- Great Old One compendium
This is a compendium of the lesser known
Great Old One s of theCthulhu Mythos ofH. P. Lovecraft .__NOTOC__A
Aphoom-Zhah
See Lin Carter deities.
Atlach-Nacha
See Clark Ashton Smith deities.
B
Basatan
See Clark Ashton Smith deities.
Bokrug
Bokrug ("The Great Water Lizard") first appeared in Lovecraft's
short story "The Doom That Came to Sarnath " (1920). The being is also part of Lovecraft'sDream Cycle .Bokrug is the god of the semi-
amphibian Thuum'ha of Ib in the land of Mnar. The deity slept beneath the calm waters of a lake that bordered Ib and the city of Sarnath. When the humans of Sarnath cruelly slaughtered the populace of Ib and stole the god's idol, the deity was awakened. Each year thereafter, strange ripples disturbed the otherwise placid lake. On the one-thousandth anniversary of Ib's destruction, Bokrug rose up and destroyed Sarnath (so utterly that not even ruins remained). Afterwards, the Thuum'ha recolonised Ib and thenceforth lived undisturbed.C
Chaugnar Faugn
Some were the figures of well-known myth —
gorgon s,chimaera s,dragon s,cyclops , and all their shuddersomecongener s. Others were drawn from darker and more furtively whispered cycles of subterranean legend — black, formlessTsathoggua , many-tentacledCthulhu , proboscidian "Chaugnar Faugn", and other rumoured blasphemies from forbidden books like the "Necronomicon ", the "Book of Eibon", or the "Unaussprechlichen Kulten " of von Junzt.
—H. P. Lovecraft, "The Horror in the Museum" (emphasis added)Chaugnar Faugn ("The Elephant God", "The Horror from the Hills") was created by
Frank Belknap Long and first appeared in hisnovel "The Horror from the Hills" (1931).Chaugnar Faugn (or Chaugnar Faughn) appears as a horribly grotesque idol, made of an unknown element, combining the worst aspects of octopus, elephant, and human being. When Chaugnar Faugn hungers, it can move incredibly quickly for its size and use its
lamprey -like "trunk" to drain the blood from any organism it encounters.Chaugnar Faugn came to the Earth from another
dimension eons ago, possibly in a form other than the one it later assumed. Upon arriving, he found the dominant lifeform to be only simpleamphibian s. From these creatures, he created theMiri Nigri to be his servitors. The Miri Nigri would later mate with early humans to produce hybrids that would eventually evolve into the horridTcho-Tcho people.Cthugha
See
Cthugha .Cynothoglys
Cynothoglys ("The Mortician God") first appeared in
Thomas Ligotti 's short story "The Prodigy of Dreams" (1994). The being appears as a shapeless, multiform entity with a single arm used for catching those who summoned it and bringing them painless, ecstatic death. In ancient times, it held a small inItaly , which paid it homage rather than worshipping it, since actual worship would be the same as summoning the god. They considered it to be no mereCloacina , but the mortician of all creatures, even the gods themselves.D
Dweller in the Gulf
See
Clark Ashton Smith deities .E
Eihort
See
Ramsey Campbell deities .M
Mnomquah
See
Brian Lumley deities .N
Nug and Yeb
Nug and Yeb, the "Twin Blasphemies", are the spawn of
Shub-Niggurath andYog-Sothoth . Nug is the parent ofCthulhu and the parent ofKthanid via the influence of Yog-Sothoth. Nug is a god amongghoul s, while Yeb is the leader of Abhoth's alien cult. [Harms, "Nug and Yeb", "Encyclopedia Cthulhiana", pp. 216–7.] Both Nug and Yeb closely resemble Shub-Niggurath.The names Nug and Yeb are similar to the names of the Egyptian sibling gods Nut and
Geb , members of the HeliopolitanEnnead .Nyogtha
See
Henry Kuttner deities .O
Oorn
See
Brian Lumley deities .P
Q
Quachil Uttaus
See
Clark Ashton Smith deities .R
Rlim Shaikorth
See
Clark Ashton Smith deities .hudde M'ell
See
Brian Lumley deities .ummanus
See
Brian Lumley deities .V
Vulthoom
See
Clark Ashton Smith deities .W
The Worm that Gnaws in the Night
See Lin Carter deities.
Y
Yibb-Tstll
See
Brian Lumley deities .Yig
Yig (the "Father of Serpents") first appeared in the story "The Curse of Yig" which was created by
Zealia Bishop and almost completely rewritten byH. P. Lovecraft . He is a deity that appears as a serpent man, serpent with bat like wings, or as a giant snake. Although Yig is easy to anger, he is easy to please as well. Yig often sends his serpent minions, the "children of Yig", to destroy or transform his enemies.To Native Americans, Yig is regarded as "bad medicine". He is also alluded to in western
American folklore . He is identified with the Mesoamerican deityQuetzalcoatl , and may be a prototype for that god and other serpentine gods worldwide. Some authors identify him as the Stygian serpent god Set's father, and from Robert E. Howard's Conan stories, and also with the Great Serpent worshiped by the Serpent People of Valusia from Howard's Kull stories.Yig is the subject of a song by the
shock rock bandGWAR entitled "Horror of Yig", which appears on their album "Scumdogs of the Universe ". The bandThe Darkest of the Hillside Thickets , famous for their Lovecraft references, also refers to Yig in a song titled "Yig Snake Daddy".Yig is the name of a deity in the
Arcanis Dungeons & Dragons campaign setting. Yig was once (and may still) be worshipped by the Ssethregorean Empire, a group dominated by various lizard and snake-like beings. Yig in this mythos is a female deity, but still strongly associated with serpents, suggesting the name is not a coincidence.Despite being spoken of on only a few occasions in Lovecraft's work, Yig is one of the Ancient Ones included in the
Arkham Horror boardgame, appearing alongside Ancients such asCthulhu andNyarlathotep , proving his popularity; a game where Yig is the villain will go very quickly.Z
Zathog
Zathog appears in
Richard Tierney 'snovel "The Winds of Zarr " (1971), as well as in hisshort story "From Beyond the Stars" (1975). After warring with the Elder Gods, Zathog, eager for revenge, entered into a compact with the brutalZarr . The Zarr controlled most of thegalaxy where they dwelt and desired to conquer the rest of the universe. In return for helping him free his brethren, Zathog promised to give the Zarr the ability to travel through time and space.Zushakon
See
Henry Kuttner deities .ee also
* See
Great Old One#Table for detailed bibliographical information (under "References").References
*cite book|last=Harms|first=Daniel|title=The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana|edition=2nd ed.|publisher=Chaosium|location=Oakland, CA|year=1998|id=ISBN 1-56882-119-0
*cite book|last=Long|first=Frank Belknap
[ 1931] |title=The Horror from the Hills|publisher=Arkham House|location=Sauk City, WI|year=1963|id=ISBN 9997539699*cite book|last=Lovecraft|first=Howard P.|coauthors=Hazel Heald
[ 1933] |chapter=The Horror in the Museum|title=The Horror in the Museum and Other Revisions|editor=S.T. Joshi (ed.)|publisher=Arkham House|location=Sauk City, WI|year=1989|id=ISBN 0-87054-040-8*cite book|last=Price|first=Robert M. (ed.)|title=The Book of Eibon|edition=1st ed.|publisher=Chaosium|location=Oakland, CA|year=2002|id=ISBN 1-56882-129-8
Notes
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