Subject:
RE: [from PF and Parody] - more on "heraldic dracunculi"
From:
"Fet, Victor" <fet@marshall.edu>
Date:
Thu, 28 Jan 2010 23:18:45 -0500
To:
Vladimir Nabokov Forum <NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU>

Looking further, it becomes more complicated.

There are TWO candidate 'heraldic dracunculi' images, commonly confused. See
www.altjn.com/ideas/caduceus.pdf

A caduceus (Probably of Babylonian origin, later borne by Isis) is Hermes's winged rod, with two serpents (which would be dracunculi) entwined around it. A similar structure is the non-winged rod of Aesculapius, also called Aaron's rod, a stick or staff, entwined with a single serpent (one dracunculus).

One maybe Ada-relevant caduceus art item is Rubens's "Education of the Princess" "that shows a maturing Marie de'Medici at study with Apollo, Athena, and Hermes. .... Hermes dramatically rushes in on the scene and literally brings a gift from the gods, the caduceus. ......the caduceus, which is seen in six other paintings in the cycle, has also been associated with peace and harmony."

(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_de%27_Medici_cycle)

( I apologize if the issue is well known but I could find nothing on Nabokov-L on this topic, or in any of my Ada literature.)

Brian Boyd's Ada Online notes (1.3: 27.01-02) say just "unclear... Dracunculi are little dragons".

Ilyin translation says "geraldicheskie gorynychi" - an interesting interpretation forcing a specific image; Zmej Gorynych is a Russian folktale three-headed dragon (a version of Zoroastrian Dahaka). Agamemnon (Iliad, 11) had a blue three-headed dragon (or serpent) on his shield.

It makes sense in context of "triplet" and "trilingual" (= three-tongued, like Cerberus).
But why "dracunculus" ("little dragon)"?

It seems a particularly obscure topic. We need a Robert Langdon here!



Victor Fet


* P.S. ON TRIPLETS:
- the most revered Celtic god, identified by Caesar as a "Gaulish Mercury" and named Lug [VERY close to Ada's Log!], who had a caduceus with a pair of snakes, also sometimes had three faces or three phalli, or was the sole survivor of triplets; Lugdunum (Lyons) comes from this name.

- Some of the famous classical triplet sets are three Gorgons and also the Horatii (Roman) / Curiatii (Alban) triplets.


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