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Illustration of a red mullet (Mullus barbatus L.). From the book Gervais and Boulart, Les Poissons tome 2. Paris: J. Rothschild, ca. 1860, which I learned about from the wikimedia entry this image comes from.

More on menstruating women and mirrors

Institute of Philosophy, Czech Academy of Sciences
December 21, 2022 by Sean Coughlin in Ancient Medicine

I covered some of the Aristotelian tradition here. This time, an obscure man named Bithus (Bythus?) from Dyrrhachium, (modern Durrës in Albania), if we can trust Pliny and the manuscript tradition.

“Bithus of Dyrrachium says that mirrors dimmed by the look [sc. of menstruating women] recover their brightness when the same women return their gaze to the backs of them, and that all such powers are broken if women keep mullet-fish on them.”

bithus durrachinus hebetata aspectu specula recipere nitorem tradit isdem aversa rursus contuentibus, omnemque vim talem resolvi, si mullum piscem secum habeant.

Plinius Secundus, Naturalis historia 28.7

December 21, 2022 /Sean Coughlin
Magic, magic animals, menstruation, alchemy, mirrors, Bithus, Pliny, casual misogyny
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