The Nature of the Beast: Understanding Fabulous Animals in Medieval Art

Medieval bestiaries are wondrously colourful worlds, blending fact with fiction, morality with mythology. They represent an understanding of the physical world but also fulfilled the need for symbolic creatures to supplement biblical stories, offering a wide array of noble or crude behaviours with which to compare ourselves. What happened if you chased a bonnacon? What was a beaver’s superpower? What did owls mean? And how did animals graduate from bestiaries into the realm of heraldry? In the course of an hour, we’ll explore all these and more.

Dr Jonathan Foyle is a career communicator, best known for presenting TV series such as BBC2’s Broadcast Award-winning 15-part ‘Climbing Great Buildings’, as well as contributing to Channel 4’s ‘Time Team’ and Channel 5’s ‘Secrets of the Royal Palaces’. His former roles have encompassed Curator at Hampton Court and Chief Executive of World Monuments Fund Britain, writer for the FT Weekend, and he is now a lecturer at the University of Bath. Jonathan has authored seven volumes on great cathedrals and castles and has spoken across the world about discoveries in British arts.

Date

05 Nov 2025

Time

7:45 am

Location

The Henrician
The Henrician
Category