
Johann Jakob Scheuchzer - 'Itinera Alpina'
The early modern period was a time of revolution in intellectual thought which profoundly altered the European relationship with nature and human possibility. That’s certainly part of the story. It was also a time in which the Royal Society took seriously a plan for an expedition to the Alps to search for dragons, a scheme supported by Isaac Newton and prompted by the work of a Zurich based scientist called Johann Jakob Scheuchzer.
In 1723 Scheuchzer, who was a correspondent of both Newton and Leibnitz, wrote a detailed study which detailed all the species of dragon which were known to exist in the Alps. He felt compelled to do this after having seen a ‘dragon stone’ in Lucerne, a type of rock which you can cut out a dragon’s head if you catch him sleeping. Scheuchzer had learnt that the technique for doing so was to first catch a dragon asleep, then scatter soporific herbs about him and cut the stone out of his head, all the while taking care not to wake him up since this will ruin the stone (luckily, in the case of the Lucerne stone a dragon had dropped it when flying past and it was picked up by a farmer called Stämpfli). This was said to cure a range of complaints including bubonic plague and nose bleeds. Having seen the empirical evidence, Scheuchzer felt that the existence of Dragons was not just common folklaw and could be logically inferred. He had reason to doubt the authenticity of the ‘dragon stone’ but decided it was genuine, firstly because a dishonest man would never have invented so simple a story, secondly because the finder was of good character, and thirdly because the stone could cure simple haemorrhages.

" Its length, he said, was at least seven feet ; its girth approximately that of an apple tree ; it had a head like a cat's, but no feet. He said that he smote and slew it with the assistance of his brother Thomas. He added that before it was killed, the people of the neighbourhood complained that the milk was withdrawn from their cows, and that they could never discover the author of the mischief, but that the mischief ceased after the dragon had been killed."
A Johann Bueler of Sennwald reported seeing " an enormous black beast," standing on four legs, and having a crest six inches long on its head. Another credible testimony came from Christopher Schorer, Prefect of Lucerne, who reported that:
‘In the year 1649, I was admiring the beauty of the sky by night, when I saw a bright and shining dragon issue from a large cave in the moutain commonly called Pilatus, and fly about with rapidly flapping wings. It was very big; it had a long tail ; its neck was outstretched ; its head ended with a serpent's serrated jaw. It threw out sparks as it flew, like the red-hot horse-shoe when the blacksmith hammers it. At first I imagined that what I saw was a meteor, but after observing it carefully, I perceived that it was a dragon from the nature of its movements and the structure of its limbs.’

In Scheuchzer’s defence, he is now considered one of the founders of paleobiology. While he believed in dragons he also spoke out vehemently against the practice of burning witches which was then very widespread. Witches and other minions of the devil were apparently all over the Alps, spreading plague, manipulating the wind and making the glaciers expand. A series of witch trials in Swiss cities were held and hundreds of suspects were tortured and executed. They were said to be spreading the plague using a potion ‘made of the flesh of a hanged person, the grease of the dead, cow’s blood, pigs’ blood and arsenic’.
These and other examples serve to remind us that the early modern period was as much a time of superstition and magic as the medieval period; in fact probably more so.
Discuss this post at the Quodlibeta Forum
'God's Philosophers' by James Hannam is available now from Amazon
2 comments:
Witches and other minions of the devil were apparently all over the Alps, spreading plague, manipulating the wind and making the glaciers expand..
So maybe the Witch Craze is the real cause of today's glacial retreat! Quick, repopulate the Alps with sorcerers before the ice is gone!
Could you please give me a reference for the quotes above? I'd really like to finjd a version of the complete text. English prefered but Latin would also be great.
Post a Comment