Dragon

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a large, serpent-like legendary creature that appears in the folklore of many cultures around the world





Illustration of a winged, fire-breathing dragon by Friedrich Justin Bertuch from 1806




Carved imperial Chinese dragons at Nine-Dragon Wall, Beihai Park, Beijing


A dragon is a large, serpent-like legendary creature that appears in the folklore of many cultures around the world. Beliefs about dragons vary drastically by region, but dragons in western cultures since the High Middle Ages have often been depicted as winged, horned, four-legged, and capable of breathing fire. Dragons in eastern cultures are usually depicted as wingless, four-legged, serpentine creatures with above-average intelligence.


The earliest attested dragons resemble giant snakes. Dragon-like creatures are first described in the mythologies of the ancient Near East and appear in ancient Mesopotamian art and literature. Stories about storm-gods slaying giant serpents occur throughout nearly all Indo-European and Near Eastern mythologies. Famous prototypical dragons include the mušḫuššu of ancient Mesopotamia; Apep in Egyptian mythology; Vṛtra in the Rigveda; the Leviathan in the Hebrew Bible; Python, Ladon, Wyvern, and the Lernaean Hydra in Greek mythology; Jörmungandr, Níðhöggr, and Fafnir in Norse mythology; and the dragon from Beowulf.


The popular western image of a dragon as winged, four-legged, and capable of breathing fire is an invention of the High Middle Ages based on a conflation of earlier dragons from different traditions. In western cultures, dragons are portrayed as monsters to be tamed or overcome, usually by saints or culture heroes, as in the popular legend of Saint George and the Dragon. They are often said to have ravenous appetites and to live in caves, where they hoard treasure. These dragons appear frequently in western fantasy literature, including The Hobbit by J. R. R. Tolkien, the Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling, and A Song of Ice and Fire by George R. R. Martin.


The word "dragon" has also come to be applied to the Chinese lung (龍, Pinyin long), which are associated with good fortune and are thought to have power over rain. Dragons and their associations with rain are the source of the Chinese customs of dragon dancing and dragon boat racing. Many East Asian deities and demigods have dragons as their personal mounts or companions. Dragons were also identified with the Emperor of China, who, during later Chinese imperial history, was the only one permitted to have dragons on his house, clothing, or personal articles.


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Contents





  • 1 Etymology


  • 2 Sources of inspiration for dragon myths


  • 3 Middle East

    • 3.1 Ancient Near East

      • 3.1.1 Mesopotamia


      • 3.1.2 Egypt


      • 3.1.3 Levant



    • 3.2 Medieval Near East



  • 4 Occident

    • 4.1 Proto-Indo-European


    • 4.2 Ancient Greece and Rome


    • 4.3 Germanic mythology


    • 4.4 Medieval western Europe


    • 4.5 Eastern Europe



  • 5 Orient

    • 5.1 South Asia


    • 5.2 East Asia

      • 5.2.1 Chinese dragon


      • 5.2.2 Korean dragon


      • 5.2.3 Japanese dragon


      • 5.2.4 Vietnamese dragon




  • 6 Modern depictions


  • 7 See also


  • 8 Notes


  • 9 References

    • 9.1 Bibliography



  • 10 External links



Etymology




An early appearance of the Old English word dracan in Beowulf[1]


The word dragon entered the English language in the early 13th century from Old French dragon, which in turn comes from Latin: draconem (nominative draco) meaning "huge serpent, dragon", from Ancient Greek δράκων, drákōn (genitive δράκοντος, drákontos) "serpent, giant seafish".[2][3] The Greek and Latin term referred to any great serpent, not necessarily mythological.[4] The Greek word δράκων is most likely derived from the Greek verb δέρκομαι (dérkomai) meaning "I see", the aorist form of which is ἐδρακόμην (edrakómēn).[3]


Sources of inspiration for dragon myths




Several bones purported to belong to the Wawel Dragon hang outside of Wawel Cathedral, but actually belong to a pleistocene mammal.


Dragon-like creatures appear in virtually all cultures around the globe.[5] Nonetheless, scholars dispute where the idea of a dragon originates from[6] and a wide variety of theories have been proposed.[6] In his book An Instinct for Dragons (2000), anthropologist David E. Jones suggests a hypothesis that humans, just like monkeys, have inherited instinctive reactions to snakes, large cats, and birds of prey.[7] He cites a study which found that approximately 39 people in a hundred are afraid of snakes[8] and notes that fear of snakes is especially prominent in children, even in areas where snakes are rare.[8] The earliest attested dragons all resemble snakes or bear snakelike attributes.[9] Jones therefore concludes that the reason why dragons appear in nearly all cultures is because of humans' innate fear of snakes and other animals that were major predators of humans' primate ancestors.[10] Dragons are usually said to reside in "dank caves, deep pools, wild mountain reaches, sea bottoms, haunted forests", all places which would have been fraught with danger for early human ancestors.[11]


In her book The First Fossil Hunters: Dinosaurs, Mammoths, and Myth in Greek and Roman Times (2000), Adrienne Mayor argues that some stories of dragons may have been inspired by ancient discoveries of fossils belonging to dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals.[12] She argues that the dragon lore of northern India may have been inspired by "observations of oversized, extraordinary bones in the fossilbeds of the Siwalik Hills below the Himalayas"[13] and that ancient Greek artistic depictions of the Monster of Troy may have been influenced by fossils of Samotherium, an extinct species of giraffe whose fossils are common in the Mediterranean region.[13] In China, a region where fossils of large prehistoric animals are common, these remains are frequently identified as "dragon bones"[14] and are commonly used in Chinese traditional medicine.[14] Mayor, however, is careful to point out that not all stories of dragons and giants are inspired by fossils[14] and notes that Scandinavia has many stories of dragons and sea monsters, but has long "been considered barren of large fossils."[14] In one of her later books, she states that "Many dragon images around the world were based on folk knowledge or exaggerations of living reptiles, such as Komodo dragons, Gila monsters, iguanas, alligators, or, in California, alligator lizards."[15]


Middle East


Ancient Near East


Mesopotamia




The mušḫuššu is a serpentine, dragon-like monster from ancient Mesopotamian mythology with the body and neck of a snake, the forelegs of a lion, and the hind-legs of a bird.[16] Here it is shown as it appears in the Ishtar Gate from the city of Babylon.[16]


Ancient peoples across the Near East believed in creatures similar to what modern people call "dragons".[17] These ancient peoples were unaware of the existence of dinosaurs or similar creatures in the distant past.[17] References to dragons of both benevolent and malevolent characters occur throughout ancient Mesopotamian literature.[17] In Sumerian poetry, great kings are often compared to the ušumgal, a gigantic, serpentine monster.[17] A dragon-like creature with the foreparts of a lion and the hind-legs, tail, and wings of a bird appears in Mesopotamian artwork from the Akkadian Period (c. 2334 – 2154 BC) until the Neo-Babylonian Period (626 BC–539 BC).[18] The dragon is usually shown with its mouth open.[18] It may have been known as the (ūmu) nā’iru, which means "roaring weather beast",[18] and may have been associated with the god Ishkur (Hadad).[18] A slightly different lion-dragon with two horns and the tail of a scorpion appears in art from the Neo-Assyrian Period (911 BC–609 BC).[18] A relief probably commissioned by Sennacherib shows the gods Ashur, Sin, and Adad standing on its back.[18]


Another dragon-like creature with horns, the body and neck of a snake, the forelegs of a lion, and the hind-legs of a bird appears in Mesopotamian art from the Akkadian Period until the Hellenistic Period (323 BC–31 BC).[16] This creature, known in Akkadian as the mušḫuššu, meaning "furious serpent", was used as a symbol for particular deities and also as a general protective emblem.[16] It seems to have originally been the attendant of the Underworld god Ninazu,[16] but later became the attendant to the Hurrian storm-god Tishpak, as well as, later, Ninazu's son Ningishzida, the Babylonian national god Marduk, the scribal god Nabu, and the Assyrian national god Ashur.[16]


Scholars disagree regarding the appearance of Tiamat, the Babylonian goddess personifying primeval chaos slain by Marduk in the Babylonian creation epic Enûma Eliš.[19][20] She was traditionally regarded by scholars as having had the form of a giant serpent,[20] but several scholars have pointed out that this shape "cannot be imputed to Tiamat with certainty"[20] and she seems at have at least sometimes been regarded as anthropomorphic.[19][20] Nonetheless, in some texts, she seems to be described with horns, a tail, and a hide that no weapon can penetrate,[19] all features which suggest she was conceived as some form of dragoness.[19]


Egypt




Illustration from an ancient Egyptian papyrus manuscript showing the god Set spearing the serpent Apep as he attacks the sun boat of Ra


In Egyptian mythology, Apep is a giant serpent who resides in the Duat, the Egyptian Underworld.[21][22] The Bremner-Rhind papyrus, written in around 310 BC, preserves an account of a much older Egyptian tradition that the setting of the sun is caused by Ra descending to the Duat to battle Apep.[21][22] In some accounts, Apep is as long as the height of eight men with a head made of flint.[22] Thunderstorms and earthquakes were thought to be caused by Apep's roar[23] and solar eclipses were thought to be the result of Apep attacking Ra during the daytime.[23] In some myths, Apep is slain by the god Set.[24]Nehebkau is another giant serpent who guards the Duat and aided Ra in his battle against Apep.[23] Nehebkau was so massive in some stories that the entire earth was believed to rest atop his coils.[23] Denwen is a giant serpent mentioned in the Pyramid Texts whose body was made of fire and who ignited a conflagration that nearly destroyed all the gods of the Egyptian pantheon.[25] He was ultimately defeated by the Pharaoh, victory which affirmed the Pharaoh's divine right to rule.[26]


The ouroboros was a well-known Egyptian symbol of a serpent swallowing its own tail.[27] The precursor to the ouroboros was the "Many-Faced",[27] a serpent with five heads, who, according to the Amduat, the oldest surviving Book of the Afterlife, was said to coil around the corpse of the sun god Ra protectively.[27] The earliest surviving depiction of a "true" ouroboros comes from the gilded shrines in the tomb of Tutankhamun.[27] In the early centuries AD, the ouroboros was adopted as a symbol by Gnostic Christians[28] and chapter 136 of the Pistis Sophia, an early Gnostic text, describes "a great dragon whose tail is in its mouth".[28] In medieval alchemy, the ouroboros became a typical western dragon with wings, legs, and a tail.[27] A famous image of the dragon gnawing on its tail from the eleventh-century Codex Marcianus was copied in numerous works on alchemy.[27]


Levant





The Destruction of Leviathan (1865) by Gustave Doré


In the Ugaritic Baal Cycle, the sea-dragon Lōtanu is described as "the twisting serpent/ the powerful one with seven heads."[29] In KTU 1.5 I 2–3, Lōtanu is slain by the storm-god Baal,[29] but, in KTU 1.3 III 41–42, he is instead slain by the virgin warrior goddess Anat.[29] In the Book of Psalms, Psalm 74, Psalm 74:13–14, the sea-dragon Leviathan, whose name is a cognate of Lōtanu,[29][30][31] is slain by Yahweh, the national god of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah, as part of the creation of the world.[29][30] In Isaiah 27:1, Yahweh's destruction of Leviathan is foretold as part of Yahweh's impending overhaul of the universal order:[32][33]







Original Hebrew text (Isaiah 27:1)

English translation


א בַּיּוֹם הַהוּא יִפְקֹד יְהוָה בְּחַרְבּוֹ הַקָּשָׁה וְהַגְּדוֹלָה וְהַחֲזָקָה, עַל לִוְיָתָן נָחָשׁ
בָּרִחַ, וְעַל לִוְיָתָן, נָחָשׁ עֲקַלָּתוֹן; וְהָרַג אֶת-הַתַּנִּין, אֲשֶׁר בַּיָּם. ס





On that day Yahweh shall punish

with his sharp, great, and strong sword,

Leviathan the fleeing serpent, Leviathan the twisting serpent;

He will slay the dragon that is in the sea.[29]



Job 40:15–41:26 contains a detailed description of the Leviathan, who is described as being so powerful that only Yahweh can overcome it.[34]Job 40:10–13 states that the Leviathan exhales fire and smoke, making its identification as a mythical dragon clearly apparent.[34] In some parts of the Old Testament, the Leviathan is historicized as a symbol for the nations that stand against Yahweh.[30] Rahab, a synonym for "Leviathan", is used in several Biblical passages in reference to Egypt.[30]Isaiah 30:7 declares: "For Egypt's help is worthless and empty, therefore I have called her 'the silenced Rahab'."[30] Similarly, Psalm 87:3 reads: "I reckon Rahab and Babylon as those that know me..."[30] In Ezekiel 29:3–5 and 32:2–8, the pharaoh of Egypt is described as a "dragon" (tannîn).[30] In the story of Bel and the Dragon from the apocryphal additions to Daniel, the prophet Daniel sees a dragon being worshipped by the Babylonians.[35] Daniel makes "cakes of pitch, fat, and hair";[35] the dragon eats them and bursts open (Daniel 14:23–30).[35]


Medieval Near East


In Sufi literature, Rumi writes in his Masnavi (III: 976-1066; IV: 120) that the dragon symbolizes the sensual soul, greed and lust, that need to be mortified in a spiritual battle.[36][37]


Occident


Proto-Indo-European



The story of a hero slaying a giant serpent occurs in nearly every Indo-European mythology.[38][39] In most stories, the hero is some kind of thunder-god.[39] In nearly every iteration of the story, the serpent is either multi-headed or "multiple" in some other way.[38] Furthermore, in nearly every story, the serpent is always somehow associated with water.[39]Bruce Lincoln has proposed that a Proto-Indo-European dragon-slaying myth can be reconstructed as follows:[40][41] First, the sky gods give cattle to a man named *Tritos ("the third"), who is so named because he is the third man on earth,[40][41] but a three-headed serpent named *Ngwhi steals them.[40][41]*Tritos pursues the serpent and is accompanied by *Hanér, whose name means "man".[40][41] Together, the two heroes slay the serpent and rescue the cattle.[40][41]


Ancient Greece and Rome




Greek red-figure vase painting depicting Heracles slaying the Lernaean hydra, c. 375–340 BC



The ancient Greek word usually translated as "dragon" (δράκων drákōn, genitive δράκοντοϛ drákontos) could also mean "snake",[42][4] but it usually refers to a kind of giant serpent that either possesses supernatural characteristics or is otherwise controlled by some supernatural power.[43] The first mention of a "dragon" in ancient Greek literature occurs in the Iliad, in which Agamemnon is described as having a blue dragon motif on his sword belt and an emblem of a three-headed dragon on his breast plate.[44] In lines 820–880 of the Theogony, a Greek poem written in the seventh century BC by the Boeotian poet Hesiod, the Greek god Zeus battles the monster Typhon, who has one hundred serpent heads that breathe fire and speak all kinds of frightening animal noises.[45] Zeus scorches all of Typhon's heads with his lightning bolts and then hurls Typhon into Tartarus.[46] In the Homeric Hymn to Apollo, the god Apollo uses his poisoned arrows to slay the serpent Python, who has been causing death and pestilence in the area around Delphi.[47][46] Apollo then sets up his shrine there.[46]


The Roman poet Virgil in his poem Culex lines 163-201[1], describing a shepherd having a fight with a big constricting snake, calls it "serpens" and also "draco", showing that in his time the two words were probably interchangeable.




Attic red-figure kylix painting from c. 480–470 BC showing Athena observing as the Colchian dragon disgorges the hero Jason[48][49]


Hesiod also mentions that the hero Heracles slew the Lernaean Hydra, a multiple-headed serpent which dwelt in the swamps of Lerna.[50] The name "Hydra" means "water snake" in Greek.[46][51] According to the Bibliotheka of Pseudo-Apollodorus, the slaying of the Hydra was the second of the Twelve Labors of Heracles.[52][46] Accounts disagree on which weapon Heracles used to slay the Hydra,[46] but, by the end of the sixth century BC, it was agreed that the clubbed or severed heads needed to be cauterized to prevent them from growing back.[53][46] Heracles was aided in this task by his nephew Iolaus.[53] During the battle, a giant crab crawled out of the marsh and pinched Heracles's foot,[52] but he crushed it under his heel.[54]Hera placed the crab in the sky as the constellation Cancer.[54] One of the Hydra's heads was immortal, so Heracles buried it under a heavy rock after cutting it off.[46][54] For his Eleventh Labor, Heracles must procure a golden apples from the tree in the Garden of the Hesperides, which is guarded by an enormous serpent that never sleeps,[55] which Pseudo-Apollodorus calls "Ladon".[56] In earlier depictions, Ladon is often shown with many heads;[57] the mythographer Pherecydes of Leros describes him as having one hundred heads, a description which is repeated by Pseudo-Apollodorus.[57] In Pseudo-Apollodorus's account, Ladon is immortal,[57] but Sophocles and Euripides both describe Heracles as killing him, although neither of them specifies how.[57] The mythographer Herodorus is the first to state that Heracles slew him using his famous club.[57]Apollonius of Rhodes, in his epic poem the Argonautica, describes Ladon as having been shot full of poisoned arrows dipped in the blood of the Hydra.[58]


In Pindar's Fourth Pythian Ode, Aeëtes of Colchis tells the hero Jason that the Golden Fleece he is seeking is in a copse guarded by a dragon, "which surpassed in breadth and length a fifty-oared ship".[59] Jason slays the dragon and makes off with the Golden Fleece together with his co-conspirator, Aeëtes's daughter, Medea.[60] The earliest artistic representation of this story is an Attic red-figure kylix dated to c. 480–470 BC,[61] showing a bedraggled Jason being disgorged from the dragon's open mouth as the Golden Fleece hangs in a tree behind him and Athena, the goddess of wisdom, stands watch.[61][49] A fragment from Pherecydes of Leros states that Jason killed the dragon,[60] but fragments from the Naupactica and from Herodorus state that he merely stole the Fleece and escaped.[60] In Euripides's Medea, Medea boasts that she killed the Colchian dragon herself.[60] In the most famous retelling of the story from Apollonius of Rhodes's Argonautica, Medea drugs the dragon to sleep, allowing Jason to steal the Fleece.[62] Greek vase paintings show her feeding the dragon the sleeping drug in a liquid form from a phialē, or shallow cup.[63]





Paestan red-figure kylix-krater (c. 350–340 BC) showing Cadmus fighting the dragon of Ares[64]


In the founding myth of Thebes, Cadmus, a Phoenician prince, was instructed by Apollo to follow a heifer and found a city wherever it laid down.[65] Cadmus and his men followed the heifer and, when it laid down, Cadmus ordered his men to find a spring so he could sacrifice the heifer to Athena.[65] His men found a spring, but it was guarded by a dragon, which had been placed there by the god Ares, and the dragon killed them.[65] Cadmus killed the dragon in revenge,[65][66] either by smashing its head with a rock or using his sword.[65] Following the advice of Athena, Cadmus tore out the dragon's teeth and planted them in the earth.[65][66] An army of giant warriors (known as spartoi, which means "sown men") grew from the teeth like plants.[65][66] Cadmus hurled stones into their midst, causing them to kill each other until only five were left.[65] To make restitution for having killed Ares's dragon, Cadmus was forced to serve Ares as a slave for eight years.[65] At the end of this period, Cadmus married Harmonia, the daughter of Ares and Aphrodite.[65] Cadmus and Harmonia moved to Illyria, where they ruled as king and queen, before eventually being transformed into dragons themselves.[67]


In the fifth century BC, the Greek historian Herodotus reported in Book IV of his Histories that western Libya was inhabited by monstrous serpents[68] and, in Book III, he states that Arabia was home to many small, winged serpents,[69][70] which came in a variety of colors and enjoyed the trees that produced frankincense.[69][68] Herodotus remarks that the serpent's wings were like those of bats[71] and that, unlike vipers, which are found in every land, winged serpents are only found in Arabia.[71] The second-century BC Greek astronomer Hipparchus (c. 190 BC – c. 120 BC) listed the constellation Draco ("the dragon") as one of forty-six constellations.[72] Hipparchus described the constellation as containing fifteen stars,[73] but the later astronomer Ptolemy (c. 100 – c. 170 AD) increased this number to thirty-one in his Almagest.[73]




Ancient Greek mosaic from Caulonia, Italy, depicting a cetus or sea-dragon


In the New Testament, Revelation 12:3, written by John of Patmos, describes a vision of a Great Red Dragon with seven heads, ten horns, seven crowns, and a massive tail,[74] an image which is clearly inspired by the vision of the four beasts from the sea in the Book of Daniel[75] and the Leviathan described in various Old Testament passages.[76] The Great Red Dragon knocks "a third of the sun... a third of the moon, and a third of the stars" out the sky[77] and pursues the Woman of the Apocalypse.[77]Revelation 12:7–9 declares: "And war broke out in Heaven. Michael and his angels fought against Dragon. Dragon and his angels fought back, but they were defeated, and there was no longer any place for them in Heaven. Dragon the Great was thrown down, that ancient serpent who is called Devil and Satan, the one deceiving the whole inhabited World – he was thrown down to earth and his angels were thrown down with him."[78] Then a voice booms down from Heaven heralding the defeat of "the Accuser" (ho Kantegor).[79]


In 217 AD, Flavius Philostratus discussed dragons (δράκων, drákōn) in India in The Life of Apollonius of Tyana (II,17 and III,6–8). The Loeb Classical Library translation (by F.C. Conybeare) mentions (III,7) that "In most respects the tusks resemble the largest swine's, but they are slighter in build and twisted, and have a point as unabraded as sharks' teeth." According to a collection of books by Claudius Aelianus called On Animals, Ethiopia was inhabited by a species of dragon that hunted elephants and could grow to a length of 180 feet (55 m) with a lifespan rivaling that of the most enduring of animals.[80]


Germanic mythology





Drawing of the Ramsund carving from c. 1030, illustrating the Völsunga saga on a rock in Sweden. At (5), Sigurd plunges his sword into Fafnir's underside.


In the Old Norse poem Grímnismál in the Poetic Edda, the dragon Níðhöggr is described as gnawing on the roots of Yggdrasil, the world tree.[81] In Norse mythology, Jörmungandr is a giant serpent that encircles the entire realm of Miðgarð in the sea around it.[82] According to the Gylfaginning from the Prose Edda, written by the thirteenth-century Icelandic mythographer Snorri Sturluson, Thor, the Norse god of thunder, once went out on a boat with the giant Hymnir to the outer sea and fished for Jörmungandr using an ox-head as bait.[82] Thor caught the serpent and, after pulling its head out of the water, smashed it with his hammer Mjölnir.[82] Snorri states that the blow was not fatal: "and men say that he struck its head off on the sea bed. But I think the truth to tell you is that the Miðgarð Serpent still lives and lies in the surrounding sea."[82]


Towards the end of the Old English epic poem Beowulf, a slave steals a cup from the hoard of a sleeping dragon,[83] causing the dragon to wake up and go on a rampage of destruction across the countryside.[84] The eponymous hero of the poem insists on confronting the dragon alone, even though he is of advanced age,[85][86] but Wiglaf, the youngest of the twelve warriors Beowulf has brought with him, insists on accompanying his king into the battle.[87] Beowulf's sword shatters during the fight and he is mortally wounded,[88][89] but Wiglaf comes to his rescue and helps him slay the dragon.[89] Beowulf dies and tells Wiglaf that the dragon's treasure must be buried rather than shared with the cowardly warriors who did not come to the aid of their king.[90]


In the Old Norse Völsunga saga, the hero Sigurd catches the dragon Fafnir by digging a pit between the cave where he lives and the spring where he drinks his water[91] and kills him by stabbing him in the underside.[91] At the advice of Odin, Sigurd drains Fafnir's blood and drinks it, which gives him the ability to understand the language of the birds,[92] who he hears talking about how his mentor Regin is plotting to betray him so that he can keep all of Fafnir's treasure for himself.[92][93] The motif of a hero trying to sneak past a sleeping dragon and steal some of its treasure is common throughout many Old Norse sagas.[94] The fourteenth-century Flóres saga konungs ok sona hans describes a hero who is actively concerned not to wake a sleeping dragon while sneaking past it.[94] In the Yngvars saga víðförla, the protagonist attempts to steal treasure from several sleeping dragons, but accidentally wakes them up.[94]


Medieval western Europe




Fifteenth-century manuscript illustration of the battle of the Red and White Dragons from Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain



The modern, western image of a dragon developed in western Europe during the Middle Ages through the combination of the snakelike dragons of classical Graeco-Roman literature, references to Near Eastern European dragons preserved in the Bible, and western European folk traditions.[95] The period between the eleventh and thirteenth centuries represents the height of European interest in dragons as living creatures.[96] The twelfth-century Welsh monk Geoffrey of Monmouth recounts a famous legend in his Historia Regum Britanniae in which the child prophet Merlin witnesses the Romano-Celtic warlord Vortigern attempt to build a tower on Mount Snowdon to keep safe from the Anglo-Saxons,[97] but the tower keeps being swallowed into the ground.[97] Merlin informs Vortigern that, underneath the foundation he has built, is a pool with two dragons sleeping in it.[97] Vortigern orders for the pool to be drained, exposing a red dragon and a white dragon, who immediately begin fighting.[97] Merlin delivers a prophecy that the white dragon will triumph over the red, symbolizing England's conquest of Wales,[97] but declares that the red dragon will eventually return and defeat the white one.[98] This story remained popular throughout the fifteenth century.[98]





MS Harley 3244, a medieval bestiary dated to around 1260 AD, contains the oldest recognizable image of a fully modern, western dragon.[6]


The oldest recognizable image of a fully modern, western dragon appears in a hand-painted illustration from the bestiary MS Harley 3244, which was produced in around 1260 AD.[6] The dragon in the illustration has two sets of wings and its tail is longer than most modern depictions of dragons,[6] but it clearly displays many of the same distinctive features.[6] Dragons are generally depicted as living in rivers or having an underground lair or cave.[99] They are envisioned as greedy and gluttonous, with voracious appetites.[95] They are often identified with Satan, due to the references to Satan as a "dragon" in the Book of Revelation.[95] The thirteenth-century Golden Legend, written in Latin, records the story of Saint Margaret of Antioch,[35] a virgin martyr who, after being tortured for her faith in the Diocletianic Persecution and thrown back into her cell, is said to have been confronted by a monstrous dragon,[35] but she made the sign of the cross and the dragon vanished.[35] In some versions of the story, she is actually swallowed by the dragon alive and, after making the sign of the cross in the dragon's stomach, emerges unharmed.[35]




Manuscript illustration from Verona of Saint George slaying the dragon, dating to c. 1270


The legend of Saint George and the Dragon may be referenced as early as the sixth century AD,[100][101] but the earliest artistic representations of it come from the eleventh century[100] and the first full account of it comes from an eleventh century Georgian text.[102] The most famous version of the story from the Golden Legend holds that a dragon kept pillaging the sheep of the town of Silene in Libya.[100] After it ate a young shepherd, the people were forced to placate it by leaving two sheep as sacrificial offerings every morning beside the lake where the dragon lived.[100] Eventually, the dragon ate all of the sheep[103] and the people were forced to start offering it their own children.[103] One day, the king's own daughter came up in the lottery and, despite the king's pleas for her life, she was dressed as a bride and chained to a rock beside the lake to be eaten.[103] Then, Saint George arrived and saw the princess.[103] When the dragon arrived to eat her, he stabbed it with his lance and subdued it by making the sign of the cross and tying the princess's girdle around its neck.[103] Saint George and the princess led the now-docile dragon into the town and George promised to kill it if the townspeople would convert to Christianity.[104] All the townspeople converted and Saint George killed the dragon with his sword.[104] In some versions, Saint George marries the princess,[104] but, in others, he continues wandering.[104]


Gargoyles are carved stone figures sometimes resembling dragons that originally served as waterspouts on buildings.[105][106] Precursors to the medieval gargoyle can be found on ancient Greek and Egyptian temples,[105][107][108] but, over the course of the Middle Ages, many fantastic stories were invented to explain them.[109] One medieval French legend holds that, in ancient times, a fearsome dragon known as La Gargouille had been causing floods and sinking ships on the river Seine,[110] so the people of the town of Rouen would offer the dragon a human sacrifice once each year to appease its hunger.[110] Then, in around 600 AD, a priest named Romanus promised that, if the people would build a church, he would rid them of the dragon.[110] Romanus slew the dragon and its severed head was mounted on the walls of the city as the first gargoyle.[110][111]


Dragons are prominent in medieval heraldry.[112]Uther Pendragon was famously said to have had two gold dragons crowned with red standing back-to-back on his royal coat of arms.[113] Originally, heraldic dragons could have any number of legs,[112] but, by the late Middle Ages, due to the widespread proliferation of bestiaries, heraldry began to distinguish between a "dragon" (which could only have exactly four legs) and a "wyvern" (which could only have exactly two).[112] In myths, wyverns are associated with viciousness, envy, and pestilence,[112] but, in heraldry, they are used as symbols for overthrowing the tyranny of Satan and his demonic forces.[112] Late medieval heraldry also distinguished a dragon-like creature known as a "cockatrice".[112] A cockatrice is supposedly born when a serpent hatches an egg that has been laid on a dunghill by a rooster[112] and it is so venomous that its breath and its gaze are both lethal to any living creature, except for a weasel, which is the cockatrice's mortal enemy.[112] A basilisk is a serpent with the head of a dragon at the end of its tail that is born when a toad hatches an egg that has been laid in a midden by a nine-year-old cockatrice.[112] Like the cockatrice, its glare is said to be deadly.[112]


Eastern Europe





Zmey Gorynych, a three-headed dragon from Russian folklore




Illustration of the Wawel Dragon from Sebastian Münster's Cosmographie Universalis (1544)



In Slavic mythology, the words "zmey", "zmiy" or "zmaj" are used to describe dragons. These words are masculine forms of the Slavic word for "snake", which are normally feminine (like Russian zmeya). In Romania, there is a similar figure, derived from the Slavic dragon and named zmeu. Exclusively in Polish and Belarusian folklore, as well as in the other Slavic folklores, a dragon is also called (variously) смок, цмок, or smok. In South Slavic folklores, the same thing is also called lamya (ламя, ламjа, lamja). Although quite similar to other European dragons, Slavic dragons have their peculiarities.


In Russian and Ukrainian folklore, Zmey Gorynych is a dragon with three heads, each one bearing twin goat-like horns.[114] He is said to have breathed fire and smelled of sulfur.[114] It was believed that eclipses were caused by Gorynych temporarily swallowing the sun.[115] According to one legend, Gorynych's uncle was the evil sorcerer Nemal Chelovek, who abducted the daughter of the tsar and imprisoned her in his castle in the Ural Mountains.[115] Many knights tried to free her, but all of them were killed by Gorynych's fire.[115] Then a palace guard in Moscow named Ivan Tsarevich overheard two crows talking about the princess.[116] He went to the tsar, who gave him a magic sword, and snuck into the castle.[117] When Chelovek attacked Ivan in the form of a giant, the sword flew from Ivan's hand unbidden and killed him.[117] Then the sword cut off all three of Gorynych's heads at once.[117] Ivan brought the princess back to the tsar, who declared Ivan a nobleman and allowed him to marry the princess.[117]


A popular Polish folk tale is the legend of the Wawel Dragon,[118][119][120] which is first recorded in the Chronica Polonorum of Wincenty Kadłubek, written between 1190 and 1208.[119][120] According to Kadłubek, the dragon appeared during the reign of King Krakus[119] and demanded to be fed a fixed number of cattle every week.[119] If the villagers failed to provide enough cattle, the dragon would eat the same number of villagers as the number of cattle they had failed to provide.[119] Krakus ordered his sons to slay the dragon.[119] Since they could not slay it by hand,[119] they tricked the dragon into eating calfskins filled with burning sulfur.[119] Once the dragon was dead, the younger brother attacked and murdered his older brother and returned home to claim all the glory for himself,[119] telling his father that his brother had died fighting the dragon.[119] The younger brother became king after his father died, but his secret was eventually revealed and he was banished.[119] In the fifteenth century, Jan Długosz rewrote the story so that King Krakus himself was the one who slew the dragon.[118][119][120] Another version of the story told by Marcin Bielski instead has the clever shoemaker Skubę come up with the idea for slaying the dragon.[119][121] Bielski's version is now the most popular.[119]


Orient




15th-century Persian miniature of Rostam slaying a dragon


South Asia




Head of the dragon-god Pakhangba depicted on a musical instrument from Manipur, India


In the Rigveda, the oldest of the four Vedas, Indra, the Vedic god of storms, battles Vṛtra, a giant serpent who represents drought.[122] Indra kills Vṛtra using his vajra (thunderbolt) and clears the path for rain,[123][124] which is described in the form of cattle: "You won the cows, hero, you won the Soma,/You freed the seven streams to flow" (Rigveda 1.32.12).[45] In another Rigvedic legend, the three-headed serpent Viśvarūpa, the son of Tvaṣṭṛ, guards a wealth of cows and horses.[125] Indra delivers Viśvarūpa to a god named Trita Āptya,[125] who fights and kills him and sets his cattle free.[125] Indra cuts off Viśvarūpa's heads and drives the cattle home for Trita.[125] This same story is alluded to in the Younger Avesta,[125] in which the hero Thraētaona, the son of Āthbya, slays the three-headed dragon Aži Dahāka and takes his two beautiful wives as spoils.[125] Thraētaona's name (meaning "third grandson of the waters") indicates that Aži Dahāka, like Vṛtra, was seen as a blocker of waters and cause of drought.[125]


The Druk (Dzongkha: འབྲུག་), also known as 'Thunder Dragon', is one of the National symbols of Bhutan. In the Dzongkha language, Bhutan is known as Druk Yul "Land of Druk", and Bhutanese leaders are called Druk Gyalpo, "Thunder Dragon Kings". The druk was adopted as an emblem by the Drukpa Lineage, which originated in Tibet and later spread to Bhutan.[126]


East Asia


Chinese dragon




Illustration of the dragon Zhulong from a seventeenth-century edition of the Shanhaijing



Archaeologist Zhōu Chong-Fa believes that the Chinese word for dragon is an onomatopoeia of the sound of thunder[127] or lùhng in Cantonese.[128]


The Chinese dragon (simplified Chinese: ; traditional Chinese: ; pinyin: lóng) is the highest-ranking animal in the Chinese animal hierarchy. Its origins are vague, but its "ancestors can be found on Neolithic pottery as well as Bronze Age ritual vessels."[129] A number of popular stories deal with the rearing of dragons.[130] The Zuo zhuan, which was probably written during the Warring States period, describes a man named Dongfu, a descendant of Yangshu'an, who loved dragons[130] and, because he could understand a dragon's will, he was able to tame them and raise them well.[130] He served Emperor Shun, who gave him the family name Huanlong, meaning "Dragon-Raiser".[130] In another story, Kongjia, the fourteenth emperor of the Xia dynasty, was given a male and a female dragon as a reward for his obedience to the god of heaven,[130] but could not train them, so he hired a dragon-trainer named Liulei, who had learned how to train dragons from Huanlong.[130] One day, the female dragon died unexpectedly, so Liulei secretly chopped her up, cooked her meat, and served it to the king,[130] who loved it so much that he demanded Liulei to serve him the same meal again.[130] Since Liulei had no means of procuring more dragon meat, he fled the palace.[130]


One of the most famous dragon stories is about the Lord Ye Gao, who loved dragons obsessively, even though he had never seen one.[131] He decorated his whole house with dragon motifs[131] and, seeing this display of admiration, a real dragon came and visited Ye Gao,[131] but the lord was so terrified at the sight of the creature that he ran away.[131] In Chinese legend, the culture hero Fu Hsi is said to have been crossing the Lo River, when he saw the lung ma, a Chinese horse-dragon with seven dots on its face, six on its back, eight on its left flank, and nine on its right flank.[132] He was so moved by this apparition that, when he arrived home, he drew a picture of it, including the dots.[132] He later used these dots as letters and invented Chinese writing, which he used to write his book I Ching.[132] In another Chinese legend, the physician Ma Shih Huang is said to have healed a sick dragon.[133] Another legend reports that a man once came to the healer Lo Chên-jen, telling him that he was a dragon and that he needed to be healed.[133] After Lo Chên-jen healed the man, a dragon appeared to him and carried him to heaven.[133]


In the Shanhaijing, a classic mythography probably compiled mostly during the Han dynasty, various deities and demigods are associated with dragons.[134] One of the most famous Chinese dragons is Ying Long ("Responding Dragon"), who helped the Huangdi, the Yellow Emperor, defeat the tyrant Chiyou.[135] The dragon Zhulong ("Torch Dragon") is a god "who composed the universe with his body."[135] In the Shanhaijing, many mythic heroes are said to have been conceived after their mothers copulated with divine dragons, including Huangdi, Shennong, Emperor Yao, and Emperor Shun.[135] The god Zhurong and the emperor Qi are both described as being carried by two dragons,[136] as are Huangdi, Zhuanxu, Yuqiang, and Roshou in various other texts.[130] According to the Huainanzi, an evil black dragon once caused a destructive deluge,[130] which was ended by the mother goddess Nüwa by slaying the dragon.[130]




Casting for a Chinese belt-plaque showing the lung ma, or "horse-dragon", dating to the first or second century AD


A large number of ethnic myths about dragons are told throughout China.[130] The Houhanshu, compiled in the fifth century BC by Fan Ye, reports a story belonging to the Ailaoyi people, which holds that a woman named Shayi who lived in the region around Mount Lao became pregnant with ten sons after being touched by a tree trunk floating in the water while fishing.[135] She gave birth to the sons and the tree trunk turned into a dragon, who asked to see his sons.[135] The woman showed them to him,[135] but all of them ran away except for the youngest, who the dragon licked on the back and named Jiu Long, meaning "Sitting Back".[135] The sons later elected him king and the descendants of the ten sons became the Ailaoyi people, who tattooed dragons on their backs in honor of their ancestor.[135] The Miao people of southwest China have a story that a divine dragon created the first humans by breathing on monkeys that came to play in his cave.[130] The Han people have many stories about Short-Tailed Old Li, a black dragon who was born to a poor family in Shandong.[131] When his mother saw him for the first time, she fainted[131] and, when his father came home from the field and saw him, he hit him with a spade and cut off part of his tail.[131] Li burst through the ceiling and flew away to the Black Dragon River in northeast China, where he became the god of that river.[137] On the anniversary of his mother's death on the Chinese lunar calendar, Old Li returns home, causing it to rain.[138] He is still worshipped as a rain god.[138]




Diagram illustrating the four great Dragon Kings of the Four Seas


In China, dragons are closely associated with rain[139] and drought is thought to be caused by a dragon's laziness.[140] Prayers invoking dragons to bring rain are common in Chinese texts.[139] The Luxuriant Dew of the Spring and Autumn Annals, attributed to the Han dynasty scholar Dong Zhongshu, proscribes making clay figurines of dragons during a time of drought and having young men and boys pace and dance among the figurines in order to encourage the dragons to bring rain.[139] Texts from the Qing dynasty advise hurling the bone of a tiger or dirty objects into the pool where the dragon lives;[140] since dragons cannot stand tigers or dirt, the dragon of the pool will cause heavy rain to drive the object out.[140] Rainmaking rituals invoking dragons are still very common in many Chinese villages, where each village has its own god said to bring rain and many of these gods are dragons.[140] Although stories of the Dragon Kings are among the most popular dragon stories in China today, these stories did not begin to emerge until the Eastern Han, when Buddhist stories of the serpent rain-god Nāga became popular.[140]Taoists began to invent their own dragon kings and eventually such stories developed in every major Chinese religion.[140] According to these stories, every body of water is ruled by dragon king, each with a different power, rank, and ability,[140] so people began establishing temples across the countryside dedicated to these figures.[140]




Head of a dragon from a Chinese dragon dance performed in Helsinki in the year 2000


Many traditional Chinese customs revolve around dragons.[141] During various holidays, including the Spring Festival and Lantern Festival, villagers will construct an approximately sixteen-foot-long dragon from grass, cloth, bamboo strips, and paper, which they will parade through the city as part of a dragon dance.[142] The original purpose of this ritual was to bring good weather and a strong harvest,[142] but now it is done mostly only for entertainment.[142] During the Duanwu festival, several villages, or even a whole province, will hold a dragon boat race, in which people race across a body of water in boats carved to look like dragons, while a large audience watches on the banks.[142] The custom is traditionally said to have originated after the poet Qu Yuan committed suicide by drowning himself in the Miluo River and people raced out in boats hoping to save him,[142] but most historians agree that the custom actually originated much earlier as a ritual to avert ill fortune.[142] Starting during the Han dynasty and continuing until the Qing dynasty, the Chinese emperor gradually became closely identified with dragons,[142] and emperors themselves claimed to be the incarnation of a divine dragon.[142] Eventually, dragons were only allowed to appear on clothing, houses, and articles of everyday use belonging to the emperor[142] and any commoner who possessed everyday items bearing the image of the dragon were ordered to be executed.[142] After the last Chinese emperor was overthrown in 1911, this situation changed and now many ordinary Chinese people identify themselves as descendants of dragons.[143]


Korean dragon




The Blue Dragon mural depiction at the Goguryeo Tombs.



The Korean dragon is in many ways similar in appearance to other East Asian dragons such as the Chinese and Japanese dragons. It differs from the Chinese dragon in that it developed a longer beard. Very occasionally a dragon may be depicted as carrying an orb known as the Yeouiju (여의주), the Korean name for the mythical Cintamani, in its claws or its mouth. It was said that whoever could wield the Yeouiju was blessed with the abilities of omnipotence and creation at will, and that only four-toed dragons (who had thumbs with which to hold the orbs) were both wise and powerful enough to wield these orbs, as opposed to the lesser, three-toed dragons. As with China, the number nine is significant and auspicious in Korea, and dragons were said to have 81 (9×9) scales on their backs, representing yang essence. Dragons in Korean mythology are primarily benevolent beings related to water and agriculture, often considered bringers of rain and clouds. Hence, many Korean dragons are said to have resided in rivers, lakes, oceans, or even deep mountain ponds. And human journeys to undersea realms, and especially the undersea palace of the Dragon King (용왕), are common in Korean folklore.[144]


In Korean myths, some kings who founded kingdoms were described as descendants of dragons because dragon was a symbol of the monarch. Lady Aryeong, who first queen of Silla said to have been born from a cockatrice,[145] while the grandmother of Taejo of Goryeo, founder of Goryeo, was reportedly the daughter of the dragon king of the West Sea.[146] And King Munmu of Silla, who on his deathbed wished to become a dragon of the East Sea in order to protect the kingdom. Dragon patterns were used exclusively by the royal family. The royal robe was also called the dragon robe (용포). In Joseon Dynasty, the royal insignia, featuring embroidered dragons, were attached to the robe’s shoulders, the chest, and back. The King wore five-taloned dragon insignia while the Crown Prince wore four-taloned dragon insignia.[147]


Korean folk mythology states that most dragons were originally Imugis (이무기), or lesser dragons, which were said to resemble gigantic serpents. There are a few different versions of Korean folklore that describe both what imugis are and how they aspire to become full-fledged dragons. Koreans thought that an Imugi could become a true dragon, or yong or mireu, if it caught a Yeouiju which had fallen from heaven. Another explanation states they are hornless creatures resembling dragons who have been cursed and thus were unable to become dragons. By other accounts, an Imugi is a proto-dragon which must survive one thousand years in order to become a fully fledged dragon. In either case they are said to be large, benevolent, python-like creatures that live in water or caves, and their sighting is associated with good luck.[148]


Japanese dragon




Painting of a Japanese dragon by Hokusai (c. 1730 – 1849)



Japanese dragon myths amalgamate native legends with imported stories about dragons from China, Korea and India. Like these other Asian dragons, most Japanese ones are water deities associated with rainfall and bodies of water, and are typically depicted as large, wingless, serpentine creatures with clawed feet. Gould writes (1896:248),[149] the Japanese dragon is "invariably figured as possessing three claws". A story about the samurai Minamoto no Mitsunaka tells that, while he was hunting in his own territory of Settsu, he fell asleep under a tree and had a dream in which a beautiful woman appeared to him and begged him to save her land from a giant serpent which was defiling it.[133] Mitsunaka agreed to help and the maiden gave him a magnificent horse.[133] When he woke up, the horse was standing before him.[133] He rode it to the Sumiyoshi temple, where he prayed for eight days.[133] Then he confronted the serpent and slew it with an arrow.[133]


It was believed that dragons could be appeased or exorcised with metal.[133]Nitta Yoshisada is said to have hurled a famous sword into the sea at Sagami to appease the dragon-god of the sea[133] and Ki no Tsurayuki threw a metal mirror into the sea at Sumiyoshi for the same purpose.[133] Japanese Buddhism has also adapted dragons by subjecting them to Buddhist law;[133] the Japanese Buddhist deities Benten and Kwannon are often shown sitting or standing on the back of a dragon.[133] Several Japanese sennin ("immortals") have taken dragons as their mounts.[133]Bômô is said to have hurled his staff into a puddle of water, causing a dragon to come forth and let him ride it to heaven.[133] The rakan Handaka is said to have been able to conjure a dragon out of a bowl, which he is often shown playing with on kagamibuta.[133] The shachihoko is a creature with the head of a dragon, a bushy tail, fish-like scales, and sometimes fire emerging from its armpits.[133] The shifun has the head of a dragon, feathered wings, and the tail and claws of a bird.[133] A white dragon was believed to reside in a pool in Yamashiro Province[150] and, every fifty years, it would turn into a bird called the Ogonchô, which had a call like the "howling of a wild dog".[150] This event was believed to herald terrible famine.[150] In the Japanese village of Okumura, near Edo, during times of drought, the villagers would make a dragon effigy out of straw, magnolia leaves, and bamboo and parade it through the village to attract rainfall.[150]


Vietnamese dragon



According to an ancient origin myth, the Vietnamese people are descended from a dragon and a fairy. To Vietnamese people, the dragon brings rain, essential for agriculture. It represents the emperor, the prosperity and power of the nation. Like the Chinese dragon, the Vietnamese dragon is the symbol of yang, representing the universe, life, existence, and growth.


Modern depictions




Modern fan illustration by David Demaret of the dragon Smaug from J. R. R. Tolkien's 1937 high fantasy novel The Hobbit


Dragons and dragon motifs are featured in many works of modern literature, particularly within the fantasy genre.[151][152] As early as the eighteenth century, critical thinkers such as Denis Diderot were already asserting that too much literature had been published on dragons: "There are already in books all too many fabulous stories of dragons".[153] In Lewis Carroll's classic children's novel Through the Looking-Glass (1872), one of the inset poems describes the Jabberwocky, a kind of dragon.[5] Carroll's illustrator John Tenniel, a famous political cartoonist, humorously showed the Jobberwocky with the waistcoat, buck teeth, and myopic eyes of a Victorian university lecturer, such as Carroll himself.[5] In works of comedic children's fantasy, dragons often fulfill the role of a magic fairy tale helper.[154] In such works, rather than being frightening as they are traditionally portrayed, dragons are instead represented as harmless, benevolent, and inferior to humans.[154] They are sometimes shown living in contact with humans, or in isolated communities of only dragons.[154] Though popular in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, "such comic and idyllic stories" began to grow increasingly rare after the 1960s, due to demand for more serious children's literature.[154]


One of the most iconic modern dragons is Smaug from J. R. R. Tolkien's classic novel The Hobbit.[151] Dragons also appear in the bestselling Harry Potter series of children's novels by J. K. Rowling.[5] Other prominent works depicting dragons include Anne McCaffrey's Dragonriders of Pern, Ursula K. Le Guin's Earthsea Cycle, George R. R. Martin's series A Song of Ice and Fire, and Christopher Paolini's Inheritance Cycle. Sandra Martina Schwab writes, "With a few exceptions, including McCaffrey's Pern novels and the 2002 film Reign of Fire, dragons seem to fit more into the medievalized setting of fantasy literature than into the more technological world of science fiction. Indeed, they have been called the emblem of fantasy. The hero's fight against the dragon emphasizes and celebrates his masculinity, whereas revisionist fantasies of dragons and dragon-slaying often undermine traditional gender roles. In children's literature the friendly dragon becomes a powerful ally in battling the child's fears."[155] The popular role playing game system Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) makes heavy use of dragons.[6]


See also




  • Draig.svg Mythology portal


  • Portal-puzzle.svg Dragons portal

  • Balaur

  • Bat (heraldry)

  • Behemoth

  • Dinosaur

  • Dragonology

  • Feilong (mythology)

  • Guivre

  • Ichneumon (medieval zoology)

  • Mokele-mbembe

  • Partridge Creek monster

  • Snallygaster


  • The Last Dragon (2004 film), a fictional documentary

  • List of dragons in literature

  • List of dragons in mythology and folklore

  • List of dragons in popular culture


Notes




References




  1. ^ Beowulf; a heroic poem of the 8th century, with tr., note and appendix by T. Arnold, 1876, p. 196.


  2. ^ Ogden 2013, p. 4.


  3. ^ ab Δράκων, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, at Perseus project


  4. ^ ab Ogden 2013, pp. 2–4.


  5. ^ abcde Malone 2012, p. 96.


  6. ^ abcdefg Malone 2012, p. 98.


  7. ^ Jones 2000, p. 32-40.


  8. ^ ab Jones 2000, p. 63.


  9. ^ Jones 2000, pp. 166–168.


  10. ^ Jones 2000, p. 32.


  11. ^ Jones 2000, p. 108.


  12. ^ Mayor 2000, pp. xiii–xxii.


  13. ^ ab Mayor 2000, p. xxii.


  14. ^ abcd Mayor 2000, p. xix.


  15. ^ Mayor 2005, p. 149.


  16. ^ abcdef Black & Green 1992, p. 166.


  17. ^ abcd Black & Green 1992, p. 71.


  18. ^ abcdef Black & Green 1992, p. 121.


  19. ^ abcd Black & Green 1992, p. 177.


  20. ^ abcd Fontenrose 1980, p. 153.


  21. ^ ab Ogden 2013, p. 11.


  22. ^ abc Niles 2013, p. 35.


  23. ^ abcd Niles 2013, p. 36.


  24. ^ Niles 2013, pp. 35–36.


  25. ^ Niles 2013, pp. 36–37.


  26. ^ Niles 2013, p. 37.


  27. ^ abcdef Hornung 2001, p. 13.


  28. ^ ab Hornung 2001, p. 44.


  29. ^ abcdef Ballentine 2015, p. 130.


  30. ^ abcdefg Day 2002, p. 103.


  31. ^ Ogden 2013, p. 12.


  32. ^ Ballentine 2015, pp. 129–130.


  33. ^ Ogden 2013, p. 14.


  34. ^ ab Day 2002, p. 102.


  35. ^ abcdefg Morgan 2009.


  36. ^ Savi, Julio (2008). Towards the Summit of Reality. Oxford, UK: George Ronald. ISBN 978-0-85398-522-8..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output .citation qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-maintdisplay:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  37. ^ Schimmel, Annemarie (1975). Mystical dimensions of Islam. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0807812234. LCCN 73016112. OL 5422370M.


  38. ^ ab Mallory & Adams 2006, pp. 436–437.


  39. ^ abc West 2007, pp. 255–263.


  40. ^ abcde Mallory & Adams 2006, p. 437.


  41. ^ abcde Anthony 2007, pp. 134–135.


  42. ^ Chad Hartsock, Sight and Blindness in Luke-Acts: The Use of Physical Features in Characterization, Brill, Leiden-Boston, 2008, pp. 193–4.


  43. ^ Ogden 2013, pp. 2–3.


  44. ^ Drury, Nevill, The Dictionary of the Esoteric, Motilal Banarsidass Publ., 2003
    ISBN 81-208-1989-6, p.79.



  45. ^ ab West 2007, p. 257.


  46. ^ abcdefgh West 2007, p. 258.


  47. ^ Ogden 2013, pp. 47–48.


  48. ^ Ogden 2013, p. 59.


  49. ^ ab Deacy 2008, p. 62.


  50. ^ Ogden 2013, pp. 28–29.


  51. ^ Ogden 2013, p. 28.


  52. ^ ab Ogden 2013, pp. 26–27.


  53. ^ ab Ogden 2013, p. 26.


  54. ^ abc Ogden 2013, p. 27.


  55. ^ Ogden 2013, p. 33.


  56. ^ Ogden 2013, pp. 33–34.


  57. ^ abcde Ogden 2013, p. 37.


  58. ^ Ogden 2013, p. 38.


  59. ^ Ogden 2013, pp. 59–60.


  60. ^ abcd Ogden 2013, p. 60.


  61. ^ ab Ogden 2013, pp. 58–59.


  62. ^ Ogden 2013, pp. 60–61.


  63. ^ Ogden 2013, p. 61.


  64. ^ Ogden 2013, p. 49.


  65. ^ abcdefghij Ogden 2013, p. 48.


  66. ^ abc Mayor 2000, p. 266.


  67. ^ Ogden 2013, pp. 48–49.


  68. ^ ab Charlesworth 2010, p. 169.


  69. ^ ab Jones 2000, p. 168.


  70. ^ Charlesworth 2010, pp. 169–170.


  71. ^ ab Charlesworth 2010, p. 170.


  72. ^ Grasshoff 1990, pp. 35–36.


  73. ^ ab Grasshoff 1990, p. 36.


  74. ^ Kelly 2006, pp. 149–150.


  75. ^ Kelly 2006, p. 150.


  76. ^ Kelly 2006, pp. 150–151.


  77. ^ ab Kelly 2006, p. 151.


  78. ^ Kelly 2006, pp. 151–152.


  79. ^ Kelly 2006, p. 152.


  80. ^ "ETHIOPIAN DRAGON (Drakon Aithiopikos) – Giant Serpent of Greek & Roman Legend". Retrieved 30 December 2016.


  81. ^ MacCulloch 1998, p. 156.


  82. ^ abcd West 2007, p. 159.


  83. ^ Rauer 2000, pp. 81–81.


  84. ^ Rauer 2000, pp. 74–77.


  85. ^ Rauer 2000, pp. 77–81.


  86. ^ Niles 2013, p. 122.


  87. ^ Niles 2013, pp. 122–123.


  88. ^ Rauer 2000, pp. 80–82.


  89. ^ ab Niles 2013, p. 123.


  90. ^ Niles 2013, pp. 123–124.


  91. ^ ab Haimerl 2013, pp. 36–38.


  92. ^ ab Haimerl 2013, p. 41.


  93. ^ Niles 2013, p. 119.


  94. ^ abc Rauer 2000, p. 85.


  95. ^ abc Fee 2011, p. 7.


  96. ^ Jones 2000, p. 101.


  97. ^ abcde Hughes 2005, p. 106.


  98. ^ ab Hughes 2005, pp. 106–107.


  99. ^ Ørmen, Torfinn (2005). Drager, mellom myte og virkelighet (Dragons: between myth and reality) (in Norwegian) (1st ed.). Oslo: Humanist forlag A/S. p. 252. ISBN 978-82-90425-76-5.


  100. ^ abcd Niles 2013, p. 53.


  101. ^ Thurston 1909, pp. 453–455.


  102. ^ Walter 2003, p. 141.


  103. ^ abcde Niles 2013, p. 54.


  104. ^ abcd Niles 2013, p. 55.


  105. ^ ab Sherman 2015, p. 183.


  106. ^ Cipa 2008, pp. 1–3.


  107. ^ Dinsmoor 1973, p. 96.


  108. ^ Swaddling 1989, pp. 17–18.


  109. ^ Sherman 2015, pp. 183–184.


  110. ^ abcd Sherman 2015, p. 184.


  111. ^ Cipa 2008, pp. 1–30.


  112. ^ abcdefghij Friar & Ferguson 1993, p. 168.


  113. ^ Friar & Ferguson 1993, p. 28.


  114. ^ ab Niles 2013, p. 146.


  115. ^ abc Niles 2013, p. 147.


  116. ^ Niles 2013, pp. 147–148.


  117. ^ abcd Niles 2013, p. 148.


  118. ^ ab Sikorski 1997, p. 235.


  119. ^ abcdefghijklmn Dębicka.


  120. ^ abc Kitowska-Łysiak & Wolicka 1999, p. 231.


  121. ^ Rożek 1988, p. 27.


  122. ^ West 2007, pp. 255–257.


  123. ^ West 2007, pp. 256–257.


  124. ^ Ogden 2013, p. 16.


  125. ^ abcdefg West 2007, p. 260.


  126. ^ Waddell, Laurence (1895). The Buddhism of Tibet Or Lamaism. p. 199. ISBN 9781602061378.


  127. ^ People's Daily On-line (2001), "Chinese Dragon Originates From Primitive Agriculture: Archaeologist". Retrieved June 5, 2011.


  128. ^ Guan, Caihua. (2001) English-Cantonese Dictionary: Cantonese in Yale Romanization.
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  129. ^ Welch, Patricia Bjaaland. Chinese Art: A Guide to Motifs and Visual Imagery, Tuttle Publishing, 2008, p. 121


  130. ^ abcdefghijklmn Yang, An & Turner 2005, p. 105.


  131. ^ abcdefg Yang, An & Turner 2005, p. 106.


  132. ^ abc Volker 1975, p. 64.


  133. ^ abcdefghijklmnopqr Volker 1975, p. 62.


  134. ^ Yang, An & Turner 2005, pp. 103–104.


  135. ^ abcdefgh Yang, An & Turner 2005, p. 104.


  136. ^ Yang, An & Turner 2005, pp. 104–105.


  137. ^ Yang, An & Turner 2005, pp. 106–107.


  138. ^ ab Yang, An & Turner 2005, p. 107.


  139. ^ abc Yang, An & Turner 2005, pp. 107–108.


  140. ^ abcdefgh Yang, An & Turner 2005, p. 108.


  141. ^ Yang, An & Turner 2005, pp. 108–109.


  142. ^ abcdefghij Yang, An & Turner 2005, p. 109.


  143. ^ Yang, An & Turner 2005, pp. 109–110.


  144. ^ Hayward, Philip (2018). Scaled for Success: The Internationalisation of the Mermaid. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0861967322.


  145. ^ Samguk yusa


  146. ^ The book of the genealogy of Taejo of Goryeo - Pyeonnyeon-Tong-Long (편년통록)


  147. ^ 우리 옷 만들기. Sungshin Women's University Press. 2004. p. 25-26. ISBN 978-8986092639.


  148. ^ Seo, Yeong Dae (2002). 용, 그 신화와 문화. Min sokwon. p. 85. ISBN 978-8956380223.


  149. ^ Gould, Charles. 1896. Mythical Monsters". W. H. Allen & Co.


  150. ^ abcd Volker 1975, p. 63.


  151. ^ ab Malone 2012, pp. 96–98.


  152. ^ Williamson 2015, p. 28.


  153. ^ Diderot, Denis. "Dragons". The Encyclopedia of Diderot & d'Alembert. Retrieved 1 April 2015.


  154. ^ abcd Nikolajeva 2012, p. 56.


  155. ^ Schwab, Sandra Martina (2005). "Dragons". In Gary Westfahl. The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy: Themes, Works, and Wonders. Vol. 1. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. p. 216. ISBN 0-313-32951-6.


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.mw-parser-output .refbeginfont-size:90%;margin-bottom:0.5em.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>ullist-style-type:none;margin-left:0.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>ul>li,.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>dl>ddmargin-left:0;padding-left:3.2em;text-indent:-3.2em;list-style:none.mw-parser-output .refbegin-100font-size:100%


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External links



  • Media related to Dragons at Wikimedia Commons


  • The dictionary definition of dragon at Wiktionary


  • Quotations related to Dragons at Wikiquote









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