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Transformations of the Indo-Iranian Snake-man: Myth, Language, Ethnoarcheology, and Iranian Identity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2022

Abstract

This article sets forth a history (with literary-textual focus) of the Iranian mythological Snake-man, from the earliest Vedic and Avestan evidence, down to Ferdowsi. The continuous development of the myth in Iran is accompanied by changes in the monster's name, which show linguistic reassociations, while a constant in all of this is the figure's representation as an inimical outsider. The Vedic name of the brute's fortification, the background of which in etymology and realia will be shown to be the pre-Aryan Bactria-Margiana Archeological Complex, finds a clear but hitherto unobserved correlation in Pahlavi. This illuminates the Indo-Iranian antiquity of the myth in terms of prehistoric inter-ethnic rivalries.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The International Society for Iranian Studies 2012

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References

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2 Yasna 9.8.

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7 For this name in an Arabic text, with reference to one of the demons controlled by Solomon, see Schwartz, Martin, “Qumran, Turfan, Arabic Magic and Noah's Name,Charmes et sortilèges: Magie et magiciens, ed. Gyselen, Rika (Bures-sur-Yvette, 2002), 236n26.Google Scholar I now withdraw the Iranian etymology offered there for the name.

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