Read The Good and Evil Serpent Online
Authors: James H. Charlesworth
Danten
Daphne Dardanos Dead Sea
Dead Sea Scrolls
death: of Aaron; and afterlife in Greco-Roman traditions; of Asclepius; of Bar Kochba; and blood of the Gorgon; and the bronze serpent (Num 21):; as caused by demons; of Cleopatra; of Domitian; and the Fall (Gen 2); of Jesus; of Laocoon and his sons; personified;of Pliny the Elder; salvation as escape from; sarcophagi; and serpent associated with the corpse of St. Mark (Venice); and serpent’s strength; and serpent symbology; snake as death-giver; and the snake’s molting; of Socrates; of Solomon; and symbolism of the staff of Asclepius; and underworld
Delos
Delphi
Demeter
Deus sol invictus
Deuteronomist
Devil
Dhenia (Cyprus)
Dianan.
See also
Artemis Dido Dinkas Dio Cassius Dion Chrysostomos Dionysus
(also
Bacchus, Zagerius)
Dioskouroi Doris (Greece)
dragon (dragon-serpent, lion-dragon, winged dragon)
Dresden Codex (Mayan)
Duality Dura-Europos
Durga (Kali)
Early Judaism ecdysis (molting) Echidna
Egypt
Ein Samiya Ekron (Khirbet el-Muqanna’)
Elagabalus Elephantine
elephants, and snakes
Eleusinian cultn
El Grecon Elijah El-Wad
Enkidu
Enkomi (on Cyprus) Ennius Epeios
Ephesus
Epicurus
Epidaurus Epiphanius of Salamis
Epirus Erechtheus
Erosn; as Amor; as Cupid; Eros-Hypnos
Essenes Etruscansn
Euphrates Euripides Europa
Euryale (sister of Medusa) Eurystheus Eurytion
Eusebius
Eustace, St.
Eve
evil
evil eye
Fall (Genesis)
Fates
Father, God asn
Fertile Crescent
Festus
Flavius Philostratus
Florence
Fortuna
Freud, Sigmund, and Freudians
Furies Gabriel
Gaia (Earth,
also
Ge) Galilee; Lower Galilee; Northern Galilee, Upper Galilee
Gamla
Garden of Adonisn
Garden of Eden
Garden of the Hesperides
Gauguin, Paul
Gaul
Gemara George, St.
Geryon
Gezer Giants
(also
Titans)n
Gideon
Gilgamesh epic
Giorgio Martini, Francesco di
Glykon
Gnostics and Gnosticism
GÖbekli Tepe
Golan
Golden Fleece
Gorgon
Gracián, Baltasarn Great African Rift Valley Great Mother
Greecen
Habakkuk
Hadesn
See also
Pluto Hadrian Hagia Triada Haifa
Haiti
Halafian culture
Hamat Gader
Harmonia
Harod Valley
Harpokrates (
also
Harpocrates) Hasmoneansn Hathorn Hazor
Hebrews,
See also
Israelites Hecate
Helios Hell
Hera
(also
Juno)
Herculaneumn
Hercules
(also
Herakles, Heracles)
Hermes
(also
Mercury); Hermes Psy-chopompos
Herod Archelaus
Herodotus
Herod the Great
Heros Equitans
Hesiod
Hezekiahn
Hinduism
Hippocrates
Hittitesn
Hizma
Hohenasperb
Hölderlin, Friedrichn
Homer
Hopi Horacen Horapollon
Horus
House of the Evil Eye
House of the Vettiin
Hubert, St.
Huleh Valley
Humboldt, Alexander vonn
Hyakinthos
Hydra
Hygieia
Hyksosn
Ianitor Orci.
See
Cerberus
Ibis
Ice Age
Idumeans Ierapetra
Indian
Indus Valley
Ino
Irenaeus
Isaiahn
Ishtar Gate
Isis; Temple of Isis (Pompeii)
Isis-Thermousis
Israelites.
See also
Hebrews
Izumo (Japanese shrine)
Jacob’s Well
Jalamen
Jamal (in Israel) Japanese mythology Jason Java
Jebusites Jericho
Jeroboam I
Jerusalemn.
See also
Temple of Jerusalem
Jesus
Jezreel Valley
Johannine tradition and community John the Baptizer Jonahn
Jordan
Jordan Rift Valley Jordan River Josephus
Joshuan
Judaea
Judas
Julius II, Pope
Julius Caesar
Jung, Carl Gustavnn
Jünger, Friedrich Georg
Justin Martyr
Kali
Kaliya
Kamarina (nymph) Kambach, J. J.n Karnak
Kasr Daoud (Egypt)
Kato Chorio (Crete)
Kebara cave (Israel) Keto Khnoum
Khorsabad
Kierkegaard, S⊘ren K limt, Gustav Knossosn Kore.
See also
Persephone Kreousa (nymph) Krishna
La Baume-Latrone caves (France) Labbu Labyrinth
Ladon Lanuvium (cave)n Laocoon
(also
Laokoon)
Lares
Last Judgment Latium Lavinium
Lawrence, T. E.n Lazarus Lebanon Lebene
Leda
Lerna Lernaean Hydra Lessing, Georg
Leto
Levant
Leviathan
Libya
London
Lucan
Lucian Lucifer Lucretius Lud
(also
Lludd) Luristan
Luther, Martinn
Madaba map Maenadsn Magharat el-Wad (cave)
Marcus Aurelius Marduk Mareshah
Mark Antonyn Marrakech Mars Mary (mother of Jesus)
Mary Magdalenen Masada
Mater Auxiliatrix
(painting) Medea
Mediterranean world
Medusa
Megasthenes
Megiddo
Melampusn Melanchthon, Philipp Melanesia Meletius Memphis
menorahn
Merida (Spain)
Mesopotamia
Messiah
Metelis
Mexico
Michael (archangel) Michelangelo Midian
Midrash
Min (Egyptian god) Minerva.
See also
Athena Minoan culture; serpent goddess in Mithra
(also
Mithras) and Mithraism
Mitzpeh Ramon
Monastiraki
Moses
“Mother Goddess,” Mount Carmel
Mount Casius
Mount Ebal
Mount Gerizim
Mount Hermon Mozart Muhammadn Munhata (Israel) Muses Mycenae mysteries
Naga (Indian deity/demon)
Nana
Napoleon
Nasca (Peruvian people)
Native Americans
Neapolis.
See
Shechem
Nebat
Nebuchadnezzar II Negevn Nehemiah
Nehushtan
Nephthys
Neptune
Nicodemus (in John)
Nicostratus
Nietzsche, Friedrichn Nile
Nineveh
Nirah (Mesopotamian deity)
Norsen
North Africa
North Pole Nox
Octaviann.
See also
Augustus Olympia
Olympiodorus of Thebes
Olympus
Oman
Ophites
Origen Orpheus
Orphic Hymns
Orthos (dog of Eurytion)
Osiris
Ostia Otakar, Kubin Ouranos
(also
Sky) Ouriel (angel)
“Our Lady of the Mammoths,”
Ouroboros
Ovid
Palace of Uperi (Qal’at Bahrain) Palaestra
Palestine
Pallene
Pammenes
Pan
Panakeia Panama Canal
Paradise
pariah dogs Paris (Trojan prince) Parthenon Parvati Pascal, Blaise
Passion (of Christ)
Passover Pater Sardus (deity) Patrick, St.
Paul, St.
Pegasus Peleus Pella Peloponnese
Pergamum; altar; coinsn; temple Periboea
Periclymenus
Persephone
(also
Kore, Proserpina)n
Perseus
Persia (Iran)
Perun
Peter, St. Phaethon Phaistos
phallus
Pheidias
Pherekydes of Athens
Philip I (Roman emperor)
Philistines
Philo of Alexandria
Philo of Byblos
Phocylides
Phoebus.
See also
Apollo Phoenicia
Phorcus
Phorkys Phylarchus
pillar (as cult object) Pindar Piraeus
Pistrinum (Pompeii)
Plato
Pliny the Elder
Pliny the Younger Plutarch Pluto.
See also
Hades Podaleirios Polydorus
Pompeii; jewelry from; murals, mosaics, and wall paintings; Rotas-Sator Square at
Pompey
Pontius Pilate
Pool of Serpents (Sultan’s Pool)
Porces
Porphyrion
Porphyry Porto Badisco nel Salento Poseidon Potnia Praxiteles
Priam
Priapus Prokles
Prometheus Prudentius Pseudo-Alexander
Pseudo-Apollodorus
Psuedo-Callisthenes
Psuedo-Tertullian Psyllian snake-charmers Ptolemies
Pyramid Texts Pythagoreans
Q (Sayings Source) Qadesh Q. Ogulnius
Qudshu
Quenin, St.
Quetzalcoatl Qumran (Khirbet Qumran); lexicography of serpents in the Qumran scrolls: Al-Qusais (graves)
Rabbi Ben Azzai
Rabbi Eleazar
Rabbi Eliezar ha-Kappar
Rabbi Gamaliel II
Rabbi Janni
Rabbis
(also
rabbinic teaching)