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Unicorn I am brave I am bruised I am who face mask

In the first century C.E., Roman naturalist Pliny claimed to quote Ctesias that the unicorn was the most ferocious species in India with a horse body, deer head, elephant legs, wild boar's tail, and a unique horn. oblong from the forehead.
Pliny also added an element that later imprinted on medieval society: this species could not be captured alive.
A century later, the Roman scholar Aelian compiled a book about animals based on Pliny's material. In that book, On the Nature of Animals, Aelian wrote that the unicorn will be gentler with the partner during mating season.
The feminine gentleness of the unicorn is deeply symbolic and is also the inspiration for writers and artists in the Middle Ages to weave stories like only a virgin can catch a unicorn.
Painting of "Virgin and Unicorn" by Domenichino (1602). Many medieval writers and painters thought that only virgins could approach and domesticate unicorns.
Although the Greeks and Romans soon wrote quite a lot about this species, most civilizations around the world did not know the unicorn until the Middle Ages. In order to become popular, the creature had to escape the pages and paintings in the library and become an integral part of popular life and culture - precisely through Christianity.

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