Tradition / Region: German mythology
Alternate Names: —
Category: Cow
The Myth
In the time when Bardowick was a rich and powerful city, its people rose in pride and defied their lord, Duke Henry the Lion of Brunswick, refusing him entry through their gates. Enraged by this insult, the duke laid siege to the city. For two days his forces pressed against Bardowick’s defenses, yet made no progress.
During the siege, a bull wandered calmly into the ducal camp. The soldiers soon realized that it was the town bull of Bardowick, a familiar animal that roamed freely and knew every path and crossing of its home. Seeing opportunity, Duke Henry ordered the bull released and commanded his men to follow it quietly.
The bull, untroubled and unaware, returned toward the city. It moved along the outer defenses, crossed a shallow ford, and passed through a narrow, crumbling opening in the stonework—a place long overlooked and poorly guarded. By instinct alone, the bull revealed the city’s hidden weakness.
That same night, the duke’s soldiers followed the path the bull had taken. They crossed the ford, slipped through the broken stone, and poured into Bardowick. The city was taken and destroyed. Many were slain, others fled, and Bardowick was reduced to ruins. Only the cathedral was spared from the devastation.
Though the city never regained its former glory, the memory of the bull endured. It was remembered not as an innocent creature, but as the animal whose unwitting loyalty betrayed its home and led the enemy inside. Even generations later, the tale remained sharp with shame. It is said that one should never ask the people of Bardowick about the bull, for the memory of the beast that led destruction home still stirs anger in every heart.
Gallery
Sources
Interpretive Lenses
Religious Readings
- Christian Ascetic Deep Dive
Philosophical Readings
- Nietzschean Deep Dive
Psychological Readings
- Jungian Deep Dive
Esoteric Deep Dive
- Hermetic Deep Dive
Political / Social Readings
- Marxist Deep Dive
Other
- How to Invite The Bull of Bardowick