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¶ The Global Presence of Dragons
Hello, here be dragons it used to say, on the edges of maps when the world seemed flat, and almost wherever you look in the world there are dragon legends, if not actual dragons. sometimes compared to snakes. Alligators, lions, and even dinosaurs. Dragons have appeared on clay tablets in ancient Mesopotamia, in the Chinese zodiac, in the guise of the devil in Christian religious texts, and in the national symbolism of the countries of England and Wales.
They're often portrayed as terrifying, but sometimes appear as sacred or even benign creatures, and they continue to populate our cultural fantasies through blockbuster films, TV series, and children's books. With me to discuss dragons are Kelsey Granger, postdoctoral researcher in Chinese history at the University of Edinburgh. Daniel Ogden, Professor of Ancient History at the University of Exeter, and Juliet Wood, Associate Lecturer in the School of Arts at the University of Wales.
¶ Origins and Symbolism in China
Kelsey, why do the first dragons appear in China? In China, dragons are typically depicted as having a long serpentine body, four legs, a fairly long tail, and then a large horned head. And they're actually one of a number of fantastic Chinese beasts. The earliest examples that we have of dragon like creatures actually date back to Neolithic Chinese archaeological sites, so the Hongshan and the Yangshao cultures where we can see them, for instance, carved into jade.
there was a general tendency to depict hybrid animals at this time and the dragon is one of these hybrid animals. Theories and scholarship has Try to suggest that maybe these renderings might have been depictions of real world reptiles like snakes or alligators. But this evidence is quite speculative and it would overlook the fact that dragons, as I said, are hybrid animals in a Chinese context. They're composite, a bit like a griffin.
So they have multiple body parts from other types of animal. And these vary across... But in eleventh century art manuals, for instance, the dragon has nine specific resemblances it has the ears of an ox, it has the claws of an eagle, the scales of a carp, and the antlers of a stag.
But the head and the eyes tend to vary. Sometimes dragons have the head of a horse, and sometimes they have the head of a camel, and sometimes they have the eyes of a demon, and sometimes they have the eyes of a shrimp. But they are still hybrids even if they're not so neatly prescribed for us.
But is it thought that there were creatures like this, not a little bit of a bigger thing? Absolutely. They were thought to be real, so while they seem very fantastical to us, they were perceived to be very much a real, visible and physical animal. So real world phenomena would be interpreted as being signs of dragons.
For instance, if bones were excavated in early China, which might have been the remains of dinosaur or might have been the remains of large fauna, they would be understood as actually being dragon bones, so the remains of dead dragons, or even the moltings of living dragons. And these have long been used in medicine actually. Uh they are normally in a powdered form and they're used to treat illnesses up to and including leg paralysis, fever, abscesses, all sorts.
What they symbolise is rather than in maybe the European context where they're seen as very adversarial, they're actually very positive and beneficial figures in early China. So sightings of dragons would be very much connected with great men and great reputations in the Warring States period, so that's five hundred BC onwards.
But especially in the Han Dynasty, so two hundred BC onwards, they become very much connected with emperors and rulers, and that means emperors of the present and also of the distant past. So emperors are said to be the sons or offspring of dragons. They look like dragons. When they take the throne they might see dragons or dream of dragons.
And this is partly due to how rulership is conceived of in China. So the emperor is positioned as a pivot between heaven and earth, he balances those two things. If a good ruler's on the throne, everything happens as it should, and things like dragons appear. If a bad ruler's on the throne, everything's out of balance, disasters, plagues, pestilence are sure to follow.
So the dragon's a very convincing sign of good rulership because it prospers in these balanced conditions and also it's very associated with rainfall, which means that it would stave off droughts and famine.
¶ Western Dragon Traditions Emerge
Daniel, what's a dragon in the Western tradition? Is it related to the Chinese uh tradition? That's a $64,000 question, isn't it? Well, let's start with what the Dragon in the Western tradition is. The Dragon in the West... Similarly begins, I would say, in the probably late 4th millennium BC. Our evidence for that is not archaeological, but linguistic and mythological. There's reason, for example, for thinking. that there was a dragon fight story in Indo European language and culture.
So that puts us maybe on the Russian steppe in the 419 BC. To move ahead and to come to something more tangible, in ancient Greece we have the drachone, and the drachone is Uh basically a big fiery snake. Usually with some sort of supernatural context as well. Well the complication here is that the Greeks had a rather broad view of a dracone. So in their myth and their cult we have the big fiery thing.
Yn a cultic context, you could see them in your dreams. For example, Asclepius, the great healing god Asclepius, when he wasn't in human form, he was a A dracone, a massive snake, a wonderful bit of Ovid talking of him in this way. So seen in a dream, yeah. Um now another another aspect of this also is that in their healing sanctuaries, in their in their escapion sanctuaries, they the the Greeks did actually keep large
snakes, large real snakes, which they called dracons. Again, there was a sort of sacred context there. Probably they were four lined rat snakes, if you want to know exactly what they were. They grew to about six feet. And they're very they're very placid, they're very phlegmatic. And they don't mind being mauled around and they were used in healing sanctuaries to uh don't they they were uh invited to lick or even nip the patient uh the uh on the affected part as part of the healing process.
So you would encounter a drachon that way. But I think perhaps today we're more interested in the big mythical versions. As Rome passed from paganism to Christianity, so the form of the dragon mutated a bit. because of things that happen in the Greek translation of the Bible, it got merged with the ancient Greek concept of the sea monster and so it acquired a fat body. A more animalian head and legs are Sometimes flippers.
And then at a later stage again it acquired uh wings. This was because in getting Christian culture dragons became identified with humanoid winged flying demons. And so that's so that's how it all came together. So about nine hundred AD is when we first get the wyvern, the two legged dragon, but a dragon that All your listeners will recognise. Right. I'm conscious that I didn't get as far as answering is the Western Dragon and the Chinese Dragon the same thing?
It's impossible for us to see any common point of genesis. So what's the more impressing question therefore, the more interesting question is are we right to put them in the same box conceptually? And that depends on how we define a dragon. Now, the working definition I have for a dragon is it's a snake plus. A snake and something more, whether that
size, behaviour, extra body parts, again a sort of supernatural divine context. And I would say that according to that definition, and now I don't know whether Kelsey accepts it, that would bring them together because I do think the earliest Chinese texts to discuss the physiology of a dragon, talk about it being typically a a blend between a A snake and a horse.
I would just add to that, actually there's been a pushback in this recent year of the dragon with Chinese scholars actually wanting to translate long, which is the Chinese term for dragon, as
¶ Real Creatures and Dragon Legends
long L O O N G in English text to try and differentiate the Western dragon, which is very adversarial and aggressive, and the Chinese dragon, with far more association with water than with fire. So it creates interesting conversations to bring Chinese dragons into the frame. Julia, they've been compared to real animals. Can you run through the numbers of comparisons and how to do that?
I still want the listeners to be quite sure that they're listening to not real p things but dreams and suppositions and so on. Well, this is where it gets a little dicey. Oh good. Uh because you think of dragons as as serpentine. Uh that's very, very common. Uh there's actually a wonderful Roman instance where they kill a dragon during the Punic Wars. They skin it and send it back to Rome. Obviously we don't have it any longer, but what did they send? Was it the skin of a Nile crocodile?
There's certainly a Nile crocodile hanging in Brno, which is the Brno dragon, which blew up when it was fed all sorts of horrible things. Um so there is this sense of trying to find in the real world what these things were. But there was this sense that they were somehow real, and indeed one of the saints sort of says he's explaining a play.
And he says, Well what happened is the Tiber overflowed, and all of these log like things and serpents kind of floated down the Tiber, and they came out to sea and they were thrown back on the shore, and they created a plague. Well what was he looking at? Was he looking at logs floating down, dead animals floating down? There is this sort of grey area. When the Komodo Dragon was first captured the Komodo Dragon is a large lizard that you find in the islands of the Pacific.
It's not a dragon at all, it's a monotolis. But the man who uh collected the specimens, which is still in the American Museum of Natural History, sort of said when he first saw them, he said it was like watching a dinosaur, and if only they stood up on two legs, they would be dinosaurs, but he says, when they were killed to be shipped over to be sort of taxidermed. He said they weren't all that big.
So you have this perception of seeing particularly the reptilian world in terms of these very powerful monsters. Now currently, not so long ago, someone suggested that dinosaurs and dragons look alike. Some of them do, and therefore our idea of a dragon came from animal bones. Now the problem with that is that unless you know what a dragon looks like, uh kind of a bone c sort of coming out of it is not gonna remind you of that.
So I think they've both reinforced the idea of dragons and they've helped us disenchant the world, raise this sort of barrier between the real and the imaginative. There is, however, one really interesting thing. In a town in Austria, Klagenfurt, you have a typical I killed a dragon that was sort of polluting the place. And then many years later, as they were draining the swamp, they found a skull.
which isn't a dinosaur. It's a i it it's an Ice Age rhinoceros or something, but they thought, Aha, here's the skull of the dinosaur that so and so has killed and the fountain in the town is based on this skull, and this skull was first put in the church and it's now in the natural history museum. So you have legend, relic, natural history. What's the significance of dragons in Roman culture?
They were following on very much from the Greek culture. But as so much of what the Romans did, they kind of not so much domesticated it, but turned it into a symbol for the empire, hence this dragon thing being sent back. But you also get them sort of creating these war monuments, uh sometimes called Dracos. Some people say they were wolves, but let's go with the Draco for this. as a symbol of the power of the Roman Empire. So you have them kind of turning them into subjecting them really.
to being a symbol for the power of Rome. Whereas in the g in the Greek world they were much more a power symbol, closer to a healing symbol. The Romans kind of militarized them, I suppose, would be the answer. accounts of the dragons in Greek myth and there were a great many dragons in Greek myth, but the best accounts, the juiciest, the ones that sort of psychologise the dragon, tell the story from his side, give him a bit of metal, you know. They're all in Latin.
And yet the Romans were so reluctant to invent dragon myths off their own. This is part of a wider problem in that On the whole, the Romans didn't invent much myth, you know, Romulus and Remus, uh, that's it. You know. And
I should have to go back to the Bagrada dragon, which Juliet was talking about before. I mean, that is the case in point, really. That is really the one example of the Romans inventing a mythical dragon, but it's more of a legend. They're really situated it in a historical context. the first Punic War against Juliet said. So a very a very real battle context, and the Roman army, Regulus's Roman army, defeats it. gyda'r amser, gyda'r amser, gyda'r amser, gyda'r amser, gyda'r amser, gyda'r amser.
I like to think of it as kind of like the equivalent of one of those 50s American B-movies where you get the space alien invading and the USA defeats it with their new nuclear weapons and things like that. That sort of story. Yeah. It is and you're right, it has a creature feature element to it. Here is this monstrous thing which civilization, uh military civilization defeats.
The other interesting thing I think which happens to the Roman dragons is that as y they get more Christian, you get these dragons associated with Roman ruins. and a Christian saint will come in and defeat the dragon and that will then m sort of symbolize paganism being overcome by Christianity.
¶ Chinese Zodiac and Dragon Personalities
Specifically Roman paganism. I'll come back to that in a second'cause I want to ask Elsie, w go back to China. What's the relationship between the dragons and the zodiac in China? So that's another usage of the dragon that's quite different to its use as an imperial symbol as a symbol that's very much connected with the ruler. Here instead it's used as part of a twelve animal zodiac cycle that divides the lunar year, so it doesn't exactly match up with our Gregorian calendar.
Uh but it divides the Loony years and the dragon is fifth in this cycle. So we've had dragon years in two thousand, twenty twelve and twenty twenty four. But these are also used in combination with the five Chinese elements, which are earth, fire, water, metal and wood.
So each dragon year will be slightly different. It will be a different combination of element and dragon. So for instance, this past year was the year of the wood dragon, the time before was the water dragon, the time before that was the metal dragon. What's the significance of it being the year of
This would essentially be used not only to dictate the personalities and the successes and the compatibility of the people born in the year of the dragon. So if I was born in the year of a dragon, what would it do to my personality? You should be very auspicious and you should be very lucky.
It's funny because actually in Thailand, Cambodia and Malaysia they don't have dragon years, despite following the same Zodiac calendar. They actually have a variant of Naga as their dragon year. And the Naga was an Indian semi-divine serpent. that guards Buddhist treasures and lives at the bottom of rivers and lakes. But the zodiac was also actually used to divide the hours of the day in dynastic China. So the twenty four hours were actually divided into two hour blocks.
and these were colloquially referred to by the Zodiac animals as a shorthand. So the dragon being fifth in the cycle is the hours from seven AM to nine AM. Thank you. Daniel, well let's go to the Bible. How do dragons feature the
¶ Biblical and Folkloric Dragons
Well, in the Old Testament we have a number of big serpentine adversaries. Of course we have the Serpent of Eden to start with. We have So the Serpent of Eden you you c you compare with the dragon, do you? Yeah. No To be scrupulous uh I hope you are always uh when the Hebrew Bible is brought into Greek in the Septuagint.
The word dracone is not actually applied at that point. He's just an office, just a as it were, a snake. But when he's then taken up into early Christian art We then have Leviathan and Rahab the great Sea monsters. And then when they're again when they're brought into Greek they are s uh the the name Leviathan is is eliminated in the in the Greek version of the Bible.
He's sometimes called a drachon, and he's sometimes called a kertos, a sea monster, and that actually is the origin of that merging that I mentioned earlier between the physical forms of the dragon and the sea monster in Greek and Latin culture. And then in a slightly obscure bit of the Old Testament, we have the charming little book of Bell and the Dragon. It only survives in Greek, 2nd century AD probably, and BC rather.
Uh and in that we have Daniel, great name, fighting the dragon of Babylon and uh how does he fight this false idol, this this dragon that's worshipped in Babylon? He he makes a little ball of pitch and fat uh and hair and he feeds it to it and that gums up the dragon and its fire just you know inflates it internally until it explodes.
So that's a great little story. So that's the Old Testament dragon feature. Would you come in, Julia? Yes, the exploding dragon I think is one of the most fascinating ones because it's such an appealing story as a way to sort of drag the de Yes, the the dragon being blown up. that you get it in folklore, you get it in what are known as migratory legends, legends that are localized in various places. I think the most famous one is the Dragon of Krakov, which which lived at the bottom of a hill.
And eventually the shepherd Phil's a sheep, it had a taste for sheep. fills a sheepskin with sort of gunpowder and the dragon swallows it and of course the fire makes it explode. And so this becomes the Krakow dragon. One of many, but this is certainly I think the most elaborate. Hm. Let's turn to uh British folklore, Judith. How do dragons feature here? We have lots of them is the answer. Again they share the same sort of mythology and motifs that go back
to Greek and Roman times basically. But they become anglicized. What I think is very striking about the dragons, particularly in Britain, is they're often linked to a carving in a church. So you will have a carving of some sort of monster or a carving of someone killing a monster. And what develops is the idea, Oh, is that person is Saint George or Saint Michael if he has wings and this is the dragon. And then you'll have someone say, Ah yes, it was a dragon who lived in the well.
and he used to come out at certain times and he did this and that and by the end of this you have a whole elaborate story attached to a carving in church which actually may have had nothing to do with the dragon, but this is the way of kind of Numanizing, making numinous the world around you. you defang it in a sense and sounds rather strange by making sort of monsters. But very much so. Very much. So you'd be talking of folklore though. Absolutely, because what happens is these motifs
are actually independent in many ways of the stories that are told. So they can move around, which is why they call'em migratory,'cause they they literally move and they become attached to things. But people have this collection of motifs and stories to draw on. And so it's very, very easy to t have some of them associated with Saint George, some with Saint Michael, some with all kinds of saints, some very obscure saints.
Um and occasionally you get a female saint associated with the dragons as well. They're not common, but they were very popular. Wasn't that delicious? So good. Your bill, ladies. I got it. No, I got it. Seriously, I missed. I said first. Oh, don't be silly. You don't be silly. People with the Wells Fargo Active Cash credit card prefer to pay because they earn unlimited 2% cash rewards on purchases. Okay. Rock, paper, scissors for it. Rock, paper, scissors.
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¶ Women and Dragons in Chinese Power
Can we talk about dragons and women with you? Absolutely. So dragons when I've been talking about them as a kind of imperial symbol They have largely been, therefore, a symbol of male imperial power, because in China it was thought that only men could be emperors, but this was all upended by China's only female emperor. who reigned over her own dynasty, the Joule dynasty, from six ninety to seven oh five AD, which was Emperor Wu Zetien.
She first starts out as an empress with her husband, the Emperor Gardzong, from the mid-seventh century. He dies in six eighty three and she becomes regent. And it's at this point that she starts to think about taking the throne for herself. Which puts her in direct competition with her sons for the throne. Rumours conveniently begin to spread that maybe she is also the daughter of a dragon, and this was, as I've mentioned earlier, the marker of a future emperor.
However, she couldn't really lean into the dragon imagery because it's something that her sons could really use far more effectively than she could because of this kind of gendering, despite the fact that there were male and female dragons. they were still very much associated with the male emperor. So she instead really leans into the Phoenix imagery.
If the emperor was the dragon, was the sun, was the yang of yin and yang and the masculine energy as it were, then the phoenix is the empress, it's the moon, it's the yin of yin and yang, it's the softer, the feminine, in this case the
second to the dragon, but she leans into the phoenix instead. She has phoenix pavilions built, she has phoenixes placed on top of these amazing architectural wonders that she has built, and she also makes sure that the phoenixes are at the top and the dragons are below. She comes to rule her own dynasty, it's very avian, lots of avian imagery throughout, but she's forced to abdicate in seven oh five, dies shortly thereafter, and is buried with her late husband, the Emperor Garzong.
It's the only tomb we have in China where two emperors are actually buried together in the same tomb. And it's also the only case we have of a phoenix being placed above a dragon outside the tomb. And this shows not only that she inverts expectations to be a woman on the throne, but also that she symbolically inverted and challenges the supremacy of the dragon in her own reign by putting the Phoenix on top. Thank you. We come back to you, Daniel and then Julia.
¶ Dragons in Germanic Mythology
Can you give us one or two praises of the dragon tales from Anglo Saxon and Germanic literature? To start with Old Norse, the most famous story by far is that of Sigurd, or Siegfried as he's known in German, and Fafner, again Wagner fans will know this story well. Fafner was a humanoid entity of some sort in origin, and he retreated into a cave with his gold. He was very miserly. couldn't bear the thought of anybody else touching this gold and he sat upon it and he mutated into a dragon.
It's possible that he died there and then a dra dragon was born out of his body. That seems to be quite a common Norse idea. But anyway, we end up with this great dragon sitting on the gold in the cave. And along comes Seagood with the idea of getting his hands on it. He waits for Fafner to crawl down, whether Uh Fafner is a crawling dragon, a worm dragon or a winged dragon is debatable.
But anyway, so he but he's crawling down to the river for his drink. Sigurd sits in a little uh ditch and as as the great s um serpentine body passes over the top Up he goes with a sword into Fafna and that's how he kills Fafna. And what happens after that? Well there there are various versions. According to one version, he's cooking the dragon's heart.
He tests it with his finger, burns his finger, sucks it, and in in ingesting the dragon's blood in that way suddenly acquires the ability to understand the language of birds, not hatches in particular, and he hears the birds telling him that his companion is about to kill him.
uh and so he whips off his head first. In another version he coats himself in the dragon's blood and that gives him a horny skin makes him invulnerable of course he misses one spot either a linden leaf falls on his back or he can't reach his agnesis the bit in the middle of his back Ac yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r.
Well, Beowulf is the end of the Beowulf. You stated for our listeners. With Beowulf the story is about eight hundred, and Beowulf has a a very successful time ruling his kingdom. Then what happens is suddenly someone steals from a dragon horde. And this, as I say, reflects the Norse notion that very often dragons are associated with hordes and with burial mounds. So you get gold and death.
Someone steals a piece of the dragon's hoard, the dragon comes out and starts burning and ravaging the country. So Beowulf goes and takes the dragon on. Now this is an old Beowulf. He only has one companion who is willing to stay with him. and the dragon spits his fire and Beowulf is wounded. Beowulf kills the dragon, but is poisoned by it, is wounded by it, and so the poison gets into Beowulf and Beowulf dies
the dragon's body is thrown into the water. It has so many other motifs that we know from earlier and are going to continue later. One of them is this notion that the hero kills the dragon, but something about the dragon's poison catches him. so that you have this notion of this great culture hero who saves his people but sacrifices himself, but always with the idea that something better can come along. You have the fiery dragon, of which there are Famous ones.
But they don't actually dominate. A lot of the local dragons are just nasty, but they aren't necessarily fire spitting. This one definitely is. And of course Tolkien takes up this wonderful one and we have it in front of him. Can you tell us about the role of the dragon in Walsh culture?
¶ Welsh Dragon Legends and Arthur
In Welsh culture the one that is best known is the story of the Red and the White Dragon, in which either Ambrosius or Melinus, depending on what the source is, is going to be sacrificed. Because Vortigern is building this tower which keeps falling down and is told that the blood of a fatherless child will save it. And Merlin says, No, get me these two little things which you'll find under Dinis Emiris.
And they bring two little pots in which are tiny little creatures that jump out and get bigger and bigger and bigger. One is white, one is red, and they fight. And the red seems to be b uh losing and suddenly pulls itself together and sees off the white one. And Merlinus Ambrosius says, This is what's gonna happen, you're gonna lose to the Saxons, but eventually the Britons will be secure.
Now, that's the famous one. But what people sometimes don't recognise is that Geoffrey of Monmouth had three dragons and they were really important. The second one is a comet, a gold dragon, that Utha sees in the sky. And Merlin says, This is you, you are Pendragon, chief dragon. However the little comets are your son and your descendants who will be better. And so he takes this gold dragon and puts it on his helmet. The third time is just before Arthur sort of grass.
and he has dreams of a dragon. So you have the white dragon, the gold dragon and the dream dragon. all sort of framing the Arthurian legend.
¶ Chinese Dragons: Color, Weather, Shape-shifting
really is dictated by the colour. There's this idea that there are five colours, they work in a system along with the five elements, and each dynasty frames themselves on one of these colours. So for instance it starts with the first Emperor Qin Shu Huang in two hundred two one BC. So for instance in five seven nine AD a black dragon was said to drop dead out of the sky.
And this is already very bad. It already indicates something bad's going to happen to the Emperor that he might fall because the Emperor and the Dragon are so closely and symbolically intertwined. But because it's a black dragon specifically, it's deemed doubly as bad because the dynasty at the time has taken black as their colour. That's the Northern Joel dynasty. So it's not just that the emperor will fall, but the entire dynasty will fall.
And it does two years later. So the colour of the dragon is is very important in China as well. Perhaps on a lighter touch here, what's the relationship between dragons and the weather in China? They have an incredibly strong relationship with rain. So dragons are actually aquatic creatures in China.
They live in lakes, rivers, seas strongly associated with water and have this ability to summon rain, which is something that's actually shared by Japanese dragons as well, and also the Indian Nagas that I mentioned earlier. So local dragons can be worshipped at shrines or even at the rivers and lakes in which they're said to reside. And this reveals a tension between people and the weather. Agriculture really needs consistent, predictable rainfall, but weather does not follow human timetables.
So in China they position dragons as this intermediary to whom they can ask for rain, particularly in times of drought. And these ceremonies which start in very early China can be incredibly simple or they can be the most convoluted affairs possible that last multiple days. and they prey usually to a clay figurine of a dragon or sometimes they use live substitutes like a small lizard or a small snake.
That's not to say necessarily that dragons are reptilian in a Chinese context. There's something between a reptile and a fish. So fish can become dragons, and also so can lizards and snakes. And if the rain still doesn't come, people get increasingly desperate to have the dragons bring forth the rain. So you can start by, for instance, demoting the dragon. Or you can threaten to close their shrine. So the founder of the Ming Dynasty no less.
Yes, Emperor Tidzel, in the fourteenth century he prays for rain at a dragon shrine, no rain comes, and he's furious, and he declares in three days time, if it doesn't rain, I'm going to come back and I'm going to personally destroy this shrine. And luckily it does rain within the three days, which spares the dragon's dignity. But it also shows that this emperor has the power to move the supernatural and to move the weather. Now a big shift now here, Daniel.
¶ Christian Saints and Dragon Slaying
Can we talk about how dragons figure in the lives of the Christian saints? Right. Well, if we s if you say Saint and Dragon, the first big idea that everyone's gonna get in their mind is Saint George on a horse Slaying the dragon below him and saving the damsel in distress, who in some early accounts is called Princess Sabra.
It must be said that Saint George is f almost unique. There's another saint, a military saint like George that that kills a dragon by martial means, uh and that's uh Theodore Tiran, he's slightly obscure now. Let's stick with St George's. Well, again, I think actually the interesting thing about St George's is how abnormal he is. Um I mean there are just so many
Saintly dragon slaying stories. I mean I on a just a casual trawl I found two hundred. I am aware that I've only just scratched the surface. What dates are we talking about? Uh the well basically it starts two hundred AD, even before that really with the apocryphal lives of the apostles.
I suppose hagiography kind of peters out around 1500 AD. So I've turned up 200 narratives and I'm aware that I've only scratched the surface. I wouldn't be surprised if there were over a thousand in the Western Christian tradition.
Now, as I say, uh Saint George and Theodore are military saints and they kill their dragon by martial means, but they are really quite distinctive. So the great bulk of the saints, all the other saints Rwy'n cael ei wneud yn unrhyw beth yw'r hyn yn unrhyw beth yw'r hyn yn unrhyw beth yw'r hyn yn unrhyw beth yw'r hyn yn unrhyw beth yw'r hyn yn unrhyw beth yw'r hyn yn unrhyw beth yw'r hyn yn unrhyw beth
The dragon comes out, you know, in a in an aggressive mode and uh again the saint just prays to God uh and he and uh either the dragon just drops dead or scarpers off into the wilderness or is sent down into the sea or into the abyss or something like that.
So these saints are just sort of putting themselves in the footsteps of Saint Michael. We didn't quite get to the New Testament before but I mean the big dragon of the New Testament is uh the Revelation Dragon, which uh the Archangel Michael confines to the abyss. Rydyn ni'n ymwneud â'r hynny'n ymwneud â'r hynny'n ymwneud â'r ymwneud â'r ymwneud â'r ymwneud â'r ymwneud â'r ymwneud â'r ymwneud.
Rydyn ni'n ymwneud, mae'r unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw who again faces a dragon in her martyr cell. Rwy'n cael ei fod yn unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw unrhyw.
it's equal opportunity. So women's saints can do it just as men's sense can. And the interesting thing about Saint Margaret is in fact she's she's actually swallowed, she does come into contact with her dragon, she's actually swallowed by her dragon, but Jesus precedes her down into the dragon's stomach. This is about a ninth century tradition, by the way. And Jesus precedes her down into the dragon's stomach and bursts it open for her, and so she pops out of the water.
the the dragon's stomach. And because of that, amazingly, this virgin Christian saint becomes the the patron saint of childbirth.
¶ Saint George: From Healer to National Symbol
Can I just I think we skipped over St George. We did. And I'd rather not skip over St George. So can you tell us a bit more about him and why he figured so heavily In the canon. Well, Saint George in initially really is a healing saint, really before he becomes attached to the dragon. He's associated sometimes with storms, with healing and healing disease.
So having him switch to overcoming evil is not all that big a jump. But the first story we get which we would recognise Saint George the Dragon and the Girl, is from the Legenda Aurea, which is a collection of Saint Slive. About the fourteen hundred, just at the point where hagiography was going to start to change, and there we get this notion of the warrior saint. Saving a woman.
He in that one doesn't actually kill the saint. She is killed the dragon, rather. She wraps her belt around it and they lead it into the town to be killed. But then George kind of becomes really, really popular. The Crusaders probably had something to do with him moving from the east to Europe. Eventually of course he becomes the symbol of Britain. He becomes very much a British saint. Why is it how does that manage? Well, it's a question really of sort of incremental interest.
Suddenly he becomes popular with the English aristocracy, with the British aristocracy, warriors basically. He's a great big manly warrior saint riding a horse. And he becomes associated with this particularly strongly after the Reformation, when of course the Christian the sort of Catholic business becomes less popular. But there is one w wonderful printed tale called The Heroes of Christendom and George leads them. It's a real boy's own adventure.
and George and Saint Patrick and all of the sort of national saints go off to save this girl and only George manages to do it. So you can imagine that it's it's obviously written from an English point of view and it is an English story. So he becomes both a symbol of the nation and a kind of symbol of warrior culture, but also on a softer level this notion of healing, this notion of someone who will protect us.
And it's very interesting. In New York, on the side of one of the buildings of the UN is a Saint George and the Dragon made up of bits of weapons that are supposed to symbol peace. So you have bits of ballistic missiles in this very, very modernistic George and the Dragon and it's supposed to sort of see George as a protector rather than a murderer.
¶ Dragons in Contemporary Chinese Culture
Can we go back to China and more contemporary uh mood? Do dragons have any significance in modern day China? Absolutely, they have huge significance, particularly in I would say three different areas. The first is language. So thousands of place names and river names still contain the word dragon and stories and references to dragons are still very much used in day-to-day language. So there's a very popular idiom which is Li Yu Chiao Longmen which is
the carp leaps over the dragon gate. And this tells the story of a carp that leaps over an incredibly high waterfall on the Yellow River and by this feat it becomes a dragon. And this is often said to students who are about to face their own imposing waterfall, which is the intent Gaalkarl examinations to encourage them to persevere so that they will become dragons on the other side.
Another area where we see dragons a lot is the Dragon Boat Festival, which is celebrated on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month. So it's normally around May or June. It was the thirty first of May this year. It's celebrated across East Asia, South East Asia and also London. And this probably started out as an agricultural festival in South China to bring the rains for.
So when we think of this kind of chaos of dragon boat racing and the noise of it, it should call to mind this idea in late imperial China and Japan that if the dragons just weren't bringing the rain, they should be made to wake up and bring the rain out. So people would throw rubbish
And they would even throw iron. Dragons hate iron in China. They hate the metal. It dazzles them. So you would throw rubbish, you'd throw iron into the water to try and vex them and make them wake up and cleanse the waters. And finally, we've also just said goodbye to the Year of the Dragon in China, which ended at the end of January this year.
And actually this is hugely significant in contemporary Asia as a whole. There's actually been a noticeable uptick since nineteen seventy six, which was a year of the dragon. There's been a noticeable uptick in birth rates in countries that follow the zodiac calendar for dragon years. So one expert even predicted an extra million babies would be born in this last dragon year in China.
Because people that believe in this calendrical system, in this astrology system, believe that dragon children will be lucky, auspicious and fortunate. They invest very heavily in their education. So dragon children actually have higher graduation rates, higher test scores, and fewer chores than their other Zodiac cohorts. So they're still very much relevant in contemporary Asia. Daniel, why have dragons become such important symbols?
¶ Enduring Power and Modern Interpretations
I'm very hesitant about the idea that dragons symbolise any one thing, really. I mean um I mean I I I think that like the middle of the Greek verb it's the dragon is a form, not a meaning, you know, and you can load whatever you want onto that form. But in some cultures they're terrifying. In other cultures and other stages of people's lives they're very lovable. Where do you stand?
Oh I love them of course. Even looking on them as villainous, I mean we love the great villains, don't we? And also there are Again, focusing on the Western Dragon, in some ways it's a just a bizarre thing cobbled together from these arbitrary b body parts from other animals. And yet it's become a design classic, hasn't it? Refined over the centuries.
to something that's re we regard as absolutely beautiful. That's why there's so much sort of f fantasy art on the internet. Do you want to take this up, Juliet? Yes, this idea of dragons as being sort of multivarious. Leonardo da Vinci draws cats. And one of those cats is actually a little dragon. Now that's really unusual. And I think it kind of anticipates what's really interesting about a lot of contemporary dragon law is that it's become part of fantasy.
Now the Tolkien fantasies, the dragon is still very much the dragon that you find in Beowulf and the Norse. But what's interesting is how much dragon you now get in children's fantasy and how very different it is. Apart from anything else they talk. They provide children with an opportunity to mature, basically. They become companions, guardians more than anything else.
And I think it starts actually with with Kenneth Graham, uh the tale of Custard the Dragon. The dragon there is an esthete. He doesn't really want to fight George at all. And this little boy, this innocent little boy who really anticipates the figure that you get in a lot of children's fantasy literature, kind of mediates between them. So I think this has really, really changed the nature of how we look at the dragon in the West.
And I have to say you're now also getting fantasy literature written from the point of view of Japanese dragons and Chinese dragons. So we're beginning to open this up. The dragons within internet games. So they've become something quite different, but still retained the fascination and fierceness that they had when they first appeared. Would you agree with that? I think in the West we tend to be quite guided by our close contact with the Qing dynasty of what a dragon is in a Chinese context.
The Qing dynasty, which ruled from sixteen forty four to nineteen eleven in China, really intensified the connection between the emperor and the dragon. So we were dealing with an emperor who was very visually connected to dragons. He was wearing dragon robes on a dragon throne in a dragon room with dragon in his name and even was ruling an empire with dragon on the flag. So the flag of China until nineteen eleven was a yellow background with a blue dragon on it.
So we very strongly associate the dragon in China with the Emperor and I I suppose we associate it and conflate it with our own ideas of dragons being very fierce and aggressive. And that's obviously not quite the case with the Chinese dragon. Not only is it not always just a symbol of the Emperor, it has many other roles in local religious practices, in rain making, in religious art, architecture. It doesn't always have that connection to the emperor.
But it also was never restricted just for the Emperor's use. The Emperor only restricted the usage of the five clawed dragon, that was the Imperial Dragon. But the others were fair game. So I think sometimes we're misled down that route of seeing the dragon as a national symbol of China, but not always perhaps appreciating the other aspects of Chinese dragons. Well thank you all very much. Thank you Juliet, Juliet Wood, Daniel Ogden and Kelsey Granger next week.
We'll be discussing ideas on civility since the Renaissance, how to talk to those you disagree with, and why that matters. Thank you for listening. And the In Our Time podcast gets some extra time now with a few minutes of bonus material from Melvin and his guests.
¶ Global Dragon Variations and Origins
What did you not get a chance to say? Starting with you Donnie? Just one more point on the relationship between snake and dragon in a western context. is that some of the most important things we associate with dragons actually derive from snakes. Why are dragons fiery? Why do they breathe fire? Because viper venom has a burning effect when it's injected.
Rydyn ni'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hynny'n gwneud hyn.
Rydyn ni'n rhywbeth, yn unrhyw beth, yn unrhyw beth yw'r rydyn ni'n rhywbeth, yw'r rydyn ni'n rhywbeth, yw'r rydyn ni'n rhywbeth sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n sy'n. Rydyn ni'n gweithwyr, mae drachon yn gweithwyr. Rydyn ni'n gweithwyr, ac mae'n sicrhau bod yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r.
I'd like to sort of um mention the dragons that are non Western at all. Um you have sort of serpent creators, particularly prominent in South America. Now I'm I'm not sure whether I pronounce this correctly, but Serecha starts off as a woman who becomes a serpent. And she becomes a powerful creator by swallowing and regurgitating things. Again, this kind of Pythonesque thing, her husband, her brother, various things. So you get this notion of kind of female cosmology.
Um and again, not a dragon in the c in a in the sense of a western dragon, but very much part of this cosmic element. And the other thing too are the the orishas, the dambalas, the snakes that you find in again in West African culture, which are very positive and very creative. So I think one has to sort of say that very often the non Western dragons actually have quite a different significance.
Um, and as I say, they they tend to be stay more serpentine, uh, with the exception of perhaps of the feathered serpent, who is very much part of uh Aztec mythology. So I think when one talks about dragons, you've got Western dragons, Chinese dragons, Japanese dragons And others
I was just gonna say actually it's very interesting because early Chinese philosophical texts tend to position the dragon as the point of creation actually. All things evolve out of a dragon as a start point. Uh one text particularly focuses on that. So we do have that same kind of concept of a dragon as a creative force. So that's really interesting parallels.
I also wanted to touch on the idea of has anyone ever seen a dragon? because they managed to find a very clever way of getting round it actually in early China because they felt that Chinese dragons could shape shift and so they could be not only as large as you like, but they could be as small as a silkworm.
So that could get around it. And they could also take on different guises. So you could be talking potentially to a dragon or you could kill a fish, but it's actually a dragon in disguise. So maybe they really did see dragons everywhere. Well you've certainly covered the territory. Thank you all very much indeed. Thank you. That was terrific. That was smashing. Kelsey, can I offer you tea or coffee? Oh I'm okay, thank you. Tea would be great, thank you. Three teas and one coffee.
In Our Time with Melvin Bragg was produced by Eliane Glazer, and it is a BBC Studios audio production for Radio 4. Hello, it's Lucy Worsley here, and we're back with a brand new series of Ladies. Here we are in the Cell number one. I'm just shutting us in, Ross. Wow. Following in the footsteps of some all new
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