuments as sherdal, is not followed by other current archaeological scholarship.
Possible Old or Middle Iranian names for the creature have been discussed. Middle Persian Sēnmurw in Sasanian culture was a fabulous composite creature, and Russian archaeologist argued for the possibility that the application of this term may extend to the griffin. The term Sēnmurw is recognized as the etymological ancestor of simurgh, which is generally regarded as a mythological bird in later medieval Persian literature, though some argue that this bird may have originated from the Mesopotamian lion-griffin.
There is also the Armenian term Paskuč that had been used to translate Greek gryp 'griffin' in the Septuagint, which H. P. Schmidt characterized as the counterpart of the simurgh. However, the cognate term Baškuč also occurs in Middle Persian, attested in the Zoroastrian cosmological text Bundahishn XXIV. Middle Persian Paškuč is also attested in Manichaean magical texts, and this must have meant a "griffin or a monster like a griffin" according to W. B. Henning.

Egyptian names

The griffin was given names which were descriptive epithets, such as or tesh-tesh meaning "Tearer" inscribed on a griffin image found in a tomb at Deir El Bersha; and / "fiery one", attested at Beni Hasan. The descriptive epithet "Tearer" is not uniquely applied to the griffin beast, and has also been used to denote the god Osiris elsewhere.

Form

Most statuary representations of griffins depict them with bird-like forelegs and talons, although in some older illustrations griffins have a lion's forelegs ; they generally have a lion's hindquarters. Its eagle's head is conventionally given prominent ears; these are sometimes described as the lion's ears, but are often elongated, and are sometimes feathered.

Cauldron figurines

The griffin of Greece, as depicted in cast bronze cauldron protomes, has a squat face with short beaks that are open agape as if screaming, with the tongue showing. There is also a "top-knob" on its head or between the brows.

Tendrils

There may also be so-called "tendrils", or curled "spiral-locks" depicted, presumably representing either hair/mane or feather/crest locks dangling down. Single- or double-streaked tendrils hang down both sides and behind the griffin's neck, carven on some of the Greek protomes. The tendril motif emerged at the beginning of the first millennium, BC., in various parts of the Orient. The "double spiral of hair running downwards from the base of the ear" is said to be a hallmark of Iranian art. The Etruscan cauldron-griffins also bear the "curled tresses" that are the signature of Uratrian workmanship. Even the ornate crests on Minoan griffins may be a development of these curled tresses.

Top-knob

One prominent characteristic of the cauldron griffins is the "top-knob between the brows".
The top-knob feature has clear oriental origins. Jack Leonard Benson says these appendages were "topknots" subsequently rendered as "knobs" in later development of the cauldron Griffins. Benson's emphasis is that the Greeks attached a stylized "anorganic" topknot or an "inorganic" plug on the griffin's head, while in contrast, a known oriental example is simple but more "plausible", resembling a forelock.

Warts

A cluster of "warts" between the eyes are also mentioned. One conjecture is that these derive from the bumps on a lion's snout. Another view regards the wart as deriving from the bumpy cockscomb on a rooster or other such fowls.

Art in antiquity

Mesopotamia

Griffin-like animals were depicted on cylinder seals in Mesopotamia 3000 BC, perhaps as early as the Uruk period and subsequent Proto-Elamite period. An example of a winged lion with beaks, unearthed in Susa dates to the 4th millennium B.C., and is a unique example of a griffin-like animal with a male lion's mane. However, this monster then ceased to continue to be expressed after the Elamite culture.
What the Sumerians of the Early Dynastic period portrayed instead were winged lions, and the lion-headed eagle.
In the Akkadian Empire that succeeded Sumer, early examples of lions with bird heads appeared on cylinder seals, shown pulling the chariots for its rider, the weather god. The "lion-griffin" on Akkadian seals are also shown as fire-belching, and shaggy in particular examples.
The bronzeworks of Luristan, the North and North West region of Iran in the Iron Age, include examples of Achaemenid art depicting both the "bird-griffin" and "lion-griffin" designs, such as are found on horse-bits. Bernard Goldman maintains the position that Luristan examples must be counted as developments of the "lion-griffin" type, even when it exhibits "stylization.. approaching the beak of a bird". The Luristan griffin-like creatures resemble and perhaps are descended from Assyrian creatures, possibly influenced by Mitannian animals, or perhaps there had been parallel development in both Assyrian and Elamite cultures.

Iran

Bird-headed mammal images appeared in art of the Achaemenian Persian Empire. Russian jewelry historian Elena Neva maintained that the Achaemenids considered the griffin "a protector from evil, witchcraft, and secret slander", but no writings exist from Achaemenid Persia to support her claim. R.L. Fox remarks that a "lion-griffin" attacks a stag in a pebble mosaic at Pella, from the 4th century BC, perhaps serving as an emblem of the kingdom of Macedon or a personal emblem of Antipater, one of Alexander's successors.
A golden frontal half of a griffin-like animal from the Ziwiye hoard in Kurdistan province, Iran resembles the western protomes in style. They were of Urartian workmanship, though the hoard itself may have represented a Scythian burial. The animal is described as having a "visor" made by Urartian craftsmen, similar to what is found on Greek protomes.

Egypt

Representations of griffin-like hybrids with four legs and a beaked head appeared in Ancient Egyptian art dating back to before 3000 BC. The oldest known depiction of a
griffin-like animal in Egypt appears as a relief carving on slate on the cosmetic palette from Hierakonpolis, the Two Dog Palette dated to the Early Dynastic Period, BC.

Near East elsewhere

Griffin-type creatures combining raptor heads and mammalian bodies were depicted in the Levant, Syria, and Anatolia during the Middle Bronze Age, dated at about 1950–1550 BC.

Greece

Griffin-type animals appeared in the art of ancient Crete in the MM III Period in Minoan chronology, found on sealings from Zakro and miniature frescos dated to this period. One early example of griffin-types in Minoan art occurs in the 15th century BC frescoes of the Throne Room of the Bronze Age Palace of Knossos, as restored by Sir Arthur Evans.
The griffin-like hybrid became a fixture of Aegean culture since the Late Bronze Age, but the animal called the gryps, gryphon, or griffin in Greek writings did not appear in Greek art until about 700 BC, or rather, it was "rediscovered" as artistic motif in the 8th to 7th centuries BC, adapting the style of griffin current in Neo-Hittite art. It became quite popular in the 6th and 5th centuries BC, when the Greeks first began to record accounts of the "gryps" creature from travelers to Asia, such as Aristeas of Proconnesus. A number of bronze griffin protomes on cauldrons have been unearthed in Greece. Early Greek and early Etruscan examples of cauldron-griffins may have been of Syric-Urartian make, based on evidence, but "Vannic originals" have yet to be found. It has thus been controversially argued that these attachments had always since the earliest times been crafted by Greek workshops, added to the plain cauldrons imported from the Near East. Detractors believe that the griffin-ornamented cauldron, in its entirely, were crafted in the East, though excavated finds from the Orient are scarce.