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DAGON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 730 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DAGON  , a

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god of the
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Philistines who had temples at Ashdod (1 Sam. v . 1), and Gaza (Judg. xvi . 21, 23); the former was destro,yed by Jonathan, the
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brother of Judas the , Maccabee (1 Macc. x.84; 148 B.C.) . But Dagon was more than a mere
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local deity; there was a place called Beth-Dagon in
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Judah (Josh. xv . 41), another on the
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borders of
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Asher (ib. xix . 27), and a third underlies the
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modern
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Bet Dejan, south-east of Nablus . Dagon was in all probability an old Canaanite deity; it appears in the name of the Canaanite Dagantakala as early as the 15th century, and is possibly to be identified with the Babylonian god Dagan . Little is known of his cult (Judg. xvi . 23 seq.), although as the male counterpart of Ashtoreth (see
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ASTARTE) his worshipwould scarcely differ from that of the Baalim (see
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BAAL) . The name Dagon seems to come from dag,"fish," and that his idol was
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half-man half-fish is possible from the ichthyamorphic representations found upon coins of
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Ascalon and Arvad, and from the fact that
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Berossus speaks of an
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Assyrian merman-god . The true meaning of the name is doubtful . In 1 Sam. v .

4, Thenius and

Wellhausen, followed by Robertson Smith and others, read " only his fish-
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part (
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dago) was
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left to him "; against this, see the
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comm. of H . P . Smith and Budde . The identification of Dagon with the Babylonian Dagan is doubted by G . F . Moore (Encyc.Bib., col . 985), and that of the latter with Odacon and Ea-
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Oannes is questionable . Philo Byblius (Muller, Fr . Hist . Graec..iii . 567 seq.) makes Dagon the inventor of corn and the plough, whence he was called
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Zeus 'Apbrpws . This points to a natural though possibly
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late etymology from the
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Hebrew and Phoenician dagan " corn." It is not improbable that, at least in later times, Dagon had in place of, or in addition to, his old character, that of the god who presided over agriculture; for in the last days of paganism, as' we learn from
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Marcus Diaconus in the
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Life of Porphyry of Gaza (§ 19), the
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great god of Gaza, now known as Marna (our Lord), was regarded as the god of rains and invoked against famine .

That Marna was lineally descended from Dagon is probable in every way, and it is therefore interesting to

note that he gave oracles, that he had a circular temple, where he was sometimes worshipped by human sacrifices, that there were wells in the sacred circuit, and that there was also a place of adoration to him situated, as was usual, outside. the
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town . Certain marmora " in the temple, which might not be, approached, especially by
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women, may perhaps be connected with the
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threshold which the priests of Dagon would not touch with their feet (1 Sam.. v . 5, Zeph. i . 9) . See further, the comm. on the Old Testament passages, Moore (loc. cit.), and Lagrange, Relig. semit. p . 131 seq .

End of Article: DAGON
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