The Karkadann (Arabic كركدن karkadann or karkaddan from Kargadan, Persian language: كرگدن) is a mythical creature said to have lived on the grassy plains of India and Iran.
The word kargadan also means rhinoceros in Persian and Arabic.
Depictions of karkadann are found also in art. Like the unicorn, it can be subdued by virgins and acts ferociously toward other animals. Originally based on the Indian rhinoceros (one of the meanings of the word) and first described in the 10th/11th century, it evolved in the works of later writers to a mythical animal "with a shadowy rhinocerine ancestor" endowed with strange qualities, such as a horn with medicinal qualities.
After Al-Biruni, Persian scholars took his description and formed ever more fanciful versions of the beast, aided by the absence of first-hand knowledge and the difficulty of reading and interpreting old Arabic script. A decisive shift in description concerned the horn: where Al-Biruni had stuck to the short, curved horn, later writers made it a long, straight horn, which was shifted in artists' representations from the animal's nose to its brow.
The Persian physician Zakariya al-Qazwini (Al-Qazwini, d. 1283) is one of the writers who at the end of the thirteenth century links the karkadann's horn with poison, in his Aja'ib al-Makhluqat. He lists a few beneficial effects: holding the horn opens up the bowels to relieve constipation, and it can cure epilepsy and lameness. Later authors had the horn perspire when poison is present, suggesting the horn is an antidote and connecting it to alicorn, though this connection is not made by all writers.
In the 14th century, Ibn Battuta, in his travelogue, calls the rhinoceros he saw in India a karkadann, and describes it as a ferocious beast, driving away from its territory animals as big as the elephant; this is the legend that is told in One Thousand and One Nights in the "Second Voyage of Sinbad the Sailor".
The karkadann is referred to by Elmer Suhr as the "Persian version of the unicorn". The name appears also in medieval European Bestiary, such as those from Escorial and Paris, where the name karkadann appears in the captions of unicorn illustrations.
It has been conjectured that the mythical karkadann may have an origin in an account from the Mahabharata.
The initial portion of Persian kargadan resembles the Sanskrit word "khaRga" for rhinoceros also meaning sword, where "R" represents a retroflex flap sound. The rhinoceros is "sword horned".
Modern Iraq still has a tradition of "tears of the karkadann," dumiu al-karkadan, which are reddish beads used in the Misbaha, the Muslim prayer beads ( subuhat). The accompanying legend says that the rhinoceros spends days in the desert looking for water; when he does, he first weeps "out of fatigue and thirst-pain." These tears, as they fall into the water of the drinking hole, turn into beads.
Peter Beagle (author of The Last Unicorn) wrote a story, "My Son Heydari and the Karkadann," in The Overneath (c)2017.
Evolution of descriptions
Horn
Name
The karkadann in modern scholarship and culture
Scholarship on the karkadann
Notable appearances and references
External links
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