
- amolosh
- Sep 7, 2025
- 1 min read
A knight in chain-mail spears a griffin. "Alphonso" psalter, 1284 CE.
Si’l y a des griffons, n’en mangeons point;
si’l n’y en a point, nous en mangerons encore moins.*
—Voltaire, Zadig
Franks on the Fourth Crusade (thirteenth century),
Diverted from the Holy Land by the Venetians,
To sack Constantinople, the great city,
Like all rapists, sought a rude name for those they fucked,
Pejoratively calling Greeks "griffins," their
G-word. They'd come to steal an Empire,
"Chrysostom's** foreskin—sworn genuine!—and a True Cross splinter was what I got."
It was the Venetians who looted that lion and the four horses of the Hippodrome
That tourists gaze at in Saint Mark's Basilica;
(Be only right to return them, I say,
along with the Elgin Marbles—
The British Museum must surely give those back some day!)
"If there are griffins, we don't eat 'em;
if there are none, we'll eat 'em even less."*

The Crusaders' attack the City. Miniature from a manuscript of Geoffrey de Villehardouin's De la Conquête de Constantinople. Venetian MS, ca. 1330.
**John Chrysostom (ca. 347–407), Church Father, archbishop of Constantinople and Christian saint, author of Adversus Judaeos ("Against the Jews").
Sunday, August 7, 2025



