Winged unicorn explained

A winged unicorn (cerapter, flying unicorn, unisus, pegacorn, unipeg[1]) is a fictional ungulate, typically portrayed as a horse, with wings like Pegasus and the horn of a unicorn.[2] In some literature and media, it has been referred to as an alicorn, a word derived from the Italian word,[3] (itself from Latin wing āla and horn cornū)[4] or as a pegacorn, a portmanteau of pegasus and unicorn.

Description

Winged unicorns have been depicted in art. Ancient Achaemenid Assyrian seals depict winged unicorns and winged bulls as representing evil, but winged unicorns can also represent light.[5] [6]

Irish poet W. B. Yeats wrote of imagining a winged beast that he associated with ecstatic destruction. The beast took the form of a winged unicorn in his 1907 play The Unicorn from the Stars and later that of the rough beast slouching towards Bethlehem in his poem "The Second Coming".[7]

Other representations in media

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Winged Unicorn . 2024-05-07 . TV Tropes.
  2. Web site: Citations:cerapter. 24 June 2020.
  3. Book: Shepard, Odell . The Lore of the Unicorn . 1930 . London . Unwin and Allen . 9781437508536.
  4. Web site: Winged Unicorn . 2024-05-07 . TV Tropes.
  5. Book: Brown, Robert . The Unicorn: A Mythological Investigation . 18 . 9780766185302 . 2004 . Kessinger Publishing.
  6. The Ancient Seals from the Near East in the Metropolitan Museum: Old and Middle Persian Seals . Hans Henning . Von Der Osten . The Art Bulletin . 13 . 2 . June 1931 . 221–41 . 10.2307/3050798 . 3050798.
  7. Yeats's Conflicts with His Audience, 1897–1917 . David . Ward . ELH . 49 . 1 . Spring 1982 . 155–6 . 10.2307/2872885 . 2872885.