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Feb 10, 2024 · But speakers of Akkadian, an ancient Semitic language related to modern-day Arabic and Hebrew, borrowed the Sumerian word and used it as "ušumgallu", which has been translated as 'lion-dragon',...
One of the earliest depictions portray dragons as giant snakes in the mythologies of the ancient Near East, particularly in Mesopotamian art and literature, where dragon-like creatures are described in the Epic of Creation, the Enuma Elish, from the late 2nd millennium BC.
Scholars say that belief in dragons probably evolved independently in both Europe and China, and perhaps in the Americas and Australia as well. How could this happen?
Mar 10, 2021 · Where did the dragon myth originate, and why are dragon stories so widespread across at least two continents? Carolyne Larrington, Professor of medieval European literature at the University of Oxford, investigates.
The Sumerian Ušumgal 𒁔𒃲 ushum.gal, meaning "great dragon" and Ušum meaning "dragon" would be one of the earliest representations of what we envision as the modern day definition of a western dragon, in that it is serpent-like, with wings and four legs.
Vikings referred to dragons in general as “Dreki”, an Old Norse term commonly used for sea monsters, sea serpents, and dragons. The name is similar to “Drake” in Old English, which eventually inspired the term we use for dragons today.
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A dragon is a magical legendary creature that appears in the folklore of multiple cultures worldwide. Beliefs about dragons vary considerably through regions, but dragons in Western cultures since the High Middle Ages have often been depicted as winged, horned, and capable of breathing fire.