The history of the ancient Near East is often presented as a dry succession of empires, a ledger of taxes, territories, and kings. Yet, beneath the political maneuvers of the Bronze and Iron Ages lay a much more volatile landscape: the spiritual frontier. In this world, the boundaries between the terrestrial and the divine were porous, and the success of a nation was seen as a direct reflection of the potency of its patron deity. Among the many gods who vied for supremacy in the fertile crescent, few possess a history as long, as geographically diverse, or as narratively dramatic as Dagon. Though primarily known to modern readers as the national god of the Philistines and the perennial antagonist of the Biblical Israelites, Dagon was a figure of immense prestige centuries before the first Philistine ship ever sighted the Levantine coast.
This book seeks to trace the full arc of Dagon's biography, moving from the dusty tablet houses of Mesopotamia to the coastal fortresses of the Mediterranean, and finally into the dark recesses of modern horror literature. To understand Dagon is to understand the very nature of ancient religious transition. He was not a static idol, but a fluid force that adapted to the needs of those who knelt before him. In the inland river valleys of the Euphrates, he was the "King of the Land," a majestic provider of grain and the divine architect of the harvest. He was the father of the pantheon, the source of royal legitimacy, and a god of civilization itself. However, as the migrations of the Sea Peoples reshaped the Mediterranean world, Dagon underwent a radical transformation. Adopted by the Philistines, he became a maritime power, a god of war, and a symbol of an invading culture that sought to plant its roots in the Promised Land.
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