A Little Book of Serpents
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A Little Book of Serpents - Yvonne Aburrow
A little book of serpents
by Yvonne Aburrow
Birdberry Books
Oxford
© 1998, 2012
Contents
Adder
Asp
Chameleon
Crocodile
Dinosaur
Lizard
Python
Snake
Tortoise
Turtle
Adder
Varieties
The Viperidae (Vipers) include the Common Viper (Vipera berus); the Asp Viper (Vipera aspis), a very venomous snake found in Europe; the Levantine Viper (Vipera lebetina); the Desert or Orsini's Viper (Vipera ursinii) and the Long-nosed or Sand Viper (Vipera ammodytes), both found in southern Europe; the Carpet or Saw-scaled Viper (Echis carinatus), found in desert regions of Africa and India; the deadly Daboia, Tic-Polonga, or Russell's Viper (Vipera russelli), found in India, Sri Lanka, Burma, and Thailand; the Gaboon Viper (Bitis gabonica), from the forests of equatorial Africa; and the Puff Adder (Bitis arietans), from the region south of the Sahara, whose bite can be fatal. The Crotalinae (Pit Vipers) include the Water Moccasin or Cottonmouth (Agkistrodon piscivorus) from the swamps of North America; the Copper-head Snake (Agkistrodon contortrix) from the forests of North America; the Siberian Moccasin (Agkistrodon halys caraganus) from the steppes of central Asia; the Fer-de-Lance (Bothrops atrox) from Central and South America; the Urutu (Bothrops alternatus), from the jungles of South America; and the Rattlesnakes, of which there are about fifteen species, found only on the American continent. They are called rattlesnakes because they have a loosely jointed section of dried skin at the end of their tails which they erect and shake when disturbed, making a rattling sound. The most common species are the Sidewinder or Horned Rattlesnake (Crotalus cerastes) and the Prairie Rattlesnake (Crotalus viridis helleri).
Folklore
In Christianity, the viper is one of the four aspects of the devil, according to St Augustine. The deaf adder depicts sinners who close their ears to Christian doctrine.
Mythology
The viper was one of the Eleven Mighty Helpers enlisted by Tiamat in her fight against Marduk.
In Scotland, various stones were reputed to have healing powers. Among them were adder stones (a Chlach Nathrach), also known as druidical beads, which are sometimes found in the heather. A man from the Isle of Lewis told F. Marian McNeill that the adders form themselves into a knot and move round and round on a stone until a hole is worn. They then writhe through the hole one after the other, and leave slime on it, which eventually becomes hard. It is this which gives the stone its healing virtues. Serpent stones were used to ease the pains of child-bed, as protection from enchantment, for general healing, and as weights for the distaff.
Asp
The asp is found in North Africa, Egypt, Arabia, and Southern Europe. The Elapidae have poison fangs in the front part of the upper jaw. They include the cobras, such as the Indian or Spectacled Cobra (Naja naja), the Monocled Cobra (Naja naja kaouthia), the smaller Asian Cobra (Naja naja oxiana) and the King Cobra (Ophiophagus hannah), all of which live in Asia. The Asp or Egyptian Cobra (Naja haje) lives in Africa. Another species of Elapid is the Banded Krait (Bungarus fasciatus), which lives in south-east Asia.
Symbolism
In Egypt, the asp was the symbol of the Sun, royalty, dominion, and power. The uraeus, which consisted of a solar disk supported by two asps, symbolised sovereignty, royalty, power, light, life and death, the power to rule, the destruction of enemies, and the eye of Ra, the Sun god. The so-called 'horned asp' may well have been the slug (q.v.).
In Greece, it embodied protective and benevolent