Midnight Dawns
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Does anyone know where the D&D concept of the gorgon came from? Is there some story or myth that it was based on? Until I started playing I had only every heard of gorgons like Medusa.
Does anyone know where the D&D concept of the gorgon came from? Is there some story or myth that it was based on? Until I started playing I had only every heard of gorgons like Medusa.
The gorgon in D+D is also very similar to the gorgon in the Castlevania series. D+D obviously wasn't inspired by Castlevania, but the two probably share the same mythos.
In one of the Questions & Answer threads with Gygax, he mentioned that he got the inspiration for the gorgon from a bestiary he had seen, probably in the Lake Geneva public library.
The book in question is probably "The Historie of foure-footed beastes" by Edward Topsell. The cover illustration on this book shows "the gorgon" and is cataloged as such.
Gorgon
Edward Topsell gave this mythological name (after the three Gorgons of Greek myth) to the catoblepas, giving them scales and killing breath in place of a deadly gaze. It was further copied and appeared in many medieval bestiaries.
The scale-mailed bull model of a gorgon came directly from a copy of a medieval bestiary, the title of which I do not recall, but it was and probably still is in the local (Lake Geneva) public library. I was happy to use that model, for it added another fearsome monster to the roster for DM use
Gary Gygax, May 13, 2006, EN World Q&A X
Among the manifold and divers sorts of Beasts which are bred in Affricke, it is thought that the Gorgon is brought foorth in that countrey. It is a feareful and terrible beast to beholdd, it hath high and thicke eie lids, eies not very great, but much like an Oxe or Bugils, but all fiery-bloudy, which neyther looke directly forwarde, nor yet upwards, but continuallye downe to the earth, and therefore are called in Greeke Catobleponta. From the crowne of their head downe to their nose they have a long hanging mane, which maketh them to looke fearefully. It eateth deadly and poysonfull hearbs, and if at any time he see a Bull or other creature whereof he is afraid, he presently causeth his mane to stand upright, and being so lifted up, opening his lips, and gaping wide, sendeth forth of his throat a certaine sharpe and horrible breath, which infecteth and poysoneth the air above his head, so that all living creatures which draw in the breath of that aire are greevously afflicted thereby, loosing both voyce and sight, they fall into leathall and deadly convulsions. It is bred in Hesperia and Lybia.
Edward Topsell (c. 1572–1625), The Historie of Foure-Footed Beastes (1607), p. 262.
from Literary sources of D&DGorgon
Edward Topsell in his 1607 History of 4-footed Beasts, included a bit translated from Conrad Gesner's 1551 Historiae animalium that was a description of a Gorgon as a [four-legged] animal with dragon's scales, pig's teeth, a poisonous mane, human hands, and lethal breath, that was a native of Africa and supposedly was bred in Libya. This description is possibly based on misunderstandings of Greek descriptions of Medusa's sisters.