Raza
 
  Al Borayque
 
  
   "The Jews of Spain and the Expulsion of 1492"
 
   Edited by M. Lazar and S. Haliczer, pp. 153-236
  
 
 
  Manticore, mantiserra, mermelcoleons, mermaids, etc.
 
 
 
   Click to see: 
 
 
  What then is an "Al Borayque"? The following is a definition
  of an "Al Borayque"1, 2:
 
 
   -  
    Wolf's mouth (hypocracy, as they are heretics and sinners 
    pretending to be Catholics, recognized by their holidays 
    observing Sabbath like Jews, practicing circumcision like
    Jews and Muslims, eating meat during Lent, praying as 
    Jews, their fasting days, festivals, never confessing or 
    communing, not observing the Lord's day, nor going to 
    mass, praising neither Jesus Christ nor the Virgin Mary. 
    Jacob said of his son Benjamin: "Benjamin is a ravenous 
    wolf".)
   
 
   -  
    Horse's muzzle (also swift like a horse, to shed blood in battle)
   
 
   -  
    Man's eyes (a neophyte alboraycos looks like a
    charitable and endearing human, but they are inhuman and 
    cruel, only human in appearance, but are really devils 
    [Saint John calls them a synagogue of devils...].)
   
 
   -  
    A dog's ears (sometimes the ears of an elephant)
   
 
   -  
    A horse's neck (or a camel's neck) and a horse's mane (like a horse not fit for work 
    in the mountains nor in rugged soil, but only fit for 
    ambling in squares and streets, trying to cheat 
    Catholics. Their work being useless, heretics as 
    orators they can only be dishonest defense lawyers).
   
 
   -  
    Breast of a mule
   
 
   -  
    Body of an ox
   
 
    
   -  
    Serpent's tail (because conversos poison the world with their
    heresy) or camel's tail
   
 
   -  
    At the end of the tail, A crane's head with a peacock's body 
    ("And as the cranes live in great fear amongst us and under
     the cover of darkness, so do these people who live in fear
     amongst us; and in the same way as it is quite impossible
     to kill cranes, because they protect themselves behind layers
     of feathers, it is almost impossible to bring to justice and
     execute an alborayco because they protect themselves with
     important sums of money and bribes")
   
 
   -  
    An elegantly clothed human leg with a well-shod foot
   
 
   -  
    Another leg shod as a horse
   
 
   -  
    Another leg an eagle's leg with talons (claws)
   
 
   -  
    The last leg  a lion's with a paw without claws
   
 
   -  
    Hooves like an ox
   
 
    
   -  
    Fur of many colors (like the morciegalo 
    [bat] that lives in the night, they have teeth 
    like animals but wings like birds: they are 
    neither birds nor animals, neither Christians 
    or Moors, but are Jews).
   
 
   -  
    It eats all kinds of food
   
 
   -  
    Hermaphroditic (neither male nor female; "The tribe of Benjamin
    sinned in sodomy ... From the Jews it was transmitted to the
    Moors, and from the Moors to the bad Christians ...").
   
 
    
   -  
    A saddle of precious construction: seat support of fig-tree wood
   
 
   -  
    Stirrups of many metals (signifying the many types of conversions
    of alboraycos; "one would hardly find any heretics amongst the 
    conversos naturales [natural converts, i.e., willingly converted];
    on the contrary, in the kingdom of Toledo and Murcia, in all of
    Andalusia and Estramadura, one will hardly find amongst them [i.e.,
    conversos] any sincere Christians").
   
 
   -  
    A fiery bridle's bit, reins as finely polished as a sword's steel
   
 
 
 
  The Alboraique was a mythical monster that was said to have
  been Mohammed's mount as Mohammed rode to heaven upon his
  death (though this does not appear in the Koran). The idea 
  of the Alboraique (and other fantastical creatures such as 
  the Manticora) originated in the Middle East (Persia), but 
  extended to the Iberian Peninsula, as early as the 13th 
  century. During the 15th century the Alboraique was 
  modified by "someone close to Torquemada" and used as a
  propaganda tool against Jews and conversos.
 
 
   1  
    
     Moshe Lazar, "Anti-Jewish and Anti-Converso Propaganda: 
     Confutatio Libri, talmud and Alboraique", in Moshe 
     Lazar, Stephen Haliczer, Eds., "The Jews of Spain and the
     Expulsion of 1482", Labyrinthos Press, Lancaster, CA, pp. 153-236.
     
 
  .
 
   2  
    
     Dwayne Lee Carpenter, Ed., Tratado del Alboraique, Biblioteca 
     Nacional de Madrid, MS. 17567, Madison, 1993, pp. 1-9.
    
 
 
  
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