Merbishop: Difference between revisions
From Marinelexicon
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
{{HeaderEN}}<br /> | {{HeaderEN}}<br /> | ||
[[File:ConradiGesnerimIVGess-439 Seabishop.jpg|thumb|right|frame| A merbishop (Conrad Gesner, 1604: ''Historiae animalium'', p. 439).]] | [[File:ConradiGesnerimIVGess-439 Seabishop.jpg|thumb|right|frame| A merbishop (Conrad Gesner, 1604: ''Historiae animalium'', p. 439).]] | ||
'''merbishop''' • Antropomorph fish that is mentioned by the Swiss naturalist Conrad Gesner in his chapter on merpeople<ref>Conrad Gesner, 1604: ''Historiae animalium'', p. 439.</ref>. Apparently, a merbishop was captured near Poland in | '''merbishop''' • Antropomorph fish that is mentioned by Cornelius Aurelius in 1517 <ref>Cornelius Aurelius, 1517. Die cronycke van Hollandt Zeelandt ende Vrieslant. Leiden, Jan Seversz. Den Haag, Koninklijke Bibliotheek: KW 1084 A 6.</ref> and picked up again by the Swiss naturalist Conrad Gesner in his chapter on merpeople<ref>Conrad Gesner, 1604: ''Historiae animalium'', p. 439.</ref>. Apparently, a merbishop was captured near Poland in 1431. Next to merbishops, Gesner also mentions [[Mermonk| mermonks]] living in the Baltic Sea. | ||
<br /> | <br /> | ||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
:Seebischof | :Seebischof | ||
;French | ;French | ||
: | :Évêque marin | ||
;Spanish | ;Spanish | ||
:<br /> | :<br /> |
Revision as of 08:29, 16 February 2021
-
Português
-
Norsk
Marine Lexicon — Marine mammals — Mythical creatures — Activities related to marine mammals — Toponomy — Zooarchaeology — Historical sources — Cite Marine Lexicon
merbishop • Antropomorph fish that is mentioned by Cornelius Aurelius in 1517 [1] and picked up again by the Swiss naturalist Conrad Gesner in his chapter on merpeople[2]. Apparently, a merbishop was captured near Poland in 1431. Next to merbishops, Gesner also mentions mermonks living in the Baltic Sea.
- English
- Merbishop
- Portuguese
- Norwegian
- Havbiskop (literal translation; not known in Norwegian mythology)
- Dutch
- Zeebischop (literal translation; not known in Dutch mythology)
- German
- Seebischof
- French
- Évêque marin
- Spanish
- Italian
- Greek
- Creole