Angus Canmore


Angus Canmore authored a book on gargoyles that presented them in an especially grim and hostile light during the 19th Century. In his writing, he repeatedly characterized gargoyles as “unholy beasts,” language that reflects both fear and moral condemnation rather than objective observation. Such phrasing suggests that Canmore did not view gargoyles as neutral or misunderstood creatures, but instead as inherently dangerous and corrupt.

This portrayal strongly implies that Angus Canmore was either a Hunter himself or was deeply shaped by the beliefs and traditions of his family, who evidently held a long-standing animosity toward gargoyles. His work appears less like an impartial scholarly study and more like a continuation of a broader ideological stance, one rooted in suspicion and hostility. As a result, the book likely reinforced existing prejudices of the era, contributing to the widespread 19th-century perception of gargoyles as monstrous threats rather than complex or sentient beings.