Drakon: Dragon Myth and Serpent Cult in the
Greek and Roman Worlds is the first substantial
survey to be focally devoted to the 'dragon' or the
supernatural serpent, the drakon or
draco, in Greek and Roman myth and religion.
Almost every major myth cycle of the Greek and Roman
worlds featured a dragon-fight at its heart, including
the sagas of Heracles, Jason, Perseus, Cadmus, and
Odysseus. Asclepius, the single most beloved and
influential of the pagan gods from the late Classical
period until Late Antiquity, was often manifest as a
giant serpent and even in his humanoid aspect carried a
serpent on his staff.
Detailed and
authoritative, but lucidly presented, this volume
incorporates analyses of all of antiquity's major
dragon-slaying myths, and offers comprehensive accounts
of the rich sources, literary and iconographic. Ogden
also explores matters of cult and the initially
paradoxical association of dragons and serpents with the
most benign of deities, not only those of health and
healing, like Asclepius and Hygieia, but also those of
wealth and good luck, such as Zeus Meilichios and
Agathos Daimon. The concluding chapter considers the
roles of both pagan dragon-slaying narratives and pagan
serpent cults in shaping the beginnings of the tradition
of the saintly dragon- and serpent-slaying tales we
cherish still, the tradition that culminates in our own
stories of Saints George and Patrick.
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