{{Short description|Legendary animal}} {{Other uses|Griffin (disambiguation)|Griffon (disambiguation)|Gryphon (disambiguation)}} {{pp-semi-indef}} {{Use dmy dates|date=December 2024}} {{Infobox mythical creature | image = Knossos fresco in throne palace.JPG | caption = Restored griffin fresco in the Throne Room, Palace of Knossos, Crete, an original from the Bronze Age |Folklore = Greece, Ancient Iran, Armenia, Ancient Egypt, Ancient Mesopotamia |Grouping = Mythical creature |AKA = Axex, Opinici, Keythong |Similar_entities = Akhekh, Hippogriff, Sphinx, Simurgh }}
The '''griffin''', '''griffon''', or '''gryphon''' ({{langx|grc|γρύψ|grýps}}; Classical Latin: ''gryps'' or ''grypus''<!-- not "ph" -->;<ref name=gaffiot>{{cite book |title=Dictionnaire Illustré Latin-Français |author=Félix Gaffiot |author-link=Félix Gaffiot |publisher=Hachette |place=Paris|year=1934}}</ref> Late and Medieval Latin:<ref name=dmlbs>{{cite book |title=Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources|author=Ronald Edward Latham|author-link=Ronald Edward Latham|author2=David Robert Howlett |author3=Richard Ashdowne |publisher=British Academy |place=London |year=1975–2013}}</ref> ''gryphes'', ''grypho'' etc.; Old French: ''griffon'') is a legendary creature with the body, tail, and back legs of a lion, and the head and wings of an eagle with its talons on the front legs.
In Greek and Roman texts, griffins and Arimaspians were associated with the gold deposits of Central Asia. The earliest classical writings on the topic were derived from Aristeas (7th century BC) and preserved by Herodotus and Aeschylus (mid 5th century BC).<ref name=":0" />
==Overview== [[File:Falcon-headed feline predator, and statuettes from Tell el-Farkha. Late Predynastic period (Naqada IIIB, c. 3200–3000 BCE). Egyptian Museum (Cairo). Cropped.jpg|thumb|upright|Falcon-headed feline predator or "griffin". End of Dynasty 0, {{circa}} 3000 BC, Western Kom, Tell el-Farkha, Egypt.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Ciałowicz |first1=Krzysztof M. |title=Votive figurines from Tell el-Farkha and their counterparts |journal=Archéo-Nil |date=2012 |volume=22 |issue=1 |pages=84–86 |doi=10.3406/arnil.2012.1044 |url=https://www.persee.fr/doc/arnil_1161-0492_2012_num_22_1_1044}}</ref>]] Because the lion was traditionally considered the king of the beasts and the eagle the king of the birds, by the Middle Ages, the griffin was thought to be an especially powerful and majestic creature. Since classical antiquity, griffins were known for guarding treasures and priceless possessions.<ref name="friar"/>
In the Greek and Roman texts, the griffins and the Arimaspians were associated with gold deposits of Central Asia. The earliest classical writings were derived from Aristeas (7th cent. BC) and preserved by Herodotus and Aeschylus (mid 5th century BC), but the physical descriptions are not very explicit and from Herodotus to Aelian imply that griffins were creatures seen and known through artworks.<ref name=":0" /> Even though they are sharp-beaked, their being likened to "unbarking hounds of Zeus" has led to the speculation they were seen as wingless.
Pliny the Elder (1st century) was the first to state explicitly that griffins were winged and long eared. But Apollonius of Tyana wrote that griffins did not have true bird wings, but membranous webbed feet that only gave them the capability of short-distanced flight. Writers after Aelian (3rd century AD) did not add much new material to griffin lore, except for the later idea that griffins deposited agate stone among the eggs in their nest.{{citation needed|date=March 2025}}
Pliny placed the griffins in Æthiopia and Ctesias (5th century BC) in greater India. Scholars have observed that legends about the gold-digging ants of India may have contaminated griffin lore.{{citation needed|date=March 2025}}
In the Christian era, Isidore of Seville (7th century AD) wrote that griffins were a great enemy of horses. This notion may have developed from the tradition that horseback-riding Arimaspians raided the griffin gold.{{citation needed|date=March 2025}}
==Nomenclature== === Etymology === [[File:Abderacoin.png|thumb|alt= Griffin depicted on obverse side of coin. Silver tetradrachm. Greek city state of Abdera, Thrace ({{circa}} 450–430BC).|Griffin depicted on obverse side of coin. {{right|{{small|—Silver tetradrachm. Abdera ({{circa}} 450–430BC).}}<ref name="bement-no144"/>{{efn|Abdera minted coins since it was founded in 544 BC as a colony of Teos, which also used the griffin motif.}}}}]]
The derivation of this word remains uncertain. It could be related to the Greek word {{lang|el|γρυπός}} (grypos), meaning 'curved', or 'hooked'. Greek {{lang|el|γρύφ}} (gryph) from {{lang|el|γρύφ}} 'hook-nosed' is suggested.<ref name="isidore-tr-throop2015"/>
It could also have been an Anatolian loan word derived from a Semitic language; compare the Hebrew {{lang|he|כרוב}} ''kərúv''.<ref>William H. C. Propp, ''Exodus 19–40'', volume 2A of ''The Anchor Bible'', New York: Doubleday, 2006, {{ISBN|0-385-24693-5}}, p. 386; citing Julius Wellhausen, ''Prolegomena to the History of Israel'', Edinburgh: Black, 1885, p. 304.</ref><ref>Also see Robert S. P. Beekes, ''Etymological Dictionary of Greek'', volume 1, Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2010 {{ISBN|978-90-04-17420-7}}, p. 289, entry for {{lang|el|γρυπος}}, "From the archaeological perspective, origin in Asia Minor (and the Near East: Elam) is very probable."</ref>
===Persian names=== [[File:Jam-sasani.jpg|thumb|Shirdal on the silver cup, Iranian Art.]] In the modern Persian language, the griffin has come to be called ''šērdāl'' ({{langx|fa|{{linktext|شیردال}}}}), meaning 'lion-eagle'. However, the practice of referring to ancient Iranian griffin objects or monuments as ''sherdal'',{{sfnp|Taheri|2013}} is not followed by other current archaeological scholarship (e.g., here<ref name="asadi&darvishi2020"/>).
Possible Old or Middle Iranian names for the creature have been discussed. Middle Persian ''Sēnmurw'' in Sasanian culture was a fabulous composite creature, and Russian archaeologist {{interlanguage link|Boris Anatolʹevič Litvinskij|ru|Литвинский, Борис Анатольевич|lt=Boris A. Litvinskij}} argued for the possibility that the application of this term may extend to the griffin.<ref name=litvinskij&picikian1995/><ref name=litvinskij2002/> The term ''Sēnmurw'' is recognized as the etymological ancestor of ''simurgh'', which is generally regarded as a mythological bird (rather than a composite) in later medieval Persian literature,<ref name="schmidt"/>{{Refn|group="lower-alpha"|Also, ''Sēnmurw'' etymological root was Avestan ''mərəγō saēnō'' (''marəya saēna'') which also denoted a bird (falcon or eagle),<ref name="schmidt"/> and not a composite, as conceded by Litvinskij.<ref name=litvinskij2002/>}} though some argue that this bird may have originated from the Mesopotamian lion-griffin.{{Refn|{{citation|last=Harper |first=P. O. |author-link=<!--Prudence Oliver Harper--> |title=The Sēnmurw |journal=Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin |series=Series 2 |volume=20 |date=1961 |issue=3 |pages=95–101|doi=10.2307/3257932 |jstor=3257932 }} ''apud'' Schmidt.<ref name="schmidt"/>}}
There is also the Armenian term ''Paskuč'' ({{langx|hy|պասկուչ}}) that had been used to translate Greek ''gryp'' 'griffin' in the Septuagint,{{Refn|{{citation|last=Marr |first=N. Ya. |author-link=Nikolai Marr |title=Ossetica-Japhetica |journal=Izvestiya Rossiskoi Akademii Nauk |script-journal=ru:Известия Российской академии наук |date=1918 |page=2087, n. 2<!--2069–2100, 2307–2310-->}} ''apud'' Schmidt.<ref name="schmidt"/>}} which H. P. Schmidt characterized as the counterpart of the simurgh.<ref name="schmidt"/> However, the cognate term '''''Baškuč''''' (glossed as 'griffin') also occurs in Middle Persian, attested in the Zoroastrian cosmological text ''Bundahishn'' XXIV (supposedly distinguishable from ''Sēnmurw'' which also appears in the same text).<ref name="kiperwasser&shapira"/> Middle Persian '''''Paškuč''''' is also attested in Manichaean magical texts (Manichaean Middle Persian: ''pškwc''), and this must have meant a "griffin or a monster like a griffin" according to W. B. Henning.<ref name="henning"/><!--Bailey's writing on Aramaeogram TNYNA meaning "monster of the sea" (given in Kiperwasser&Shapira's note 22) is not directly relevant to griffin (but probably relevant to dragon, cf. Arabic ''tinnin''=dragon). Bailey only ventured to guess synonymousness with MPers. TNNA meaning "some other winged creature" [not committing to "dragon"], by reason of its mention side-by-side with ''baškuč''("griffin'). But cf. Henning (1947), p. 42 (op. cit.) who reconstructs the Mannachean MPers. text as "*tnyn' (w) bškwc" and reads "dragon and griffin". Henning also consulted Prof. Bailey on this.-->
===Egyptian names=== The griffin was given names which were descriptive epithets, such as {{transliteration|egy|tštš}}{{efn|{{transliteration|egy|tštš}}: <hiero>t:S t:S</hiero> The "š" glyph seems to be 𓈚 rathe than 𓈙 and are thus superposed in Leibovitch's inline text; however the glyps are juxtaposed and seemingly the plain bar "š" is used on his Fig. 5 line sketch.}} or '''''tesh-tesh'''''<ref name="griffith&newberry1895"/> meaning "Tearer[-in-pieces]"{{Refn|{{harvp|Riefstahl|1956|p=2}} citing Leibovitch.}}<ref name="griffith&newberry1895"/> inscribed on a griffin image found in a tomb at Deir El Bersha;{{Refn|{{harvp|Leibovitch|1942|pp=186–187}} and Fig. 5: "{{lang|fr|tštš.. signifie déchirer, triturer, couper, metter en pièces}} [tštš.. denotes tearing, grind up, chopping, ripping to pieces]". Citing {{harvp|Griffith|Newberry|1895}} ''El-Bersheh'' '''2''': Pl. XVI, tomb no. 5.<ref name="griffith&newberry1895"/>}}{{Refn|David glosses {{transliteration|egy|tštš}} as "Crusher",<ref name="david2023"/> which is consistent with one of Leibovitch's several glosses.<!!-- But David note 8 indicates the source to be Newberry 1893b (Beni Hasan II), Pl. 16, which probably should by Griffith & Newberry (El-Bersheh II)0, Pl. 16-->}} and {{transliteration|egy|sfr}}/{{transliteration|egy|srf}} "fiery one", attested at Beni Hasan{{sfnp|Leibovitch|1942|pp=186–187}}{{Refn|David,<ref name="david2023"/> citing Newberry (1893a, 1893b ''recte'' [1893], [1894]). ''Beni Hasan''.}} (compare Hebrew ''saráf''). The descriptive epithet "Tearer" is not uniquely applied to the griffin beast, and {{transliteration|egy|tštš}} ({{transliteration|egy|Teš-teš}}) has also been used to denote the god Osiris elsewhere.{{sfnp|Leibovitch|1942|p=187}}{{Refn|The epithet "the Crusher" (or "Trampler") is also given by {{harvp|Riefstahl|1956|p=2}} citing Leibovitch, but the words do not actually occur as names/epithets in Leibovitch's reading of the inscription: "{{lang|fr|Spdw le seigneur des pays montagne, qui écrase (en les piétinant)}} Sopdu the lord of the mountain countries, who crushes (trampling them)". The inscription is from Sahure (pharaoh of Fifth Dynasty of Egypt).{{sfnp|Leibovitch|1942|pp=186}}<!--Note: thus Riefenstahl stating "as early as the Old Kingdom, such monsters are designated by epithets"{{sfnp|Riefstahl|1956|p=2}} is probably based on this reinterpretation of Sahure, and can be judged to be an overreach.--> A relief represents Sahure as an enemy-trampling griffin in the reliefs work found in his pyramid complex.<ref name="prakash"/>}}
==Form== {{See also|#Medieval iconography|#Variants}} thumb|Bronze figure of a griffin, Roman period (AD 50–270) Most statuary representations of griffins depict them with bird-like forelegs and talons, although in some older illustrations griffins have a lion's forelegs (see bronze figure, right); they generally have a lion's hindquarters. Its eagle's head is conventionally given prominent ears; these are sometimes described as the lion's ears, but are often elongated (more like a horse's), and are sometimes feathered.
===Cauldron figurines=== The griffin of Greece, as depicted in cast{{Refn|group="lower-alpha"|The cast pieces could also have additional hammered details.<ref>{{harvp|Benson|1960|p=60}} et passim.</ref> The "cast protomes" are grouped by Jantzen.<ref>Third Group ''GG'', p. 56 ''apud'' {{harvp|Benson|1960|pp=59–60}}.</ref> }} bronze cauldron protomes (cf. below), has a squat face with short beaks{{efn|The beaks on the Greeks are identified as "visor" of beasts such as seen in Urartian art, by {{harvp|Ghirshman|1964c|p=108}}.}} that are open agape as if screaming, with the tongue showing.{{sfnp|Goldman|1960|p=321}} There is also a "top-knob" on its head or between the brows.{{sfnp|Goldman|1960|p=321}}
====Tendrils==== [[File:Villa Poniatowski 63.jpg|thumb|Griffins and lions on cauldron. Etruscan. {{right|{{small|—8th – 7th centuries B.C., from Barberini tomb. National Etruscan Museum of Villa Giulia, Rome.}}{{sfnp|Ghirshman|1964c|p=434}}}}]] There may also be so-called "tendrils", or curled "spiral-locks" depicted, presumably representing either hair/mane or feather/crest locks dangling down. Single- or double-streaked tendrils hang down both sides and behind the griffin's neck, carven on some of the Greek protomes.{{sfnp|Goldman|1960|p=321}}{{sfnp|Jantzen|1955|pp=20, 69–70}}{{efn|The example on figure right is the broken off head, and it is not certain whether the paired spiral-locks ran down its neck, as in other examples of griffin protomes from Olympia (Jantzen, ''GG'' no. 80, p. 20).}} The tendril motif emerged at the beginning of the first millennium, BC., in various parts of the Orient.{{sfnp|Goldman|1960|p=322}} The "double spiral of hair running downwards from the base of the ear" is said to be a hallmark of Iranian (Uratrian) art.{{sfnp|Ghirshman|1964c|p=108}} The Etruscan cauldron-griffins (e.g., from {{interlanguage link|Barberini tomb|it|Tomba Barberini}}, figure right{{efn|See the cover photo of this cauldron in {{harvp|Papalexandrou|2021}} and {{URL|1=https://books.google.com/books?id=vNgkEAAAQBAJ&pg=PT211 |2=Fig. 3.2}}. The lateral side of the griffins are hard to see on this picture shown right; the lions do not have these hanging tresses. Cf. {{URL|1=https://books.google.com/books?id=vNgkEAAAQBAJ&pg=PT213 |2=Fig. 3.3}} for another cauldron, from the {{interlanguage link|Bernardini tomb|it|Tomba Bernardini}}. Both are bronze cauldrons on a conical stand.}}{{Refn|group="lower-alpha"|An additional example of Etruscan griffin is the one found in Vetulonia, Italy.<ref name="chahin"/><ref>{{harvp|Papalexandrou|2021}}, Fig. 3.6<!--non previewable--></ref> }}) also bear the "curled tresses" that are the signature of Uratrian workmanship.<ref name="chahin"/>{{Refn|group="lower-alpha"|While Maxwell-Hyslop, thought early griffin protomes were made in the east, she regarded later Etruscan examples as being made locally, imitating the Eastern originals, but such "Vannic (Urartrians) originals" are yet to be found.{{sfnp|Goldman|1960|pp=320–321}}}} Even the ornate crests on Minoan griffins (such as the fresco of the Throne Room, figure top of page) may be a development of these curled tresses.<ref>{{harvp|Goldman|1960|p=322}} and note 22.</ref>{{efn|In addition to the Throne Room, Goldman provides the following Mycenaean examples: the "ivory plaque of Mycenae" (Demargne, Pierre (1947), ''La Crète dédalique'', fig. 24); the "gold cylinder seal from Pylos" (Blegen, Carl W. (5 December 1953). "A Royal Tomb of Homeric Times", ''Illustrated London News'', fig. 7)}}
====Top-knob==== One prominent characteristic of the cauldron griffins is the "top-knob between the brows"{{sfnp|Goldman|1960|p=321}} (seemingly situated at the top of the head{{Refn|The positioning is between the brows, yet looks to be at the top of the head, as seen on the example {{harvp|Goldman|1960|p=324}} provides: Plate 90, fig. 1 (adapted from ''GG'' 75).}}).
The top-knob feature has clear oriental origins.<ref>{{harvp|Goldman|1960|p=321}}: "the top-knob on the cauldron griffin is a straight-forward carryover from its oriental counterparts".</ref> Jack Leonard Benson says these appendages were "topknots" subsequently rendered as "knobs" in later development of the cauldron Griffins.{{sfnp|Benson|1960|p=63}} Benson's emphasis is that the Greeks attached a stylized "anorganic" topknot{{sfnp|Benson|1960|p=63}} or an "inorganic" plug on the griffin's head (due to lack of information),{{sfnp|Benson|1960|p=63}}{{efn|Benson thinks using a simplified "plug" shape was the Greek "solution" to the problem of not knowing exactly what 3-dimensional shape to use, having only access to 2-dimensional renderings from the East.}} while in contrast, a known oriental example (stone protomes from Nimrud) is simple but more "plausible" (naturalistic), resembling a forelock.<ref>{{harvp|Benson|1960|p=62}} and Fig. 5, griffin protome of stone, from Nimrud.</ref>
====Warts==== A cluster of "warts" between the eyes are also mentioned.{{Refn|Examples of ''GG'' no. 14,{{sfnp|Goldman|1960|p=321}}}} One conjecture is that these derive from the bumps (furrows) on a lion's snout.<ref>{{harvp|Goldman|1960|p=321}}: "wart-like protuberances between the eyes..natural property of the lion". An example from the east is given as Fig. 10: "Lion-griffin. Middle Assyrian (after Corpus 596)".</ref> Another view regards the wart as deriving from the bumpy cockscomb on a rooster or other such fowls.{{sfnp|Benson|1960|p=64}}
==Art in antiquity== {{multiple image | align = right | total_width = 400
| image1 = Delaporte(1920)-Catalogue Louvres-pl45-n02-aigle-lion.jpg | alt1 = Griffin seal impression. Susa, Iran. 4th millennium B.C.. | caption1 = Griffin seal impression. {{right|{{small|—Susa, Iran. 4th millennium B.C.). Louvres.}}<ref name="delaporte1920"/>{{sfnp|Frankfort|1936–1937|p=106}}}}
| image2 = VAM - Luristan Greife.jpg | alt2 = Bronze griffins from ancient Luristan, Iran, 1st millennium BC. Vorderasiatisches Museum Berlin. | caption2 = Bronze griffins from ancient Luristan, Iran, 1st millennium BC.{{right|{{small|—Vorderasiatisches Museum Berlin}}}} }}
===Mesopotamia=== Griffin-like animals were depicted on cylinder seals in Mesopotamia {{circa}} 3000 BC,<ref>{{cite AV media |title=Image of Persian griffin |publisher=The Granger Collection |website=granger.com |medium=picture |url=http://www.granger.com/results.asp?image=0018458&screenwidth=977 |access-date=26 May 2014}}</ref> perhaps as early as the Uruk period (4000–3100BC) and subsequent Proto-Elamite (Jemdet Nasr) period.{{sfnp|Frankfort|1936–1937|p=106}} An example of a winged lion with beaks, unearthed in Susa (cf. fig. right<ref name="delaporte1920"/>) dates to the 4th millennium B.C., and is a unique example of a griffin-like animal with a male lion's mane.{{sfnp|Frankfort|1936–1937|p=106}} However, this monster then ceased to continue to be expressed after the Elamite culture.{{sfnp|Frankfort|1936–1937|p=106}}
What the Sumerians of the Early Dynastic period portrayed instead were winged lions, and the lion-headed eagle (Imdugud).{{sfnp|Frankfort|1936–1937|p=107}}
In the Akkadian Empire that succeeded Sumer, early examples (from early 3rd millennium BC<ref name="fishbane"/>) of lions with bird heads appeared on cylinder seals, shown pulling the chariots for its rider, the weather god.{{Refn|Fishbane's example from early 3rd millennium BC is a four-wheeled chariot, citing Pritchard.<ref name="fishbane"/> There is another four-wheeled chariot which generally match the description, held by the Morgan Library (shelfmark Morgan Seal 220), dated to between 2340 and 2150 BC.<ref name="morgan_seal_220"/>}}{{Refn|Frankfort's example is a two-wheeled chariot in the seal-impression image shown on Fig. 4.{{sfnp|Frankfort|1936–1937|p=107}}}} The "lion-griffin" on Akkadian seals are also shown as fire-belching, and shaggy (at the neck) in particular examples.<ref>{{harvp|Goldman|1960|p=324}} and pl. 90, fig. 15</ref>{{Refn|Frankfort classed it as a "winged, tailed, and taloned dragon which spat fire".{{sfnp|Frankfort|1936–1937|p=107}}}}<ref name="fishbane"/>
<!-- Some intermediate material lacking-->The bronzeworks of Luristan, the North and North West region of Iran in the Iron Age, include examples of Achaemenid art depicting both the "bird-griffin" and "lion-griffin" designs, such as are found on horse-bits.{{sfnp|Álvarez-Mon|2011|p=320}}{{sfnp|Taheri|2013}} Bernard Goldman maintains the position that Luristan examples must be counted as developments of the "lion-griffin" type, even when it exhibits "stylization .. approaching the beak of a bird".<ref>{{harvp|Goldman|1960|p=324}} and Pl. 90, Fig. 12 "Luristan lion head" (which has the beak-like feature)</ref> The Luristan griffin-like creatures resemble and perhaps are descended from Assyrian creatures, possibly influenced by Mitannian animals,{{sfnp|Goldman|1960|p=324}}<ref>Cf. {{harvp|Frankfort|1936–1937|p=110}}: "The immediate source of non-Mesopotamian motives in Assyrian art is the kingdom of Mitan"; "The griffin is as common in Mitannian (Figs. 21, 22) as in Assyrian art, and the question arises whether it was peculiar to the ephemereal kingdom, or reached it from one of the sources".</ref> or perhaps there had been parallel development in both Assyrian and Elamite cultures.{{sfnp|Álvarez-Mon|2011|p=320}}
====Iran==== Bird-headed mammal images appeared in art of the Achaemenian Persian Empire. Russian jewelry historian Elena Neva maintained that the Achaemenids considered the griffin "a protector from evil, witchcraft, and secret slander",<ref>{{cite web |last=Neva |first=Elena |author-link=<!--Елена Нева--> |date=12 March 2008 |title=Central Asian Jewelry and their Symbols in Ancient Time |website=Artwis |url=http://www.artwis.com/articles/central-asian-jewelry-and-their-symbols-in-ancient-time/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140725171007/http://www.artwis.com/articles/central-asian-jewelry-and-their-symbols-in-ancient-time/ |archive-date=25 July 2014 |url-status=usurped |postscript=;}} who cites {{cite journal |last=Pugachenkova |first=G. |author-link=Galina Pugachenkova |year=1959 |title=Grifon v drevnem iskusstve central'noi Azii |script-title=ru:Грифон в древнем искусстве центральной Азии |trans-title=Griffin in the ancient art of Central Asia |journal=Sovetskya Arheologia |volume=2 |pages=70, 83}}</ref> but no writings exist from Achaemenid Persia to support her claim. R.L. Fox (1973) remarks that a "lion-griffin" attacks a stag in a pebble mosaic at Pella, from the 4th century BC,<ref>{{cite book |first=R.L. |last=Fox |author-link=Robin Lane Fox |title=Alexander the Great |year=1973 |page=31, & notes on p. 506}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://greecefsp2009.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/dsc_0175.jpg |title=Dartmouth College expedition to Greece |type=image |date=May 2009}}</ref> perhaps serving as an emblem of the kingdom of Macedon or a personal emblem of Antipater, one of Alexander's successors.
A golden frontal half of a griffin-like animal from the Ziwiye hoard (near Saqqez city) in Kurdistan province, Iran resembles the western protomes in style.<ref>{{harvp|Benson|1960|p=63}} and Pl. 2, #3 (monochrome photograph)</ref>{{efn|Ghirshman (and others, cf. {{harvp|Maxwell-Hyslop|1956|p=160}}, citing André Godard.) thought the Ziwiye griffin was a protome to a lost cauldron. Goldman thinks this unlikely, as the animal is posed in ''couchant'' position, and gold is too soft a metal.}} They were of Urartian workmanship (neither Assyrian or Scythian),{{Refn|group="lower-alpha"|Godard, André (1950), "Le trésor de Ziwiye" at Fig. 30, considered the object a Scythinan import. Cited by {{harvp|Maxwell-Hyslop|1956|p=160}}.}}{{sfnp|Ghirshman|1964c|p=108}} though the hoard itself may have represented a Scythian burial.<ref>Ghirshman (1958) ''BibO'' '''15''' p. 259, ''apud'' {{harvp|Goldman|1960|p=319}}, note 3</ref> The animal is described as having a "visor" (i.e., beaks) made by Urartian craftsmen, similar to what is found on Greek protomes.{{sfnp|Ghirshman|1964c|p=108}}
===Egypt=== Representations of griffin-like hybrids with four legs and a beaked head appeared in Ancient Egyptian art dating back to before 3000 BC.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=McClanan |first=Anne |title=Griffinology |publisher=Reaktion |year=2024 |isbn=978-1789148466 |pages= |language=English}}</ref> The oldest known depiction of a griffin-like animal in Egypt appears as a relief carving on slate on the cosmetic palette from Hierakonpolis,{{Refn|{{harvp|Leibovitch|1942|pp=184–185}} and Fig 3 (detail of griffin-like beast), citing {{harvp|Quibell|Green|1902}}<ref name="quibell&green1902"/>}} the Two Dog Palette{{Refn|{{harvp|Frankfort|1936–1937|p=110}}, also citing {{harvp|Quibell|Green|1902}}<ref name="quibell&green1902"/>}} dated to the Early Dynastic Period,{{sfnp|Leibovitch|1942|pp=184–185}} {{circa|3300–3100}} BC.<ref>{{cite book |last=Patch |first=Diana |year=2012 |title=Dawn of Egyptian Art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tfkvlD4Pi20C&pg=PA140 |publisher=Metropolitan Museum of Art |pages=139–140 |isbn=978-0300179521 |access-date= 24 May 2014}}</ref>
===Near East elsewhere=== Griffin-type creatures combining raptor heads and mammalian bodies were depicted in the Levant, Syria, and Anatolia during the Middle Bronze Age,<ref>{{cite book |last=Teissier |first=Beatrice |year=1996 |title=Egyptian Iconography on Syro-Palestinian Cylinder Seals of the Middle Bronze Age |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oiSoxUE_Vn0C&pg=PA88 |publisher=Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht |pages=88–90 |isbn=978-3525538920 |access-date= 24 May 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Aruz |first1=Joan |last2=Benzel |first2=Kim |last3=Evans |first3=Jean M. |date=2008 |title=Beyond Babylon: Art, trade, and diplomacy in the second millennium B.C. |url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_gr5BgOwEJicC |publisher=Metropolitan Museum of Art and Yale University Press |page=[https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_gr5BgOwEJicC/page/n163 137] |isbn=978-1588392954 |access-date= 24 May 2014}}</ref> dated at about 1950–1550 BC.<ref>{{cite book |last=Teissier |first=Beatrice |year=1996 |title=Egyptian Iconography on Syro-Palestinian Cylinder Seals of the Middle Bronze Age |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oiSoxUE_Vn0C&pg=PA5 |publisher=Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht |pages=5–6 |isbn=978-3525538920 |access-date= 24 May 2014}}</ref>
===Greece=== {{see also|#Divine creature}} thumb|A Minoan ring with a female figure and a griffin. Archanes, Phourni, 1700–1450 BC.|200x200px [[File:Tripode.jpg|thumb|Bronze griffin head fragment (of a cauldron protome){{right|{{small|—Olympia, Greece. 7th century BC. Olympia museum}}}}|267x267px]] Griffin-type animals appeared in the art of ancient Crete in the MM III Period (1650–1600 BC) in Minoan chronology, found on sealings from Zakro and miniature frescos dated to this period.{{sfnp|Frankfort|1936–1937|p=113}} One early example of griffin-types in Minoan art occurs in the 15th century BC frescoes of the Throne Room of the Bronze Age Palace of Knossos, as restored by Sir Arthur Evans.<!--Bird-mammal composites were a decorative theme in Archaic and Classical Greek art, -->
The griffin-like hybrid became a fixture of Aegean culture since the Late Bronze Age,{{sfnp|Benson|1960|p=58}} but the animal called the gryps, gryphon, or griffin in Greek writings did not appear in Greek art until about 700 BC,{{sfnp|Ghirshman|1964c|p=108}} or rather, it was "rediscovered" as artistic motif in the 8th to 7th centuries BC, adapting the style of griffin current in Neo-Hittite art.{{sfnp|Benson|1960|p=58}}<ref>{{harvp|Goldman|1960|p=326}}: "the griffin-headed bird appears in the orientalizing phase of seventh century B.C. Greek art".</ref> It became quite popular in the 6th and 5th centuries BC, when the Greeks first began to record accounts of the "gryps" creature from travelers to Asia, such as Aristeas of Proconnesus. A number of bronze griffin protomes on cauldrons have been unearthed in Greece (on Samos, and at Olympia, etc., cf. fig. right).{{sfnp|Jantzen|1955}} Early Greek and early Etruscan (e.g. the Barberini) examples of cauldron-griffins may have been of Syric-Urartian make, based on evidence (the "tendrils" or "tresses" motif was already touched upon, above), but "Vannic (Urartian) originals" have yet to be found (in the Orient).{{sfnp|Goldman|1960|pp=319–320}} It has thus been controversially argued (by {{interlanguage link|Ulf Jantzen|de}}) that these attachments had always since the earliest times been crafted by Greek workshops,{{Refn|group="lower-alpha"|That later griffin protomes are Greek-made is "without question" ({{harvp|Goldman|1960|p=321}}).}} added to the plain cauldrons imported from the Near East.{{Refn|group="lower-alpha"|George M. A. Hanfmann agreed with Jantzen that the protomes were always Greek, but disagreed with Jantzen on the caudron, and doubted cauldrons were separately made in the East.}} Detractors (notably K. R. Maxwell-Hyslop) believe that (early examples of<ref>{{harvp|Maxwell-Hyslop|1956|p=156}} viewed later examples to have been western, copied from eastern "originals" (cited by {{harvp|Goldman|1960|pp=319–320}}), as shall be iterated below.</ref>) the griffin-ornamented cauldron, in its entirely, were crafted in the East, though excavated finds from the Orient are scarce.<ref>Jantzen (1951). "Die Bedeutung der Greifenprotomen aus dem Heraion von Samos". ''Festschrift für Hans Jantzen''; also {{harvp|Jantzen|1955}} ''GG''. Cited by {{harvp|Goldman|1960|p=319}}</ref><ref>{{harvp|Benson|1960|p=58}}, and note 2, naming/citing {{harvp|Maxwell-Hyslop|1956}}, pp. 150ff. and Pierre Amandry (1958) "Objets orientaux..", pp. 73ff.</ref>
===Central Asia=== In Central Asia, the griffin image was included in Scythian "animal style" artifacts of the 6th–4th centuries BC, and griffin variants extend as well to the artifacts and tattoos of the Pazyryk culture of the Altai Mountains.<ref name=":0" /> The Golden Pectoral from Tovsta Mohyla, interred in Scythian king's burial site, perhaps commissioned to Greek goldsmiths, who engraved the image of a griffin attacking a horse. Other Scythian artifacts show griffins attacking horses, stags, and goats. Griffins are typically shown attacking horses, deer, and humans in Greek art. Nomads were said to steal griffin-guarded gold according to Scythian oral traditions reported by Greek and Roman travelers.
[[File:Danam letters on Sanchi inscription.jpg|thumb|Griffin inscription at Sanchi Stupa from 3rd century BCE]]
==Ancient parallels== {{Unreferenced section|date=March 2026}} Several ancient mythological creatures are similar to the griffin. These include the Lamassu, an Assyrian protective deity, often depicted with a bull or lion's body, eagle's wings, and human's head.
Sumerian and Akkadian mythology feature the demon Anzu, half man and half bird, associated with the chief sky god Enlil. This was a divine storm-bird linked with the southern wind and the thunder clouds.
Jewish mythology speaks of the Ziz, which resembles Anzu, as well as the ancient Greek Phoenix. The Bible mentions the Ziz in Psalms 50:11. This is also similar to a cherub. The cherub, or sphinx, was very popular in Phoenician iconography.
In ancient Crete, griffins became very popular, and were portrayed in various media. A similar creature is the Minoan Genius.
In the Hindu religion, Garuda is a large bird-like creature that serves as a mount (''vahana'') of the deity Vishnu. It is also the name for the constellation Aquila.
==Classical accounts== ===Grecian accounts of the gryphon=== Local lore on the ''gryps'' or griffin was gathered by Aristeas of Proconnesus, a Greek who traveled to the Altai region between Mongolia and NW China in the 7th century BC. Although Aristeas's original poem was lost, the ''gryps'' lore was preserved in secondhand accounts by the playwright Aeschylus (ca. 460 BC) and later his contemporary, Herodotus the historian.{{sfnp|Mayor|Heaney|1993|p=42}}{{sfnp|Phillips|1955|pp=161–163}}
Herodotus explains (via Aristeas) that the gold-guarding griffin supposedly dwelled further north than the one-eyed Arimaspi people{{Refn|group="lower-alpha"|But "Herdotus doubted that Arimaspeans were monocular". The Scythian word "arimasp" signifies "rich in horses rather than one-eyed{{Sfnp|Mayor|Heaney|1993|loc=n9}}}} who robbed the gold from the fabulous creatures. Aristeas is said to have been informed through the Issedones people, who neighbored the region of the Arimaspi in the northern extremes (of Central Asia).{{Refn|Herodotus III.116, IV.13.<ref name="herodotus-tr-rawlinson1909"/>}}{{sfnp|Phillips|1955|p=161}} Aeschylus also says that the Arimaspi robbed the gold which the griffins collected from various areas in the periphery (presumably including the Armaspi's territorial stream, the stream of Pluto "rolling with gold"). The equestrian Arimaspi would ride off with the loot, and the griffins would give pursuit.{{Refn|Aeschylus, ''Prometheus Bound'' vv. 805–806, and notes by Watson.<ref name="aeschylus-ed-watson1870"/>}}
Aeschylus likened the ''gryps'' to "silent hounds of Zeus"{{sfnp|Phillips|1955|p=163}}{{Refn|group="lower-alpha"|To distinguish from the (screaming) harpies, referred as "dogs of Zeus" (by Apollonius of Rhodes, II.289).<ref name="aeschylus-ed-watson1870"/>}} Since they are called dogs or hounds, scholars have conjectured that Aeschylus considered them wingless or flightless.{{sfnp|Mayor|Heaney|1993|p=42}}{{Refn|group="lower-alpha"|Mayor's reasoning being that Aeschylus elsewhere refers to eagles as "winged dogs of Zeus".{{sfnp|Mayor|Heaney|1993|p=42}} However this seems contradictory to Apollonius being able to refer to winged harpies as "Zeus' dogs",<ref name="aeschylus-ed-watson1870"/> as noted previously.}}
===Griffins of India and gold-digging ants=== In contrast to the Greeks, Ctesias located the griffins in India and more explicitly classed them as beaked, four-legged birds.{{sfnp|Mayor|Heaney|1993|p=42}}
Herodotus mentions elsewhere that there are gold-collecting ants in Kashmir, India, and modern scholars have interpreted this account as "doublets or garbled versions" of the lore of gold-hoarding griffins.{{Refn|{{harvp|Mayor|Heaney|1993|loc=n9}}, citing {{harvp|Bolton|1962|p=81}} and {{harvp|Costello|1979|p=75}}.}} It appears that the accounts of griffins given by Pliny had been mixed with the lore of the gold-guarding ants of India,{{sfnp|Phillips|1955|p=163}} and later Aelian also inserted attributes of the ant into his description of griffins.{{sfnp|Mayor|Heaney|1993|loc=n9}}
===Pliny and later=== Later, Pliny the Elder became the first to state explicitly that griffins have wings and long ears.<ref>{{harvp|Mayor|Heaney|1993|p=42}} and n11, citing Pliny the Elder 10.70.136; 7.2.10</ref><ref name="pliny-tr-bostock07.2&10.70"/>{{Refn|group="lower-alpha"|The word for "eared" in the text is {{lang|la|aurita}} in declined form. {{L&S|auritus|ref}} gives the definition: "Furnished with ears (acc. to auris, l.), having long or large ears".}} In one of the two passages, Pliny also located the "griffons" in Æthiopia.<ref name="pliny-tr-bostock07.2&10.70"/> According to Adrienne Mayor, Pliny also wrote, "griffins were said to lay eggs in burrows on the ground and these nests contained gold nuggets".<ref>{{harvp|Mayor|Heaney|1993}}, pp. 40, 42 : "Pliny wrote: 'Arimaspeans... are always fighting for gold with the griffins, winged animals whose appearance is well known. The griffins toss up gold when they make their burrows.'" and n11, citing 11. Pliny the Elder 10.70.136; 7.2.10</ref><!--This not found in Bostock tr.-->
Apollonius of Tyana,{{efn|Apollonius of Tyana's writings, as recorded in his biography by Flavius Philostratus.}} who was nearly coeval with Pliny, gave a different account of the griffin, claiming them to be lion-sized and having no true wings, instead having paws "webbed with red membranes" that gave them the ability to make leaps of flight over short distances.<ref name="philostratus-i.ii.xlvii">{{cite book|ref={{SfnRef|Philostratus|Conybeare tr.|1912}} |translator=F. C. Conybeare |title=The Life of Apollonius of Tyana |publisher=W. Heinemann |date=1912 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ci4jAQAAMAAJ&q=griffins&pg=PA333 |at=volume I, book III. Chapter XLVIII, p. 333}}<br /> {{blockquote|As to the gold which the griffins dig up, there are rocks which are spotted with drops of gold as with sparks, which this creature can quarry because of the strength of its beak. "For these animals do exist in India" he said, "and are held in veneration as being sacred to the Sun; and the Indian artists, when they represent the Sun, yoke four of them abreast to draw the images; and in size and strength they resemble lions, but having this advantage over them that they have wings, they will attack them, and they get the better of elephants and of dragons. But they have no great power of flying, not more than have birds of short flight; for they are not winged as is proper with birds, but the palms of their feet are webbed with red membranes, such that they are able to revolve them, and make a flight and fight in the air; and the tiger alone is beyond their powers of attack, because in swiftness it rivals the winds".}}</ref>{{sfnp|Mayor|Heaney|1993|p=42}}{{Refn|group="lower-alpha"|Apollonius also compares the griffins to gold-gathering ants, though he places the ants not in India but in Africa (Aethiopia).<ref>{{harvp|Philostratus|Conybeare tr.|1912|loc={{URL|1=https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Life_of_Apollonius_of_Tyana/vntFAQAAMAAJ?&gbpv=1&bsq=griffins&pg=PA5|2=vol. II, book VI.I., p. 5}}<br />{{blockquote|And the griffins of the Indians and the ants of the Ethiopians, though they are dissimilar in form, yet, from what we hear, play similar parts; for in each country they are, according to the tales of poets, the guardians of gold, and devoted to the gold reefs of the two countries.}}}}</ref>}}
Pomponius Mela (fl. AD 43) wrote in his Book ii. 6: {{blockquote|In Europe, constantly falling snow makes those places contiguous with the Riphaean Mountains.. so impassable that, in addition, they prevent those who deliberately travel here from seeing anything. After that comes a region of very rich soil but quite uninhabitable because griffins, a savage and tenacious breed of wild beasts, love.. the gold that is mined from deep within the earth there, and because they guard it with an amazing hostility to those who set foot there.<ref name="Mela-tr-romer 1998"/>}}
The aforementioned Aelian (Claudius Aelianus, d. 235 AD) added certain other embellishments to the lore, such as describing a griffin with "black plumage on its back with a red chest and white wings".{{Refn|name="aelian"|Aelian ''De natura animalium''IV, 27:"Gryphem, Indicum animal, audio similiter quadrupedem, ut leonem,.."<!-- esse; robustissimis item exsistere unguibus, leonum similibus; tum dorsum ejus pennis indui nigris, anteriorum corporis partem rubris, alas vero candidis. Ctesias eus ait [cervicis pennas coeruleas et floridas habere], aquilino ore esse et capite cujusmodi pictores fingunt; oculis autem igneis, uidosque in montibus facere, utque aetatis processu grandes non capi, ita eorum pullos comprehendi posse. Bactri autem Indis finitimi eos illic auri custodes esse, aurumque effodere ajunt, et simul eo ipso nidos construere; quod vero auri in terram deciderit, Indos homines auferre. Contra Indi eos auri (quod vero quidem simile videtur) custodes esse negant; neque enim gryphes auri egere, sed cum ad colligendum aurum homines accesserunt, hos de pullis suis majorem in modum timentes, pro eis pugnare; atque cum aliis etiam animalibus concertare, eaque facillime vincere; contra autem leones et elephantos non stare. Indigenae, quod ab hujusmodi animalium robore timeant, non interdiu, sed ad collectionem auri noctu proficiscuntur, quod se tum melius latere arbitrentur. Locus ubi gryphes versantur, ac ubi aurum effoditur, desertissimus est. Quocirca aurum venari studentes mille aut bis mille armati eo perveniunt, simulque [ligones et] saccos adferunt, silentem lunam observantes. Quod si gryphes fallant, duplicem commoditatem adsequuntur; quod et eorum vita ab illorum atrocitate servatur, et simul aurum domum avehunt; [ubi auro purgato ab iis, qui hanc artem callent, ingentes sibi pro periculis opes comparant]: sin in furto deprehendantur, perierunt. Domum autem non nisi trienni aut quadrienni intervallo, ut audio, revertuntur.--><ref name="aelian-ed-jacobs1832"/> Quoted in English translation by {{harvp|Mayor|2011|p=33}} and excerpted with somewhat different phrasing in {{harvp|Mayor|Heaney|1993|pp=44–45}}.}} Aelian was the last person to add fresh information on the griffin, and late writers (into medieval times) merely rehashed existing material on griffins, with the exception of the lore about their "agate eggs" which emerged at some indistinct time later on (cf. infra).<ref>{{harvp|Mayor|Heaney|1993|loc=n14}}: "Aelian is the last literary text dealing with the griffin considered here; after his account,.. no new information about the ''gryps'' was added, except for 'agate eggs'"</ref>
===Divine creature=== The griffin has been associated with various deities (Apollo, Dionysus, Nemesis) in Greek mythography, but here, the identifiable attested "accounts" presented in scholarship are largely not literary, but artistic<ref>Cf. {{harvp|Riefstahl|1956|p=3}}</ref> or numismatic.
The griffin was linked to Apollo, given the existence of the cultus of Hyperborean Apollo, with a cult center at the Greek colony of Olbia on the Black Sea.<ref name="kuenzl"/><ref name="hirst"/> The main Temple of Apollo at Delphi featured a statue of the god flanked by griffins, or so it is presumed based on its representation on the tetradrachm coinage of Attica.<ref name="hirst"/> Apollo rode a griffin to Hyperboria each winter leaving Delphi, or so it was believed.{{sfnp|Franks|2009|p=469}} Apollo riding a griffin is known from multiple examples of red-figure pottery.{{Refn|Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum 202, red-figure cup/''kylix'', ca. 400–300 BC.<ref>{{harvp|Franks|2009|p=469}}, n56, Fig. 5</ref> London, British Museum E 543. red-figure ''oinochoe''.<ref>{{harvp|Franks|2009|p=469}}, n56</ref>}}<ref>{{cite web|title=Red-figure hydria with Apollo riding a griffin, ca. 380–360 B.C. (Object number: 2003-92) |website=Princeton University Art Museum |url=https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/collections/objects/41990 |access-date=2023-07-04}}</ref> Apollo also hitched griffins to his chariot, according to Claudian.{{Refn|Claudian, ''VI Honorii'' 30–31: {{lang|la|at si Phoebus adest et frenis grypha iugalem / Riphaeo tripodas repetens detorsit ab axe}}.<ref name="gualandri"/>}}
Dionysus was also depicted on a griffin-chariot{{sfnp|Riefstahl|1956|p=3}} or mounting a griffin; the motif was borrowed from the god Apollo due to "syncretism between the two gods."{{Refn|{{harvp|Westgate|2011|p=298}}<ref name="westgate"/> citing {{harvp|Delplace|1980|pp=372–376}}.}}
At the Temple of Hera at Samos, a griffin-themed bronze "wine-cup"<ref name="herodotus-tr-rawlinson-4.152"/> or "cauldron"<ref name="herodotus-tr-godley-4.152"/> had been installed, according to Herodotus. The vessel had griffin heads attached around the rim (like the ''protomes'',<ref name="towne1994"/> described above): it was an Argolic or Argive ''krater'', according to the text,{{efn|{{lang|grc|κρητῆρος Ἀργολικοῦ}}.}} standing on a tripod shaped like colossal figures.<ref name="herodotus-tr-rawlinson-4.152">{{harvp|Herodotus|Rawlinson tr.|1909}}, {{URL|1=https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_History_of_Herodotus/N084AQAAMAAJ?bsq=Argive&gbpv=1&pg=PA284 |2=IV.152 (p. 284)}}</ref><ref name="herodotus-tr-godley-4.152"/>
==Medieval accounts== thumb|A soldier fighting a griffin, 'Alphonso' Psalter, 1284 thumb|Stonemasonry with Griffins, late 11th-12th c, Gradina, Rakovac. Serbia [[File:Minneteppich KGM.jpg|thumb|Medieval tapestry, Basel, {{circa|1450}} CE]] <!--A 9th-century Irish writer by the name of Stephen Scotus asserted that griffins were strictly monogamous.{{Citation needed|date=June 2009}}-->
The notion that griffins lay stones or agate instead of eggs was introduced "at some in the evolution of griffin lore".<ref>{{harvp|Mayor|Heaney|1993|loc=n4}} citing {{harvp|Nigg|1982|p=51}}</ref> Albertus Magnus (d. 1280) attributes to other writers the claim that "this bird places an 'eagle-stone' ({{lang|la|echytem}}) or agate ({{lang|la|gagatem}}) among its eggs" to change the ambient temperature and enhance reproduction.<ref name="albertus-ed-scanlan"/>{{sfnp|Nigg|1999|p=144}}
===Christian symbolism=== The account of the "gryphes" by Isidore of Seville (d. 636) lacked any Christian allegorical interpretation, and the griffin is classified as a "beast of prey".{{sfnp|Nigg|1999|p=121}} Thus Isidore (''Etymologies'' xii.2 .17)<ref name="isidore-tr-throop2015"/>{{sfnp|McCulloch|1962|p=122}} gives: {{blockquote|The Gryphes are so called because they are winged quadrupeds. This kind of wild beast is found in the Hyperborean Mountains. In every part of their body they are lions, and in wings and heads are like eagles, and they are fierce enemies of horses. Moreover they tear men to pieces".<ref name="brehaut" />{{sfnp|Nigg|1999|p=121}}}}
Isidore's localization of the griffins in the mountains of Hyperborea derives from Servius (4th and 5th century).<ref>Servius's commentary on Virgil's eighth ''Eclogue'' (1. 27), accord. to {{harvp|McCulloch|1962|p=122}}</ref> Griffins had already been localized Riphean Mountains by Mela (1st century) as quoted above,<ref name="Mela-tr-romer 1998"/> while the Hyperboreans are sometimes said to dwell further north than these mountains.
The idea that griffins hated horses can be explained as an offshoot of the lore that griffins had their gold stolen by horseback-riding Arimaspians.<ref>{{harvp|South|1987|p=89}} citing {{harvp|Costello|1979|pp=73–76}}</ref> The griffin were already being depicted attacking the horse in ancient art, as on the gold pectoral of the Scythian King noted above.<ref name="kuenzl"/>
Despite Isidore passing on classical without religious connotation, the griffin, being a union of an aerial bird and a terrestrial beast, came to be regarded in Christendom as a symbol of Jesus, who was both human and divine, espoused by many commentators, who see this evidenced in the griffin that draws the chariot in Dante's ''Purgatorio'' (cf. §In literature below).<ref name="longfellow"/>{{sfnp|Millington|1858|p=277}}<ref name="friar" />
A slightly different interpretation was that the griffin symbolized the pope or papacy rather than Christ himself, as proposed by French critic Didron, who built this interpretation upon the observation that Herrad of Landsberg's manuscript (''Hortus deliciarum'', completed c. 1185) clearly depicted the two-colored bird as symbolic of the Church.<ref name="longfellow"/>
At any rate, the griffin can be found sculpted at a number of Christian churches.{{sfnp|Millington|1858|p=277}}<ref name="friar" />
===Claw, egg, feather=== thumb|upright|Martin Schongauer: ''The griffin'', 15th century Alleged griffin's claws, eggs, and feathers were held as valuable objects, but actually derived from exotic animals, etc.<ref name="bedingfeld"/>{{sfnp|Mayor|2022|pp=43–48}} The eggs were often ostrich eggs, or in rare cases, fossilized dinosaur eggs.{{sfnp|Mayor|2022|pp=43–44}} The feather is a piece of forgery, an object crafted from raffia palm fiber, with painted colors.{{sfnp|Mayor|2022|p=44}}
The supposed claws were often turned into drinking cups<ref name="bedingfeld"/>{{sfnp|Mayor|2022|p=47}} (and griffin egg artifacts were also used as goblets, according to heraldry scholars).<ref name="bedingfeld"/>{{sfnp|Millington|1858|pp=278–279}}<ref>London, Hugh Stanford (1956). ''Royal Beasts''. p. 17 n5 ''apud'' {{harvp|Edwards|2005|loc=p. 225 n10}}</ref>
A number of medieval griffin's claws existed, sometimes purported to be very large.{{Refn|Gerald Leigh, in his work on heraldry (1563), surmised from his claw that the original griffin must have been as "bigge as two lyons".{{sfnp|Mayor|2022|p=44}} Lady Mary Wortley Montague (1716) observed a gilded "prodigious claw" referred to as a griffin's claw while touring the Danube.{{sfnp|Mayor|2022|p=44}}}} St. Cuthbert is said to have obtained claw and egg: two claws and two eggs were registered in the 1383 inventory of the saint's shrine,{{sfnp|Mayor|2022|pp=42–43, 47–48}} but the two-feet claws that still remain on display have been identified as Alpine ibex horns.{{sfnp|Mayor|2022|p=47}}
There is said to be a legend that a griffin's claw was made into a cup and dedicated to Cuthbert.{{sfnp|Millington|1858|p=278}} As a matter of fact, griffin claws were frequently fashioned into goblets (drinking cups) in medieval Europe,<ref name="bedingfeld"/>{{sfnp|Mayor|2022|p=47}} and specific examples can be given, such as Charlemagne's griffin-claw drinking horn, formerly at Saint-Denis and now housed in the Bibliothèque Nationale, is a drinking cup made of a bovine horn. Additional ornamentation were attached to it, such as a gilt copper leg for it to stand on, realistically resembling the taloned foot of a raptor.{{sfnp|Mayor|2022|pp=44–45}}{{efn|Mayor suggests the griffin horn was one of many gifts from Harun al-Rashid (Aaron), who also gave Charlemagne the live elephant Abul-Abbas (referred to as "Abdul" by Mayor).{{sfnp|Mayor|2022|pp=44–46, 49}}}} Kornelimünster Abbey located in Charlemagne's former capital of Aix-la-Chapelle (now Aachen, Germany) also houses a griffin horn of Pope Cornelius, made of Asian buffalo horn.{{sfnp|Mayor|2022|p=46}}
===Medieval iconography=== thumb|Byzantine silk with griffins, 11th century, now in Sion, Switzerland By the 12th century, the appearance of the griffin was substantially fixed: "All its bodily members are like a lion's, but its wings and mask are like an eagle's."<ref name="white"/> It is not yet clear if its forelimbs are those of an eagle or of a lion. Although the description implies the latter, the accompanying illustration is ambiguous. It was left to the heralds to clarify that.
Griffins also appear on a wide range of medieval luxury objects, such as textiles, and in these contexts are part of a shared visual language deployed by artisans in the Byzantine, western medieval, and Islamic worlds.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=McClanan |first=A |date=2019 |title=Illustrious Monsters: Representations of Griffins on Byzantine Textiles |journal=Animals in Text and Textile: Storytelling in the Medieval World, Riggisberger Berichte |volume=23 |pages=133–45}}</ref>
==Folklore== According to Stephen Friar's ''New Dictionary of Heraldry'', a griffin's claw was believed to have medicinal properties and one of its feathers could restore sight to the blind.<ref name="friar" />{{Additional citation needed|date=March 2023}}
Attestation of griffin's feather as cure for blindness does occur in an Italian folktale,<ref name="hand2021"/> classed as "The Singing Bone" tale type (ATU 780).<ref name="lewis"/> There is also a study that considers the griffin's feather tale as a variant of "The Twa Sisters" ballad (Child Ballad 10), as the tale incorporates the song in Italian, supposedly sung by the bones of the murdered finder of the feather).<ref name="brewster"/> It may not be a griffin's feather but another kind of avian plumage (peacock feather) that remedies blindness in other Italian variants of this folktale type.<ref name="zipes&russo2009"/>
==In heraldry== {{See also|List of griffins as mascots and in heraldry}} {{multiple image | align = right | total_width = 320 | perrow=2
| image1 = Bevan Crest.jpg | alt1 = A heraldic griffin passant of the Bevan family crest. | caption1 = A heraldic griffin passant of the Bevan family crest.
| image2 = Griffin of Perugia.jpg | alt2 = Griffin segreant wearing the mural crown of Perugia, 13th century | caption2 = Griffin segreant wearing the mural crown of Perugia, 13th century }} {{multiple image | align = right | total_width = 240 | perrow=2
| image1 = COA Pomerania-Stettin Iberian style shield white.svg | alt1 = | caption1 = Coat of arms of Pomerania | image2 = POL Szczecin COA.svg | alt2 = | caption2 = Coat of arms of Szczecin, Poland | image3 = POL COA Gryf.svg | alt3 = | caption3 = Gryf coat of arms, symbol of the Gryfit family used since c. 1481 | image4 = Emblem of Crimea.svg | alt4 = | caption4 = Coat of arms of Crimea
| footer = }} Griffins in heraldry are usually portrayed with the rear body of a lion, an eagle's head with erect ears, a feathered breast, and the forelegs of an eagle, including claws.<ref name="oliver"/>
The heraldic griffin "denote[d] strength and military, courage and leadership", according to one source.<ref name="oliver"/> That it became a Christian symbol of divine power and a guardian of the divine,<ref name="von volborth"/> was already touched upon above.
Griffins may be shown in a variety of poses, but in British heraldry are never shown with their wings closed. Heraldic griffins use the same attitude terminology as the lion, with the exception that where a lion would be described as rampant a griffin is instead described as segreant.<ref name="Davies"/>
In British heraldry, a male griffin is shown without wings, its body covered in tufts of formidable spikes, with a short tusk emerging from the forehead, as for a unicorn.<ref>Male griffin depicted in Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p. 222, sinister supporter of Earl of Carrick (Ireland)</ref> In some blazons, this variant is termed a keythong. This distinction is not found outside of British heraldry; even within it, male griffins are much rarer than winged ones, which are not given a specific name. One example is John Butler, 6th Earl of Ormond, whose badge was described as featuring a "peyr [pair of] keythongs".<ref>{{cite book |author=J[ames] R[obinson] Planché |title=The Pursuivant of Arms, or Heraldry Founded upon Facts |publisher=W. N. Wright [Bookseller to the Queen, 60, Pall Mall] |year=1852 |location=London |page=183 |chapter=Badges |authorlink=James Planché |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/planchepursuivantofarms/page/183/mode/1up}}.</ref> It is possible that the male griffin/keythong originated as a derivation of the heraldic panther.<ref name=Davies/>
===Houses and cities using the device=== When Genoa emerged as a major seafaring power in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, griffins commenced to be depicted as part of the republic's coat of arms, rearing at the sides of the shield bearing the Cross of St. George.
The red griffin rampant was the coat of arms of the dukes of Pomerania and survives today as the armorial of West Pomeranian Voivodeship (historically, Farther Pomerania) in Poland. It is also part of the coat of arms of the German state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, representing the historical region Vorpommern (Hither Pommerania).
==Variants== ===Hippogriff=== A '''hippogriff''' is a related legendary creature, supposedly the offspring of a griffin and a mare.
===Heraldic subtypes=== ====Wingless griffin==== Infrequently, a griffin is portrayed without wings, or a wingless eagle-headed lion is identified as a griffin. In 15th-century and later heraldry, such a wingless griffin may be called an '''alke''', a '''keythong''' or a '''male griffin'''.
====Sea-griffin==== The '''sea-griffin''', also termed the '''gryphon-marine''', is a heraldic variant of the griffin possessing the head and legs of the more common variant and the hindquarters of a fish or a mermaid. Sea-griffins are present on the arms of a number of German noble families, including the Mestich family of Silesia and the Barony of Puttkamer.<ref name=Davies/>
====Opinicus==== The '''opinicus''' or '''epimacus''' is another heraldic variety of griffin, which is depicted with the head and wings of an eagle, the body and legs of a lion, and the tail of a camel. It is sometimes wingless. The opinicus is rarely used in heraldry, but appears in the arms of the Worshipful Company of Barbers.<ref>Arthur Fox-Davies, [https://archive.org/details/completeguidetoh00foxduoft ''A Complete Guide to Heraldry''], T.C. and E.C. Jack, London, 1909, pp. 231–232.</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=Giants, Monsters, and Dragons: an Encyclopedia of Folklore, Legend, and Myth|last=Rose|first=Carol|publisher=W. W. Norton & Company|year=2001|isbn=0393322114|location=New York|page=279|oclc=48798119}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=Fictitious and Symbolic Creatures in Art: With Special Reference to Their Use in British Heraldry|last=Vinycomb|first=John|publisher=Chapman and Hall|year=1906|location=London|page=162}}</ref>
==In architecture== {{multiple image | align = right | total_width = 400
| image1 = Psa-Opera del Duomo-Grifone Islamico007.jpg | alt1 = The Pisa Griffin, in the Pisa Cathedral Museum, 11th century | caption1 = The Pisa Griffin, Pisa Cathedral Museum, 11th century | image2 = Venice - Statue of a griffin.jpg | alt2 = Statue of a griffin at St Mark's Basilica in Venice | caption2 = Statue of a griffin. St Mark's Basilica, Venice | image3 = Austrian Parliament Building - colored sections 04.jpg | alt3 = Relief of griffins on the Austrian Parliament Building in Vienna | caption3 = Relief of griffins, Austrian Parliament Building, Vienna | footer = }}
In ancient Rome, at sites such as the Forum of Trajan, griffins featured prominently in the architectural decoration.<ref name=":0" /> The Pisa Griffin is a large bronze sculpture that has been in Pisa in Italy since the Middle Ages, though it is of Islamic origin. It is the largest bronze medieval Islamic sculpture known, at over 3 feet tall (42.5 inches, or 1.08 m), and was probably created in the 11th century AD in Al-Andaluz (Islamic Spain).<ref>{{cite web |title=The griffon of Pisa |website=Quantara |url=http://www.qantara-med.org/qantara4/public/show_document.php?do_id=1141&lang=en |access-date=15 May 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120326172719/http://www.qantara-med.org/qantara4/public/show_document.php?do_id=1141&lang=en |archive-date=26 March 2012}}</ref><ref>Hoffman, 318</ref> From about 1100 it was placed on a column on the roof of Pisa Cathedral until replaced by a replica in 1832; the original is now in the Museo dell' Opera del Duomo (Cathedral Museum), Pisa.
In architectural decoration the griffin is usually represented as a four-footed beast with wings and the head of an eagle with horns, or with the head and beak of an eagle.{{Citation needed|date=May 2007}}
The statues that mark the entrance to the City of London are sometimes mistaken for griffins, but are in fact (Tudor) dragons, the supporters of the city's arms.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20040302214758/http://www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/leisure_heritage/libraries_archives_museums_galleries/clro/pdf/cityarms.PDF The City Arms], City of London Corporation, hosted by webarchive</ref> They are most easily distinguished from griffins by their membranous, rather than feathered, wings.
==In fiction== : ''For fictional characters named Griffin, see Griffin (surname)''
Griffins are used widely in Persian poetry; Rumi is one such poet who writes in reference to griffins.<ref name=Coleman>''The Essential Rumi'', translated from Persian by Coleman Barks, p 257</ref>
In Dante Alighieri's ''Divine Comedy'' story ''Purgatorio'', after Dante and Virgil's journey through Hell and Purgatory has concluded, Dante meets a chariot dragged by a griffin in Earthly Paradise. Immediately afterwards, Dante is reunited with Beatrice. Dante and Beatrice then start their journey through Paradise. [[File:The red animal story book - plate facing page 004.png|thumb|Illustration for Mandeville's legend by H. J. Ford, 1899]]
Sir John Mandeville wrote about them in his 14th century book of travels, and this textual depiction by Mandeville is typical of the way griffins were used to signal "exotic lands":<ref name=":0" />
{{blockquote|In that country be many griffins, more plenty than in any other country. Some men say that they have the body upward as an eagle and beneath as a lion; and truly they say sooth, that they be of that shape. But one griffin hath the body more great and is more strong than eight lions, of such lions as be on this half, and more great and stronger than an hundred eagles such as we have amongst us. For one griffin there will bear, flying to his nest, a great horse, if he may find him at the point, or two oxen yoked together as they go at the plough. For he hath his talons so long and so large and great upon his feet, as though they were horns of great oxen or of bugles or of kine, so that men make cups of them to drink of. And of their ribs and of the pens of their wings, men make bows, full strong, to shoot with arrows and quarrels.<ref name=Mandeville>''The Travels of Sir John Mandeville'', Chapter XXIX, Macmillan and Co. edition, 1900.</ref>{{sfnp|Millington|1858|p=278}}}}
[[File:Alice griffin, rabbithole.jpg|thumb|Griffin misericord, Ripon Cathedral, alleged inspiration for the Gryphon in Lewis Carroll's ''Alice's Adventures in Wonderland'']]
John Milton in ''Paradise Lost'' he mentions the griffin as an allusion to Satan:{{sfnp|Edwards|2005|p=100}}
{{blockquote|As when a Gryfon through the Wilderness<br /> With winged course ore Hill or moarie Dale,<br /> Pursues the Arimaspian, who by stelth<br /> Had from his wakeful custody purloind<br /> The guarded Gold [...]}}
==Theories of origin== ===Possible influence by dinosaurs=== [[File:Hyperborean-gryphon-persepolis-protoceratops-psittacosaurus-skeletons.jpg|thumb|right|Early historic references to the gryphon describe the area of the Dzungarian Gate, a region where ''Protoceratops'' and ''Psittacosaurus'' skeletons are very common.]]
Discounting the evidence of extensive contact between West Asia and Greece, and the transmission of griffin imagery through that pathway, Adrienne Mayor, a classical folklorist and science historian, speculates that the way the Greeks imagined griffins from the seventh century BC onwards may have been influenced in part by the fossilized remains of beaked dinosaurs such as ''Protoceratops'' and ''Psittacosaurus'' that ancient Scythian (Central Asian) nomadic prospectors saw on the way to gold deposits.<ref>{{cite journal |first=Adrienne |last=Mayor |title=Guardians of The Gold |volume=47 |number=6 |journal=Archaeology Magazine |date=November–December 1994| pages=53–59 |jstor=41766590}}; {{harvp|Mayor|2011|pp=xvii, xxv, 49}}.</ref> This speculation is based on Greek and Latin literary sources and related artworks in a specific time frame, beginning with the first written descriptions of griffins as real animals of Asia in a lost work by Aristeas (referenced by Herodotus, ca. 450 BC) and ending with Aelian (3rd century AD), the last ancient author to report any "new" details about the griffin.
Mayor took a paleo-cryptozoological approach, trying to identify the unknown creature by its features: mammalian body but head with raptor's beak, dwelling in Eastern deserts en route to gold deposits, laying eggs in nests on the ground. No living animal matched this description, but some dinosaurs had all these features, raising the question of whether the ancient nomads who told Greeks about griffins could have seen fossils of beaked dinosaurs and nests with eggs. Traffic went both ways on the ancient trade routes; traders and gold seekers traveling west from China recounted tales of these strange creatures that were transmitted to the Greco-Roman world through translators. On their way to the gold-dust-bearing gullies of the Altai ("Gold") Mountains and Tien Shan gold belts, travelers from the east would pass through the Gobi and arrive in Issedonian territory (Issedon Serica and Issedon Scythica, desert stations where the griffin was first described to Greeks), having observed or heard garbled descriptions of strange beaked quadrupeds east of those points.<ref>{{harvp|Mayor|2022|pp=23, 25, 27}}</ref>
Mayor argues that ''Protoceratops'' and other fossils, seen by ancient observers, may have been interpreted as evidence of a half-bird-half-mammal creature.<ref>BBC Four television program ''Dinosaurs, Myths and Monsters'', 10 and 13 December 2011</ref> She argues that repeated oral descriptions and artistic attempts to illustrate a bony neck frill (which is rather fragile and may have been broken or entirely weathered away) may have been rendered as large mammal-type external ears, and its beak may have been treated as evidence of a part-bird nature, leading to stylized wings being added to match the creature's avian-like attributes. The narrow, elongated scapula of beaked dinosaurs resembles that of birds, and this avian feature may have suggested to ancient observers that the creature had wings.<ref>{{harvp|Mayor|1994||p=58}}; {{harvp|Mayor|2011||pp=49, 71}}</ref>
Paleontologist Mark P. Witton contests this hypothesis.<ref>Mark Witton, [http://markwitton-com.blogspot.pt/2016/04/why-protoceratops-almost-certainly.html Why Protoceratops Almost Certainly Wasn't The Inspiration For Griffin Legend]</ref> McClanan, Witton, and Richard A. Hing argue that it ignores the existence of depictions of hybrid creatures bird's heads on mammal bodies throughout the Near East dating to long before the time Mayor posits the Greeks became aware of ''Protoceratops'' fossils in Scythia. They further argue that the anatomies of griffins in Greek art are clearly based on those of living creatures, especially lions and eagles, and that there are no features of griffins in Greek art that can only be explained by the hypothesis that the griffins were based on fossils. They note that Greek accounts of griffins describe them as living creatures, not ancient skeletons, and that some of the details of these accounts suggest griffins are purely imaginary, not inspired by fossils.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Witton |first1=Mark P. |last2=Hing |first2=Richard A. |date=2024-06-20 |title=Did the horned dinosaur Protoceratops inspire the griffin? |journal=Interdisciplinary Science Reviews |volume=49 |issue=3–4 |pages=363–388 |language=en |doi=10.1177/03080188241255543 |issn=0308-0188|doi-access=free |bibcode=2024ISRv...49..363W }}</ref><ref name=":0" />
==Modern culture== ===Popular fiction=== Griffins, like many other fictional creatures, frequently appear within works under the fantasy genre. Examples of fantasy-oriented franchises that feature griffins include ''Warhammer Fantasy Battle'', ''Warcraft'', ''Heroes of Might and Magic'', the Griffon in ''Dungeons & Dragons'', ''Ragnarok Online'', ''Harry Potter'', ''The Spiderwick Chronicles'', ''My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic'', and ''The Battle for Wesnoth''.
Griffins appear in the fairy tales "Jack the Giant Killer", "The Griffin" and "The Singing, Springing Lark".
In ''Digimon'', there is a Digimon called Gryphomon who is based on the depiction of a griffin that has a snake-headed tail.
In ''The Son of Neptune'' by Rick Riordan, Percy Jackson, Hazel Levesque, and Frank Zhang are attacked by griffins in Alaska.
In the ''Harry Potter'' series, the character Albus Dumbledore has a griffin-shaped knocker. Also, the character Godric Gryffindor's surname is a variation on the French ''griffon d'or'' ("golden griffon").
In ''The Empyrean'' series by Rebecca Yarros, griffins are the chosen mounts for the fliers of Poromiel.
===Modern art=== The griffin appears in French symbolist precursors to the modernist period in the work of Gustave Moreau as noted in his painting of "the Fairy and the Gryphons" ("La fée aux griffons," 1876) shown below.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://musee-moreau.fr/fr/collection/objet/fee-aux-griffons-grisaille | title=Fée aux griffons (Grisaille) }}</ref><ref name=":0" /> thumb|The fairy and gryphons Through his friendship with Marcel Proust, Jean Cocteau the twentieth-century surrealist artist, writer and filmmaker, became familiar with the paintings of Gustave Moreau.<ref>Cocteau parle de Proust: "... la main d'une dame qui aurait touché une rose..." https://www-syscom.univ-mlv.fr/~vignat/Html/Proust/cocteau1.html</ref> Whether or not this is related to Cocteau's own rendering of "Le Griffon" which is a 1957 colored lithograph depicting an eagle-headed, winged male dancer in the style of a costume design for les Ballets Russes is unknown, yet clearly shows the lion part of the griffin replaced by the strong physique of the ballet dancer in red tights.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.artsy.net/artwork/jean-cocteau-le-griffon | title=Jean Cocteau | le griffon (1957) | Artsy }}</ref>
thumb|"Griff" Statue in the forecourt of the Farkashegyi Cemetery Budapest, 2007 The griffin is also the symbol of the Philadelphia Museum of Art; bronze castings of them perch on each corner of the museum's roof, protecting its collection.<ref>[http://www.philamuseum.org/giving/441-495-380.html Philadelphia Museum of Art – Giving : Giving to the Museum : Specialty License Plates]. Philamuseum.org. Retrieved on 2 January 2012.</ref><ref name="glasssteelandstone.com">{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20130511205337/http://www.glasssteelandstone.com/BuildingDetail/472.php Glassteelandstone.com]}}, Philadelphia Museum of Art: Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, Glass Steel and Stone</ref>
The "Griff" statue by {{interlanguage link|Veres Kálmán|hu}} was erected in 2007 at the forecourt of the Farkashegyi cemetery in Budapest, Hungary.
==Logos, mascots== {{See also|#Eponymy}}
An archaic griffin design, created by artist {{interlanguage link|Thomas Fanourakis|el|Θωμάς Φανουράκης}} (1915–1993), was adopted as the official symbol of the city of Heraklion on 22 March 1961 (cf. figure right).{{efn|The design of the griffin is a mock-up of Minoan art, but the inscription language is archaicized Greek, not Minoan (Linear A and Cretan hieroglyphs).}}<ref name="creatalive">{{cite news|author-link=<!--No byline --> |title=Ο Γρύπας, το μυθικό τέρας γίνεται το σύμβολο της πόλης του Ηρακλείου... |newspaper=Cretalive News |date=22 March 2021}}</ref>
Film and television company Merv Griffin Entertainment uses a griffin for its production company. Merv Griffin Entertainment was founded by entrepreneur Merv Griffin and is based in Beverly Hills, California. His former company Merv Griffin Enterprises also used a griffin for its logo.
The griffin is used in the logo of United Paper Mills, Vauxhall Motors, and of Scania and its former partners Saab Group and Saab Automobile.
Similarly, prior to the mid-1990s a griffin formed part of the logo of Midland Bank (now HSBC).
Saab Automobile previously used the griffin in their logo (Cf. Saab fighter Gripen)
===School emblems and mascots=== {{Further|List of griffins as mascots and in heraldry}} {{more citations needed section|date=September 2017}} [[File:FASTWÜRMS - Gryphon.jpg|thumb|right|The Gryphon is the emblem and mascot of the University of Guelph]]
Three gryphons form the crest of Trinity College, Oxford (founded 1555), originating from the family crest of founder Sir Thomas Pope. The college's debating society is known as the Gryphon, and the notes of its master emeritus show it to be one of the oldest debating institutions in the country, significantly older than the more famous Oxford Union Society.<ref>[http://www.trinity.ox.ac.uk/ Trinity.ox.ac.uk]. Trinity.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved on 2 January 2012.</ref> Griffins are also mascots for VU University Amsterdam,<ref>[http://www.vu.nl/en/about-vu-amsterdam/mission-and-profile/the-griffin/index.asp VU university Amsterdam. ''About the griffin''.] Retrieved on 5 November 2013.</ref> Reed College,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.reed.edu/reed_magazine/december2011/articles/features/almanac/almanac4.html#griffin |title=The New (Olde) Reed Almanac (continued): Griffin |publisher=Reed College}}</ref> Sarah Lawrence College,<ref>[http://gogryphons.com/ Sarah Lawrence Gryphons]. Gogryphons.com. Retrieved on 23 October 2013.</ref> the University of Guelph, and Canisius College.{{citation needed|date=December 2013}}
The Gryphon is the official school mascot for Raffles Institution, appearing also on the top of the school crest.
The official seal of Purdue University was adopted during the university's centennial in 1969. The seal, approved by the Board of Trustees, was designed by Prof. Al Gowan, formerly at Purdue. It replaced an unofficial one that had been in use for 73 years.<ref>[http://www.purdue.edu/facts/pages/traditions.html Traditions. Big Ten]. Purdue.edu. Retrieved on 2 January 2012.</ref>
The College of William and Mary in Virginia changed its mascot to Griffin in April 2010.<ref>[http://deadspin.com/5511531/pantless-man%20bird-to-lead-william-and-mary-into-battle Pantless Man-Bird To Lead William and Mary Into Battle]. Deadspin.com (7 April 2010). Retrieved on 2 January 2012.</ref><ref>[http://www.wm.edu/news/stories/2010/mascot-revealed-123.php W&M welcomes newest member of the Tribe]. Wm.edu (8 April 2010). Retrieved on 2 January 2012.</ref> The griffin was chosen because it is the combination of the British lion and the American eagle, a transition that faced some controversy and was even commented upon by alumnus comedian Jon Stewart.<ref name=":0" />
The 367th Training Support Squadron's and 12th Combat Aviation Brigade feature griffins in their unit patches.
The emblem of the Greek 15th Infantry Division features an ax-wielding griffin on its unit patch.
The English private school of Wycliffe College features a griffin on its school crest.
The mascot of St Mary's College, one of the 16 colleges in Durham University, is a griffin.
The mascot of Glebe Collegiate Institute in Ottawa is the gryphon, and the team name is the Glebe Gryphons.
Gryph the gryphon is the mascot of the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada, and the campus features a gryphon statue at its main entrance.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.uoguelph.ca/studentexperience/gryphon-traditions/|title=Gryphon Traditions|website=www.uoguelph.ca}}</ref>
The griffin is the official mascot of Chestnut Hill College and Gwynedd Mercy University, both in Pennsylvania.
The mascot of Leadership High School in San Francisco, CA was chosen by the student body by popular vote to be the griffin after the Golden Gate University Griffins, where they operated out of from 1997 to 2000.
The Gryphon is the school mascot for Glenlyon Norfolk School, an independent, co-ed, university preparatory day school in Victoria and Oak Bay, British Columbia, Canada.
===Police and military=== {{multiple image | align = right | total_width = 240 | perrow=2
| image1 = Estonian Security Police logo.svg | alt1 = Yellow griffin pictured in the logo of the Estonian Internal Security Service. | caption1 = Yellow griffin pictured in the logo of the Estonian Internal Security Service.
| image2 = Utin jääkärirykmentin lippu.svg | alt2 = Flag of the Utti Jaeger Regiment of the Finnish Army | caption2 = Flag of the Utti Jaeger Regiment of the Finnish Army }} A griffin appears in the official seal of the Waterloo Police Department (Iowa).
The Royal Air Force Police depicts a griffin for their unit badge.
The Royal New Zealand Air Force Police depicts a griffin holding a taiaha for their unit badge.
===Professional sports=== The Grand Rapids Griffins professional ice hockey team of the American Hockey League.
Suwon Samsung Bluewings's mascot "Aguileon" is a griffin. The name "Aguileon" is a compound using two Spanish words; "aguila" meaning "eagle" and "leon" meaning "lion".
AC Perugia's crest features a griffin.
===Amusement parks=== One of Busch Gardens Williamsburg's attractions is a dive coaster called the "Griffon", which opened in 2007.
In 2013, Cedar Point Amusement Park in Sandusky, Ohio opened the "GateKeeper" steel roller coaster, which features a griffin as its mascot.
=== Iran Air Logo ===
The logo design of Iran Air features a griffin. The pattern of this design, created by Edward Zahrabian, is based on a griffin statue found in Persepolis. A common mistake regarding this is the assumption that the griffin is the same as the mythical bird Homa, but this is incorrect. This mistake has arisen because the acronym for the National Airline of Iran in Persian is "Homa".
==In film and television== {{more citations needed section|date=January 2023}}
Griffins appear in ''The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe'' and ''The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian''.
Griffins are also present in various animated series such as ''My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic, World of Quest'', ''Yin Yang Yo!'', and ''Family Guy''.<ref>{{Citation |title=Family Guy – "What's your name?" | date=12 March 2016 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJzBopVRKPo |language=en |access-date=2023-01-02}}</ref>
A griffin appeared in the 1974 film ''The Golden Voyage of Sinbad'' fighting a centaur.<ref name="starburst-sinbad">{{cite magazine |title=Monsters of the Movies |journal=Starburst |date=1982 |page=60 |url=https://archive.org/details/Starburst_Annual_1982/page/n59/mode/2up?q=%22Golden+Voyage+of+Sinbad%22+%22griffin%22 |publisher=Marvel UK |quote=Notable highspots are the battle between the Griffin and the one-eyed centaur [...]}}</ref>
In the 1969 movie ''Latitude Zero'', a creature called "Griffin" is made by inserting a woman's brain into a lion–condor hybrid.
In an episode of the sitcom ''The Big Bang Theory'', Dr. Sheldon Cooper mentions that he attempted to create a griffin but could not obtain the "necessary eagle eggs and lion semen".<ref>{{Citation |title=...but my parents were unwilling to secure the necessary eagle eggs and lion semen. |url=https://www.getyarn.io/yarn-clip/31e4aae4-53ee-43da-97b2-30b445481be0 |language=en |access-date=2023-01-02}}</ref>
==Eponymy== The latest fighter produced by the Saab Group bears the name "Gripen" (Griffin), as a result of public competition.
During World War II, the Heinkel firm named its heavy bomber design for the Luftwaffe after the legendary animal, as the Heinkel He 177 ''Greif'', the German form of "griffin". General Atomics has used the term "Griffin Eye" for its intelligence surveillance platform based on a Hawker Beechcraft King Air 35ER civilian aircraft.<ref>[http://www.ga-asi.com/news_events/index.php?read=1&id=301 GA-ASI Introduces Griffin Eye Manned ISR System] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110711062840/http://www.ga-asi.com/news_events/index.php?read=1&id=301 |date=11 July 2011 }}. GA-ASI.com (20 July 2010). Retrieved on 2 January 2012.</ref>
===Fauna names=== Some large species of Old World vultures are called griffines, including the griffon vulture (''Gyps fulvus''). The scientific name for the Andean condor is ''Vultur gryphus'', Latin for "griffin-vulture". The Catholic Douay-Rheims version of the Bible uses griffon for a creature referred to as vulture or ossifrage in other English translations (Leviticus 11:13).
==Gallery== <gallery widths="200px" heights="200px"> File:Johann-Vogel-Meditationes-emblematicae-de-restaurata-pace-Germaniae MGG 1034.tif|Griffin in Johann Vogel: ''Meditationes emblematicae de restaurata pace Germaniae'', 1649
File:Griffioen, Kasteel de Haar, juli 2003.JPG|Heraldic guardian griffin at Kasteel de Haar, Netherlands, 1892–1912
File:Stuffed griffin.jpg|Rogue taxidermy griffin, Zoological Museum, Copenhagen
File:Griffin of Monti's Planisphere.jpg|A griffin portrayed in a mythical land located south of the world's known continents, from Urbano Monti's map (1587).
File:Aarnikotka.jpg|UPM (company) Finnish forest industry company. Symbol came into use in 1899. </gallery>
==See also== * Chimera, Greek mythological hybrid monster * Duck billed platypus, an egg-producing mammal with a beak * Hybrid creatures in mythology * List of hybrid creatures in mythology * Nue, Japanese legendary creature * Pegasus, winged stallion in Greek mythology * Pixiu or Pi Yao, Chinese mythical creature * Sharabha, Hindu mythology: lion-bird hybrid * Snow Lion, Tibetan mythological celestial animal * Yali, Hindu mythological lion-elephant-horse hybrid
==Explanatory notes== {{notelist}}
==References== ;Citations {{Reflist|30em|refs= <ref name="aelian-ed-jacobs1832">{{citation|author=Claudius Aelianus |author-link=Claudius Aelianus |editor-last1=Jacobs |editor-first=Friedrich |editor-link=<!--Friedrich Jacobs-->|editor-mask=Scanlan, James J. (tr.) |title=Aeliani de natura animalium libri xvii |volume=1 |publisher=Impensis Friderici Frommanni |year=1832 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8vwOAQAAIAAJ&q=Gryphem&pg=RA1-PA53 |pages=53–54}}</ref>
<ref name="aeschylus-ed-watson1870">{{cite book|author=Aeschylus |author-link=Aeschylus |editor-last=Watson |editor-first=John Selby |editor-link=John Selby Watson |title=Aischulou Promētheus desmōtēs. The Prometheus vinctus, from the text of Dindorf |year=1870 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VX4CAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA1-PA115 |at=vv. 802–806, and endnotes, pp. 115–116 }}</ref>
<ref name="albertus-ed-scanlan">{{citation|author=Albertus Magnus |author-link=Albertus Magnus |editor-last1=Scanlan |editor-first=James J. |editor-link=<!--James J. Scanlan-->|editor-mask=Scanlan, James J. (tr.) |title=Man and the Beasts (De Animalibus, Books 22-26) |publisher=Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies |year=1987|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qOgmAAAAMAAJ&q=grifes |page=290 |isbn=<!--0866980326, -->9780866980326}}</ref>
<ref name="asadi&darvishi2020">{{cite journal|last1=Asadi |first1=Arezoo |author1-link=<!--آرزو اسدی--> |last2=Darvishi |first2=Farangis |author2-link=<!--فرنگیس درویشی--> |title=The Reflection of Mythological Concepts in Achaemenid Jewelry Art |journal=Journal of Iranian Studies |publisher=Faculty of Literature and Humanities Shahid Bahonar University of Kerman |volume=18 |number=36 |date=Winter 2020 |url=https://docplayer.net/187039592-Journal-of-iranian-studies-faculty-of-literature-and-humanities-shahid-bahonar-university-of-kerman-year-18-no-36-winter-2020.html |pages=21–41 }}</ref>
<ref name="bedingfeld">{{cite book|last1=Bedingfeld |first1=Henry |author1-link=Henry Bedingfeld |last2=Gwynn-Jones |first2=Peter |author-link2=Peter Gwynn-Jones |title=Heraldry |location=Wigston |publisher=Magna Books |year=1993 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xiiqxdVU5T0C&q=goblets |pages=80–81 |isbn=1-85422-433-6 |quotation=Goblets in the shape of gryphon's claws or eggs were highly prized in the courts of medieval Europe, and were usually made from antelope horns and ostrich eggs.}}</ref>
<ref name="bement-no144">{{cite book|last=Bement |first=Clarence S. |author-link=<!--Clarence S. Bement--> |title=Descriptive Catalogue of Greek Coins selected from the cabinet |location=Philadelphia |publisher=American Numismatic Society |year=1921|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_8MGwpK7NZYC&pg=RA1-PA43 |at=p. 43 and [https://books.google.com/books/content?id=_8MGwpK7NZYC&pg=RA1-PT30 Plate X, 144] |quote=144 AR [silver] Phoenician Tetradrachm; 14.94 gr.; 27 mm. ''Obv''. Griffin seated l. on a fish, with rounded, feathered wing; around, magistrate's name Καλλιδαμασ; around, circle of dots. ''Rev.'' → Αβδηριτων on border of an incuse square; within, smaller linear square in four compartments.}}</ref>
<ref name="brehaut">{{citation|author=Isidore of Seville |author-link=Isidore of Seville |editor-last=Brehaut |editor-first=Ernest |editor-link=<!--Ernest Brehaut-->|editor-mask=Brehaut, Ernest (tr.) |title=An Encyclopedist of the Dark Ages: Isidore of Seville |location=New York |publisher=Columbia University Press |year=1912 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QBcOAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA225 |page=225 |series=Columbia Studies in the Social Sciences, 48}}. {{URL|1=http://www.eaudrey.com/myth/griffin.htm|2="Griffin"}}@eaudrey.com</ref>
<ref name="brewster">{{cite book|last=Brewster |first=Paul G. |author-link=<!--Paul G. Brewster--> |title=The Two Sisters |location=Helsinki |publisher=Academia Scientiarum Fennica |year=1953 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ATRLAAAAYAAJ&q=griffins |page=55 |series=FF Communications, 147}}</ref>
<ref name="chahin">{{cite book|last=Chahin |first=Mack |author-link=<!--Mekerditch Chahin--> |title=The Kingdom of Armenia |publisher=Curzon |orig-year=1987 |year=2001|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OR_PHoKZ6ycC&q=tresses |page=151|isbn=9780700714520 }}</ref>
<ref name="david2023">{{citation|last=David |first=Arlette |author-link=<!--Arlette David--> |editor1-last=David |editor1-first=Arlette |editor1-link=<!--Arlette David--> |editor2-last=Milstein |editor2-first=Rachel |editor2-link=<!--Rachel Milstein--> |editor3-last=Ornan |editor3-first=Tallay |editor3-link=<!--Tallay Ornan--> |chapter=3. Hybridism as a Visual Mark of Divinity: The Case of Akhenaten |title=Picturing Royal Charisma: Kings and Rulers in the Near East from 3000 BCE to 1700 CE |publisher=Archaeopress Publishing Limited |year=2016 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YPXAEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA53 |at=pp. 52–53 and Table 3.1<!--51–63--> |isbn=9781803271613<!--1803271612-->}}</ref>
<ref name="Davies">{{cite book|last=Fox-Davies |first=Arthur |author-link=Arthur Fox-Davies |title=A Complete Guide to Heraldry |location=London<!--and Edinburgh--> |publisher=T.C. and E.C. Jack |year=1909 |url=https://archive.org/details/completeguidetoh00foxduoft/page/222/mode/2up |pages=222–224 }}</ref>
<ref name="delaporte1920">{{cite book|last=Delaporte |first=Louis-Joseph |author-link=Louis-Joseph Delaporte |title=Catalogue des cylindres, cachets et pierres gravées de style oriental : Musée du Louvre |location=Paris |publisher=Hachette |date=1920 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hPpKAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA49 |page=49}} Items S. 366 (Pl. 44, fig. 10); S. 367 (Pl. 44, fig. 11); S. 368 (Pl. 45, fig. 2) [https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k6283200h/f59.item.r=lion.zoom BnF copy]. The "S" indicates Susa expedition, under the direction of J. de Morgan (1897–1912).</ref>
<ref name="fishbane">{{cite book|last=Fishbane |first=Michael A. |author-link=Michael Fishbane |title=Biblical Myth and Rabbinic Mythmaking |publisher=Oxford University Press |date=2005 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6qZg42W9EFcC&pg=PA45 |pages=45–46 |isbn=<!--0199284202, -->9780199284207}}</ref>
<ref name="friar">{{cite book|last=Friar |first=Stephen |author-link=<!--Stephen Friar --> |title=A New Dictionary of Heraldry |year=1987 |publisher=Alphabooks/A & C Black |location=London |isbn=978-0-906670-44-6 |page=173}}</ref>
<ref name="griffith&newberry1895">{{cite book|last1=Griffith |first1=F. Ll |author1-link=Francis Llewellyn Griffith |last2=Newberry |first2=Percy Edward |author2-link=Percy Edward Newberry |others=Appended by George Willoughby Fraser |title=El Bersheh |volume=2 |publisher=Sold at the Offices of the Egypt Exploration Fund |date=1895 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_Vn4DUtFC18C&pg=PA34 |at=pp. 34–35 and [https://books.google.com/books?id=_Vn4DUtFC18C&pg=PT31 Pl. XVI], tomb no. 5 |quotation=Another monster is seen just above; a lion with the head of a hawk, the wings of an eagle, and the horns and feathers of a god... called ''tesh-tesh'', "the tearer-in-pieces"}}</ref>
<ref name="gualandri">{{cite book|last=Gualandri |first=Isabella |author-link=<!--Isabella Gualandri --> |chapter=8. Sidonius' Intersexuality |editor-last=Kelly |editor-first=Gavin |editor-link=<!--Gavin Kelly (scholar)--> |title=Edinburgh Companion to Sidonius Apollinaris |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |date=2020 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W6QxEAAAQBAJ&q=griffin&pg=PA296 |page=296<!--279–316--> |isbn=9781474461702<!--1474461700--> }}</ref>
<ref name="hand2021">{{cite book|last=Hand |first=Wayland D. |author-link=Wayland D. Hand |title=Magical Medicine: The Folkloric Component of Medicine in the Folk Belief, Custom, and Ritual of the Peoples of Europe and America |publisher=University of California Press |year=2021 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CODrDwAAQBAJ&dq=griffin+feather&pg=PA298 |page=298 |isbn=9780520306783<!-- 0520306783-->}}</ref>
<ref name="henning">{{citation|last=Henning |first=W. B. |author-link=Walter Bruno Henning |title=Two Manichæan Magical Texts with an Excursus on the Parthian Ending -ēndēh |journal=Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London |volume=12 |number=1 |year=1947 |pages=41, 42<!--39–66-->|doi=10.1017/S0041977X0007988X |jstor=608983|s2cid=194111905 }}; Reprinted in Duchesne-Guillemin, Jacques ed. (1977) "B. Henning selected papers", ''Acta Iranica'' '''10''', [https://books.google.com/books?id=vWsMAQAAMAAJ&q=griffin pp. 274–275]</ref>
<ref name="herodotus-tr-godley-4.152">{{cite book|ref={{SfnRef|Herodotus|Godley tr.|1921}} |author=Herodotus |author-link=Herodotus |editor-last=Godley |editor-first=A. D. |editor-link=Alfred Denis Godley |editor-mask=Godley, A. D. (ed., tr.) |title=The History of Herodotus |volume=2 |publisher=W. Heinemann |date=1921 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bR0MAAAAIAAJ&q=argolic&pg=PA355 |at=IV.152 ('''2''': 355)}}<!--Perseus Project:http://data.perseus.org/citations/urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0016.tlg001.perseus-eng1:4.152 --></ref>
<ref name="herodotus-tr-rawlinson1909">{{cite book|ref={{SfnRef|Herodotus|Rawlinson tr.|1909}} |author=Herodotus |author-link=Herodotus |translator-last=Rawlinson |translator-first=George |translator-link=George Rawlinson |title=The History of Herodotus |volume=2 |location=New York |publisher=Tandy-Thomas |date=1909 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=N084AQAAMAAJ&q=griffins |at=III.16, IV.13 (pp. 146, 192)}}</ref>
<ref name="hirst">{{cite book|last=Hirst |first=G. M. |author-link=Gertrude Mary Hirst |title=The Cults of Olbia |publisher=Columbia University |date=1902 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HPlMAQAAMAAJ&q=griffin&pg=PA259 |pages=259–260}}</ref>
<ref name="isidore-tr-throop2015">{{cite book|author=Isidore of Seville |author-link=Isidore of Seville |translator-last=Throop |translator-first=Priscilla |translator-link=<!--Priscilla Throop--> |title=Isidore of Seville's Etymologies: Complete English Translation |volume=2 |publisher=MedievalMS |year=2005 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6jjsJ9NP6hYC&q=griffin&pg=PT45 |at=xii.2.17 |isbn=9781411665262<!-- 1411665260-->}}</ref>
<ref name="kiperwasser&shapira">{{cite book|last1=Kiperwasser |first1=Reuven |author1-link=<!--Reuven Kiperwasser--> |last2=Shapira |first2=Dan D. Y. |author2-link=<!--Dan D. Y. Shapira--> |chapter=Irano-Talmudica II: Leviathan, Behemoth and the 'Domestication' of Iranian Mythological Creatures in Eschatological Narratives of the Babylonian Talmud |editor1-last=Secunda |editor1-first=Shai |editor1-link=<!--Shai Secunda--> |editor2-last=Fine|editor2-first=Steven |editor2-link=Steven Fine |title=Shoshannat Yaakov: Jewish and Iranian studies in honor of Yaakov Elman |publisher=Brill |date=2012 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kSgyAQAAQBAJ&q=griffin&pg=PA209 |page=209 and n22 <!--203–237-->|isbn=<!--9004235450, -->9789004235458}}</ref>
<ref name="kuenzl">{{citation|last=Künzl |first=Ernst |author-link=:de:Ernst Künzl |editor1-last=Bintliff |editor1-first=John |editor1-link=<!--John Bintliff--> |editor2-last=Rutter |editor2-first=N. K. |editor2-link=<!--Neville Keith Rutter--> |chapter=13 Life on Earth and Death from Heaven: The Golden Pectoral of the Scythian King from the Tolstaya Mogila (Ukraine) |title=Archaeology of Greece and Rome: Image, Text and Context. Studies in Honour of Anthony Snodgrass |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |year=2016|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7C1WDwAAQBAJ&q=griffins&pg=PA331 |pages=331–332<!--317–-->|isbn=9781474417105 }}</ref>
<ref name=litvinskij&picikian1995>{{cite book|last1=Litvinskij |first1=Boris A. |author1-link=:ru:Литвинский, Борис Анатольевич |last2=Pičikian |first2=Igor R. |author2-link=<!--Игорь Рубенович Пичикян--> |chapter=An Achaemenian griffin handle from the Temple of the Oxus: the makhaira in Northern Bactria |editor-last=Invernizzi |editor-first=Antonio |editor-link=<!--Antonio Invernizzi--> |title=In the Land of the Gryphons: Papers on Central Asian Archaeology in Antiquity |publisher=Le lettere |date=1995 |page=123<!--107–128--> |isbn=<!--8871662482, -->9788871662480}}</ref>
<ref name=litvinskij2002>{{cite journal|last=Litvinskij |first=Boris A. |author-link=:ru:Литвинский, Борис Анатольевич |title=Copper cauldrons from Gilgit and Central Asia: more about Saka and Dards and related problems |journal=East and West |volume=52 |number=1–4 |date=2002 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DkMTAQAAMAAJ&q=%22mythical%20bird%22 |page=141<!--127–149-->}}</ref>
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<ref name="longfellow">{{cite book|last=Longfellow |first=Henry Wadsworth |author-link=Henry Wadsworth Longfellow |title=The Writings of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, with Bibliographical and Critical Notes |volume=10 |location=Cambridge, MA |publisher=Riverside Press |year=1886 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K9Q-AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA338 |pages=338, 351–352}}</ref>
<ref name="Mela-tr-romer 1998">{{cite book|author=Pomponius Mela |author-link=Pomponius Mela |editor-last=Romer |editor-first=Frank E. |editor-link=<!--Frank E. Romer--> |title=Pomponius Mela's Description of the World |publisher=University of Michigan Press |year=1998|isbn=0472084526 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6AplSod8IDcC&q=griffins&pg=PA68 |at=Book 2.1, p. 68}}</ref>
<ref name="morgan_seal_220">{{cite web |author-link=<!--No byline--> |title=Worshiper pouring libation before goddess standing on lion-griffin that draws chariot driven by weather god |website=Morgan Library & Museum |date=6 July 2017 |url=https://www.themorgan.org/seals-and-tablets/83843 |access-date=2023-04-13}}</ref>
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<ref name="zipes&russo2009">Endnotes, {{URL|1=https://books.google.com/books?id=fIskVVNHEXoC&pg=PA869 |2=volume 2, p. 869}}, to : {{citation|editor1-last=Zipes |editor1-first=Jack |editor1-link=Jack Zipes |editor2-last=Russo |editor2-first=Joseph |editor2-link=<!--Joseph Russo (literary scholar, Haverford College)-->|chapter=79. The King of Naples—Lu Re di Napuli |title=The Collected Sicilian Folk and Fairy Tales of Giuseppe Pitrè |volume=1&2|publisher=Routledge |year=2009 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tRgjAQAAQBAJ&pg=PA348 |pages=348–349|isbn=9781135861377 }}</ref> }}
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==Further reading== {{refbegin}} * Bisi, Anna Maria, ''Il grifone: Storia di un motivo iconografico nell'antico Oriente mediterraneo.'' Rome: Centro di studi semitici, Istituto di studi del Vicino Oriente, Sapienza Università di Roma, 1965. * McClanan, Anne L. ''Griffinology: The Griffin’s Place in Myth, History and Art.'' London: Reaktion, 2024. ISBN: 9781789148466 * Wild, Friedrich. ''Gryps-Greif-Gryphon (Griffon). Eine sprach-, kultur- und stoffgeschichtliche Studie'' Wien: Herman Böhlaus, 1963. (Oesterreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Philologisch-historische Klasse, Sitzungberichte, 241). {{refend}}
==External links== {{Commons category|Griffins}} * [https://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/mythic-creatures/land/griffin-bones Griffin bones] at amnh.org * {{cite EB9 |wstitle = Griffin |volume= XI | page=195 |short=1 }} {{refbegin}} * [http://www.gryphonpages.com/ The Gryphon Pages], a repository of griffin lore and information * [http://bestiary.ca/beasts/beast151.htm The Medieval Bestiary: Griffin] * [http://www.griffinfantasy.com/four-footed-winged-raptors-gryphons-of-greece-europe-and-the-near-east1.html Four Footed Winged Raptors Gryphons of Greece, Europe and the Near East], source texts in Greek, Hebrew, and Old English, with new English translations. * {{Skeptoid | id=4442 | number= 442| title= Griffins| date=25 November 2014 | last= Haupt| first=Ryan }} {{refend}}
{{Heraldic creatures}} {{Authority control}}
Category:Griffins Category:Legendary creatures in Egyptian mythology Category:European legendary creatures Category:Greek legendary creatures Category:Heraldic beasts Category:Mythological birds of prey Category:Mythological hybrids Category:Fairy tale stock characters