Since true polycoria and pseudopolycoria are so rare, there is not much history on the disorders in the tradition of modern western medicine. According to an article published in 2002, there have only been 2 cases of true polycoria since 1966. Early Chinese history names multiple legendary figures as having double pupils, which as a result led to a belief that a child born with two double pupils was destined to be a great king or sage.
Xiang Yu, Hegemon of
Chu, blood brother and later arch nemesis of
Liu Bang, the founding emperor of the
Han dynasty, was given great esteem due to his prowess in combat and auspicious double pupil. After overthrowing the
Qin dynasty together, he was named Hegemon of the loose series of kingdoms he created in its wake, while he gave Liu Bang the remote province of
Han. The Civil War that followed called the
Chu-Han contention, ending with a Han victory and a legendary last stand by the Hegemon.
Pliny the Elder describes a mythological race of people known as
Bythiæ who "have a double pupil in one eye, and in the other the figure of a horse." ==See also==