By the 7th or 8th century, there had been composed a
Letter of Pharasmenes to Hadrian, whose accounts of marvels such as
bearded women (and headless men) became incorporated into later texts. This included
De rebus in Oriente mirabilibus (also known as
Mirabilia);
its Anglo-Saxon translation;
Gervase of Tilbury's treatise; and
the Alexander legend attributed to
Leo Archipresbyter. The Latin text in the recension known as the
Fermes Letter was translated verbatim in Gervase of Tilbury's
Otia Imperialia (ca. 1211) which describes a "people without heads" ("
Des hommes sanz testes") of a golden colour, measuring 12 feet tall and 7 feet wide, living on an isle in the River Brisone (in Ethiopia). The catalogue of strange peoples from
Letter occur in the Anglo-Saxon
Wonders of the East (translation of
Mirabilia) and the
Liber Monstrorum; a recension of
Wonders of the East is bound in the
Beowulf manuscript. The transmission is imperfect. No name is given to the headless islanders, eight feet tall in the
Wonders of the East.
Epiphagi ("epifugi") is the name of the headless in
Liber Monstrorum. This form derives from "epiphagos" in a modified recension of the
Letter of Pharasmenes known as the
Letter of Premonis to Trajan (
Epistola Premonis Regis ad Trajanum).
Alexander romances The
Letter material was incorporated into the Alexander legend by
Leo Archipresbyter, known as
Historia de preliis (version J2), which was translated into Old French as ''
Roman d'Alexandre en prose. In the prose Alexandre'' the golden-coloured headless encountered by Alexandre measured just 6 feet tall, and had beards reaching their knees. In the French version, Alexander captures 30 of the headless to show the rest of the world, an element lacking in the Latin original. Other Alexander books that contain the headless people episode are
Thomas de Kent's romance and
Jean Wauquelin's chronicle.
Medieval maps Blemmyes or headless people were also illustrated and described on medieval maps. The
Hereford Mappa Mundi (ca. 1300) places the "Blemee" in Ethiopia (upper Nile system), deriving its information from Solinus, perhaps via
Isidore of Seville. One Blemee standing has his face on their chest, and another below him has "eyes and mouth at their shoulders". Both varieties of Blemmyae occur according to Isidore, who reported that in Libya, besides the Blemmyae born with a face on the chest, there were reputedly "others, born without necks, [and] have their eyes on their shoulders". Some modern commentators believe the two different types represent the male and female blemmyes, with their genitals explicitly drawn. Another example is the
Ranulf Higden map (ca. 1363), which bears an inscription regarding the headless in Ethiopia, although unaccompanied by any picture of the people. By the
Late Middle Ages, world maps began to appear that located the headless people further east, in Asia, such as the
Andrea Bianco map (1436) that depicted people who "all do not have heads (
omines qui non abent capites)" in India, on the same peninsula as the
terrestrial paradise. But other maps of the period such as the
Andreas Walsperger's map (ca. 1448) did continue to locate the headless in Ethiopia. The post-medieval map of
Guillaume Le Testu (pictured above) illustrates the headless and the dog-headed cynocephali north beyond the
Himalayan mountains.
Late Middle Ages The Travels of Sir John Mandeville writes of "ugly folk without heads, who have eyes in each shoulder" with their mouths "round like a horseshoe, in the middle of their chest" living among the populace in the big island of Dundeya (
Andaman Islands) between India and Myanmar. In other parts of the island are headless men with eyes and mouth on their backs. This has been noted as an example of Blemmyes by commentators, though Mandeville does not use the term. '' (1493) Examples of chapters on monstrous races (including the headless), taken from earlier sources, occur in the
Buch der Natur or the
Nuremberg Chronicle. The
Buch der Natur (ca. 1349), written by
Conrad of Megenberg, described the "people without heads ()" as shaggy all over the body, with "coarse hair like wild animals", but when the printed book versions appeared, their woodcut illustrations depicted them as smooth-bodied, in contradiction to the text. Conrad lumped peoples of various geography under "wundermenschen", and condemned such wondrous people as earning physical deformities due to the sins of their ancestors. == Age of Discovery ==