fbpx
Wikipedia

Cthulhu Mythos deities

American author H. P. Lovecraft (1890–1937) created a number of fictional deities throughout the course of his literary career. These entities are usually depicted as immensely powerful and utterly indifferent to humans, who can barely begin to comprehend them; however, some entities are worshipped by humans. These deities include the "Great Old Ones" and extraterrestrials, such as the "Elder Things", with sporadic references to other miscellaneous deities (e.g. Nodens). The "Elder Gods" are a later creation of other prolific writers who expanded on Lovecraft's concepts, such as August Derleth, who was credited with formalizing the Cthulhu Mythos.[1][2] Most of these deities were Lovecraft's original creations, but he also adapted words or concepts from earlier writers such as Ambrose Bierce, and later writers in turn used Lovecraft's concepts and expanded his fictional universe.

Great Old Ones edit

An ongoing theme in Lovecraft's work is the complete irrelevance of humanity in the face of the cosmic horrors that exist in the universe, with Lovecraft constantly referring to the "Great Old Ones": a loose pantheon of ancient, powerful deities from space who once ruled the Earth and who have since fallen into a deathlike sleep.[3]

Lovecraft named several of these deities, including Cthulhu, Ghatanothoa, and Yig. With a few exceptions, Cthulhu, Ghatanothoa, et al., this loose pantheon apparently exists outside of normal space-time. Although worshipped by deranged human (and inhuman) cults, these beings are generally imprisoned or restricted in their ability to interact with most people (beneath the sea, inside the Earth, in other dimensions, and so on), at least until the hapless protagonist is unwittingly exposed to them. Lovecraft visited this premise in many of his stories, notably his 1928 short story, "The Call of Cthulhu", with reference to the eponymous creature. However, it was Derleth who applied the notion to all of the Great Old Ones. The majority of these have physical forms that the human mind is incapable of processing; simply viewing them renders the viewer incurably insane.

[Sic] As written by H.P. Lovecraft, only the slumbering R'lyehians are Great Old Ones. The RPG Call of Cthulu is the one that originally coined Outer God, and Great Old One. Despite misconceptions, R'lyeh is not the home of Cthulu, just a point of travel between the Void and the Material Realm.

Table of Great Old Ones edit

Great Ones edit

The so-called "gods" of the Dreamlands, the Great Ones are not as powerful as the Great Old Ones and are not even as intelligent as most humans. However, they are protected by the Outer Gods, particularly Nyarlathotep.[4] While they once lived on peaks across the world they were driven off of lower mountains by the spread of humanity until they had to leave Earth entirely, leaving only a mark on Mount Ngranek. The Great Ones now rule from their hidden fortress of Kadath, whose location in time and space is unknown. As well as occasionally returning to white capped Thurai, Lerion and Hatheg-Kla on cloud ships under the cover of a light mist, they abandoned Kadath for a brief period for the "sunset city" that Randolph Carter conjured in his dreams. In the past, the Great Ones often married human women, so many human inhabitants of the Dreamlands have Great One blood in them.

Lobon edit

Lobon, also known as Lobon of the Sacred Spear is one of the Great Ones, the gods of Earth that reside in Kadath. He appears as an ivy-crowned youth bearing a spear. ("The Doom That Came to Sarnath"; H.P. Lovecraft's Dreamlands, John Fultz's "Wizards of Hyperborea")

Nath-Horthath edit

Nath-Horthath is known as one of the chief gods of Celephaïs. ("Celephaïs", The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath; HP Lovecraft's Dreamlands, "Kadath/The Vision and the Journey")

Oukranos edit

Oukranos is one of the Great Ones, the gods of Earth that reside in Kadath. (The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath)

Tamash edit

Tamash is a Great One dwelling on Kadath. Tamash was one of the chief gods worshipped in doomed Sarnath along with Zo-Kalar and Lobon. ("The Doom That Came to Sarnath;" HP Lovecraft's Dreamlands, "Wizards of Hyperborea")

Zo-Kalar edit

Zo-Kalar is a Great One dwelling on Kadath. Zo-Kalar was one of the chief gods worshipped in doomed Sarnath along with Tamash and Lobon. (HPL: "The Doom That Came to Sarnath"). It is also possibly the same being as Karakal or Karakal of Flames. ("The Doom That Came to Sarnath"; "Wizards of Hyperborea")

Hagarg Ryonis edit

Hagarg Ryonis, also known as The Lier-in-Wait is one of the Great Ones, the gods of Earth that reside in Kadath. He appears as a huge reptilian monster. (HP Lovecraft's Dreamlands, "Wizards of Hyperborea")

Karakal edit

Karakal, also known as Karakal of Flames is one of the Great Ones, the gods of Earth that reside in Kadath. He might also be the same being as Zo-Kalar. (HP Lovecraft's Dreamlands, "Wizards of Hyperborea", Mike Minnis' "The Crawler of Pnoth")

Outer Gods edit

As it is known in the Mythos, the Outer Gods are ruled by Azathoth, the "Blind Idiot God", who holds court at the center of infinity. A group of Outer Gods dance rhythmically around Azathoth, in cadence to the piping of a demonic flute. Among the Outer Gods present at Azathoth's court are the entities called "Ultimate Gods" in The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath (called "Lesser Outer Gods" in the Call of Cthulhu RPG), and possibly Shub-Niggurath, the "Black Goat of the Woods with a Thousand Young". Yog-Sothoth, the "All-in-One and One-in-All", co-rules with Azathoth and exists as the incarnation of time in the cosmos, yet is somehow locked outside the mundane universe. Nyarlathotep, the "Crawling Chaos", is the avatar of the Outer Gods, existing as the incarnation of space and functions as an intermediary between the deities of the pantheon and their cults. The only Outer God to have a true personality, Nyarlathotep possesses a malign intellect and reveals a mocking contempt for his master's degree.[5] Lovecraft himself never made reference to them as the Outer Gods, instead calling them the Other Gods or the gods of the outer hells, as noted in his short story "The Other Gods".

Abhoth edit

Aiueb Gnshal edit

Aiueb Gnshal (The Eyes Between Worlds, The Child-Minded God)[6] is a mysterious Outer God, who has his abode in a forgotten temple located somewhere in Bhutan. He appears as a formless black void, with seven pulsing orb-like eyes, and is mainly worshiped by ghouls, which tribute him in a defiled cult described in the mysterious Cambuluc Scrolls of the wizard Lang-Fu, dating back 1295 AD. Peering through the eyes of this god, after a hideous and devastating ritual, allows one to see straight into Azathoth's court. It is rumoured that the powers of Mongolian warlord Temujin (Genghis Khan) was a favour of Aiueb Gnshal.

Aletheia edit

Aletheia (The End of the Darkness) is a god-like entity symbolizing or incarnating the truth. Named after the Greek goddess of truth, it manifests as a vast spiral of manifold titanic hands with a single cycloptic eye in each palm as in the Hamsa, and kilometric wire-like protrusions able to ensnare living beings, replacing their spinal bone in puppet-like fashion. Introduced in Dylan Dog issue 374,[7] In the plot, the entity has clear features of an Outer God rather than a Great Old One as well as an appearance vaguely resembling that of Yog-Sothoth, and is invoked by a deranged prophet with words in Naacal or R'lyehan language almost coinciding with those featured in Cthulhu's invocation, with R'lyeh replaced with Z'lyeh.

Azathoth edit

Azathoth, sometimes referred to as the "Blind Idiot God", is a dreaming monster who rules the Outer Gods and created them, along with many other worlds. Azathoth can't understand anything in his dream, hence his title. Azathoth also shifts in his slumber, causing reality to change.

Azhorra-Tha edit

Azhorra-Tha[8] is an Outer God imprisoned on the planet Mars, as it fled from Earth after the imprisonment of the Great Old Ones. Its appearance is that of an insectoid to toad-like squid, but its shape continuously changes, emitting an awful buzz. The Mi-Go discovered the prison of Azhorra-Tha the millennia after, and made everything to not reveal its location to any human being.

The Blackness from the Stars edit

The Blackness from the Stars is an immobile blob of living, sentient darkness, torn from the primal fabric of the cosmos at the center of the universe. It is distinguishable in darkness only as vaguely shimmering oily pitch. Although intelligent, it speaks no known language and ignores attempts to communicate.

The Cloud-Thing edit

A man-eating cloudy mass, it is an unnamed Outer God at the court of Azathoth.

C'thalpa edit

C'thalpa[9] (The Internal One)[10] is a huge mass of living sentient magma, located in the Earth's mantle. She is mother of the Great Old One Shterot, and five other unnamed hideous children. She is also served by a race of mole-like humanoid burrowers known as the Talpeurs.

Cxaxukluth edit

Cxaxukluth (Androgynous Offspring of Azathoth) is one of the Seed-Spawn of Azathoth, grown to adulthood and monstrous proportions. In appearance, Cxaxukluth resembles something of a cross between Azathoth and Ubbo-Sathla: an amorphous, writhing mass of bubbling, nuclear, protoplasmic-gel. He normally dwells alone within an unnamed dimension beyond time and space, unless disturbed or summoned away.

Daoloth edit

Darkness edit

Darkness (Magnum Tenebrosum, The Unnamed Darkness) is a mysterious entity spawned by Azathoth, and is the progenitor of Shub-Niggurath.

D’endrrah edit

D'endrrah[9] (The Divinity) is a sort of blurry female entity of supernatural beauty, dwelling within her obsidian palace located on Mars' moon Deimos. She lives in a hall composed of myriad mirrors that distort her appearance, which is that of a tentacled dark abyss. This Mythos entity is somewhat inspired by C. L. Moore's Shambleau, the illusionary Martian she-vampires of lust.

Ghroth edit

The Hydra edit

The Hydra dwells in an alternate dimension, and appears as a vast sea of gray ooze. A multitude of living heads, some human and some alien, sprout from the ooze, sobbing and grimacing as if in great agony.

The Hydra's worshipers trick others into sending the god sacrifices through a pamphlet known as On the Sending Out of the Soul. The last page contains a magical formula for astral projection. When followed, the formula always works as expected, harmlessly transporting the user in astral form to whatever destination is desired. However, unbeknownst to the user, the ritual also brings the subject into contact with the Hydra, which then merges with the individual's astral self, using it as a host. Anyone present where the astral traveler appears is decapitated, the victim's head taken to become part of the Hydra. Afterwards, the astral traveler is returned safely to his or her original body, suffering no ill effects, except perhaps receiving a terrible shock from the grisly scene so witnessed.[11]

Sometimes The Hydra is treated as a Great Old One.[12]

Ialdagorth edit

Ialdagorth (The Dark Devourer) is both the cousin and servant of Azathoth, appearing as a black, shapeless, malevolent mist. The sight of such a fiend is unsettling if not traumatizing.

Kaajh'Kaalbh edit

Kaajh'Kaalbh[13] is a lesser Outer God, servitor of Azathoth, but secluded in a parallel chaotic-dimension where everything is unstable. The god itself is constantly formed or disrupted and has no true form at all. Whoever attempts summoning this entity needs the aid of a dimensional shambler, and the deity may manifest in a variety of forms, often as an immense lava lake or a vast pool of solidified quicksilver.

Lu-Kthu edit

Lu-Kthu (Birth-womb of the Great Old Ones or Lew-Kthew) is a titanic, planet-sized mass of entrails and internal organs. On closer examination it appears a wet, warty globe, covered with countless ovoid pustules and spider-webbed with a network of long, narrow tunnels. Each pustule bears the larva of a Great Old One.

Mh'ithrha edit

An invisible wolf-like fiend similar to Fenrir of Norse mythology (if not coincident). Mh'ithrha (Arch-Lord of Tindalos) is the lord of the Hounds of Tindalos, and the most powerful. Although not an actual Outer God as such, its form and astounding powers defy standard classification. Mh'ithra's eternal battle with Yog-Sothoth is said to be legendary.

Mlandoth and Mril Thorion edit

Mlandoth is a primal entity or force, not dissimilar to the Nameless Mist or Darkness, although it is uncertain if it is a place, conscious being, or an inconceivable maelstrom of unknown forces and properties outside the perceptible cosmos. It is mentioned in Uralte Schrecken as a kind of prime archetype from which all mythical god-heads are derived.

According to the cycle surrounding these beings, they are a sort of cosmic yin and yang, whose meeting resulted in the creation of all things (although Azathoth is usually attributed to this). Their joinings routinely create and destroy matter and entities. One of the beings created in this way was the inimical Outer God Ngyr-Khorath.

Mril Thorion is an Outer God who, along with Mlandoth, serve as Yin and Yang. Mlandoth and Mril Thorion were created by Walter C. DeBill Jr., but were suggested years earlier by Clark Ashton Smith. Walter C. DeBill Jr. is an author of horror and science fiction short stories and a contributor to the Cthulhu Mythos. He created the parallel Mlandoth Cycle.

Mother of Pus edit

A Lesser Outer God composed of slime, tentacles, eyes, and mouths. The Mother of Pus was spawned through an obscene mating between a human and Shub-Niggurath. When summoned to Earth, the Mother of Pus seeks refuge in pools of stagnant, foul water.

The Nameless Mist edit

The Nameless Mist (Magnum Innominandum, Nyog' Sothep) is a "misty, shapeless thing" spawned by Azathoth, and is the progenitor of Yog-Sothoth.

Ngyr-Korath edit

Ngyr-Korath (The Ultimate Abomination or The Dream-Death) is a dark blue-green mist that causes a sense of terror as it approaches. Once close, an eye of flame forms within. He was spawned by fission of the Great Old One (or the avatar of) ‘Ymnar, and his nemesis is the Elder God Paighon. He coincides with the entity known as the Magnum Tenebrosum.

Nyarlathotep edit

First appearing in Lovecraft's 1920 prose poem of the same name, he was later mentioned in other works by Lovecraft and by other writers and in the tabletop role-playing games making use of the Cthulhu Mythos. Later writers describe him as one of the Outer Gods. He is a shape-shifter with a thousand forms, most of them maddeningly horrific to humans.

Nyctelios edit

Once an Elder God, Nyctelios[14] has been punished by his peers—especially Nodens—for having created a race of foul servitors. He has been permanently banished from the Elder Gods' Olympus and imprisoned beneath the eastern Mediterranean Sea, near Greece, in a dark, basalt-built citadel named Atheron. However the exiled deity is not dead but just sleeping, and one day he will rise again from his abyss manifesting himself as a blue, 6-metre tall, cyclops-like monstrosity, with the bulk of his body covered entirely in crawling worms.

Ny-Rakath edit

A goat-like fiendish horror with bat wings and multiple horns, mentioned as the brother of Shub-Niggurath.

Olkoth edit

Olkoth (God of the Celestial Arcs)[15] appears as a demoniacal god-like entity able to reincarnate in human bodies if the stars are right (sort of a "Cthulhian" Antichrist).[16] Olkoth may emerge in our dimension through an eyeless, grotesque statue of the Virgin Mary.

Shabbith-Ka edit

Shabbith-Ka appears as a shapeless, roughly man-sized purplish aura, spitting and crackling with powerful electrical arcs. A sense of power, malignancy, and intelligence accompanies it and persons able to gaze at its form long enough can see a rudimentary face or faces within the glowing mass.

Shub-Niggurath edit

Star Mother edit

The Star Mother, also called "The Great Mother Of All", appears as a chunk of yellow-green stone about the size of an infant. Its shape suggests a plump, huge-breasted, faceless female figure. From it extend dozens of pencil-thin root-like strands. It is one of the Larvae of the Other Gods and has no cult, although served by zombie slaves.

Suc'Naath edit

Suc'Naath is one of the mindless gods which twist and dance in the court of Azathoth. It appears as a formless spinning hurricane-like thing with strings of violet and golden colors across its shape, constantly emitting sickening smacking and screeching noises while showing pain-stricken faces across its body.

Suc'Naath's essence is currently divided into three parts, one in a comet called Aiin, the other in some sort of statue located somewhere in the world, while the third has been genetically passed on for eons through prehuman, and now human races of Earth, mostly in the Middle East. The carriers of the Outer God's powers are said to have done great acts of magic and/or to have been insane. If these three parts are ever to be combined, Suc'Naath will be freed. This entity is served by a small Middle-Eastern cult known as the Golden Hands of Suc'Naath, who collect deranged intellectuals and trained assassins who wish to set Suc'Naath free (they may have connections to the old Hashashin cult as well).

Tru'nembra edit

Tru'nembra (The Angel of Music) is the name given in the Malleus Monstrorum Call of Cthulhu roleplay game guide to the entity described in H. P. Lovecraft's novel "The Music of Erich Zann". It has no shape but manifests as haunting music.

Tulzscha edit

Tulzscha (The Green Flame) is the name given in the Malleus Monstrorum Call of Cthulhu roleplay game guide to the entity described in H. P. Lovecraft's story "The Festival". Tulzscha appears as a blazing green ball of flame, dancing with its Lesser Outer Gods at the court of Azathoth. Called to our world, it assumes a gaseous form, penetrates the planet to the core, then erupts from below as a pillar of flame. It cannot move from where it emerges.

Ubbo-Sathla edit

Uvhash edit

Uvhash (The Blood-Mad God of the Void) appears as a colossal, vampiric, red mass of both tentacles and eyes. It dwells within the realm of Rhylkos, which matches with the red planet Mars, and whoever summons Uvhash witnesses an atrocious death. He has affinities with the star vampires, and is rumored to have been one of mad emperor Caligula's eldritch sponsors as well. There is enmity with both the Elder God Nodens and the Great Old One Gi-Hoveg.

Xa'ligha edit

Xa'ligha (Master of the Twisted Sound or Demon of Dissonance) is an entity made of maddening sound, somehow similar to Tru'Nembra. There is some affinity with the Great Old One Hastur.[17]

Xexanoth edit

Xexanoth is a fictional character from Clark Ashton Smith's Cthulhu Mythos work. It appears only once in "The Chain of Aforgomon", where it is summoned by the main character. Apparently, Xexanoth is the bane and mortal enemy of the time god Aforgomon and, because of Aforgomon likely being an avatar of the Outer God Yog-Sothoth, is probably an Elder or Outer God.

Ycnàgnnisssz edit

Ycnàgnnisssz is a black, festering, amorphous mass that constantly blasts and erupts violently, spewing out bits of churning lava-like material. She spawned the Great Old One Zstylzhemgni.

Yhoundeh edit

Yibb-Tstll edit

A gigantic, bat-winged humanoid with detached eyes, wearing a green robe, this horrible deity sees all time and space as it slowly rotates in the centre of its clearing within the Jungle of Kled in Earth's Dreamlands. Beneath its billowing cloak are a multitude of nightgaunts, suckling and clutching at its breasts. Having a close connection to the Great Old One Bugg-Shash,[18] so should Yibb-Tstll be regarded as a Great Old One - specifically in the Drowners group introduced by Brian Lumley, parasitic alien entities which thrive by vampirizing the Great Old Ones themselves[19] - though in RPG materials she is classed as an "Outer God".[20]

Yidhra edit

Yidhra (The Dream Witch or Yee-Tho-Rah[21]) usually appears as a youthful, attractive, earthly female, though her shape may vary.

Yidhra has been on Earth since the first microorganisms appeared and is immortal. To survive in a changing environment, she gained the ability to take on the characteristics of any creature that she devoured. Over time, Yidhra split herself into different aspects, though each part shares her consciousness.

Yidhra is served by devoted cults found in such widely separated places as Myanmar, Chad, Laos, Sumer, New Mexico, and Texas. Members of Yidhra's cult can gain immortality by merging with her, though they become somewhat like Yidhra as a consequence. Those who serve her are also promised plentiful harvests and healthy livestock. She usually conceals her true form behind a powerful illusion, appearing as a comely young woman; only favored members of her cult can see her as she actually is.

Yog-Sothoth edit

 
Kenneth Grant suggested Lovecraft's description of Yog-Sothoth as a conglomeration of "malignant globes" may have been inspired by the qlippoth.[22]

The cosmic entity Yog-Sothoth was first mentioned in The Case of Charles Dexter Ward (written 1927, first published 1941). The being is said to take the form of a conglomeration of glowing spheres. It is an all-knowing deity, which means it knows the past, present, and future, and its nature is different from any other class of Cthulhu Mythos deities. Yog-Sothoth is coterminous with all time and space, yet is supposedly locked outside of the universe we inhabit. Its cosmic nature is hinted at in this passage from "Through the Gates of the Silver Key" (1934) by Lovecraft and E. Hoffmann Price:

It was an All-in-One and One-in-All of limitless being and self—not merely a thing of one Space-Time continuum, but allied to the ultimate animating essence of existence's whole unbounded sweep—the last, utter sweep which has no confines and which outreaches fancy and mathematics alike. It was perhaps that which certain secret cults of earth have whispered of as YOG-SOTHOTH, and which has been a deity under other names; that which the crustaceans of Yuggoth worship as the Beyond-One, and which the vaporous brains of the spiral nebulae know by an untranslatable Sign...

Yog-Sothoth sees all and knows all. To "please" this deity could bring knowledge of many things. However, like most beings in the mythos, to see it or learn too much about it is to court disaster. Some authors state that the favor of the god requires a human sacrifice or eternal servitude.

According to the genealogy H. P. Lovecraft devised for his characters (later published as "Letter 617" in Selected Letters), Yog-Sothoth is the offspring of the Nameless Mists, which were born of the deity Azathoth. Yog-Sothoth mated with Shub-Niggurath to produce the twin deities Nug and Yeb, while Nug sired Cthulhu through parthenogenesis.[23] In Lovecraft's short story "The Dunwich Horror", Yog-Sothoth impregnates a mortal woman, Lavinia Whateley, who then gives birth to twin sons: the humanoid Wilbur Whateley and his more monstrous unnamed brother.

In Anders Fager's short story "Grandmother's Journey", a tribe of dog or wolf-like humans (analog to the "ghouls" of the Lovecraftian mythos) is said to have sacrificed to Yog-Sothoth to become "different". In Fager's "Herr Goering's Artifact", Yog-Sothoth is invoked to protect a couple of witches from Father Dagon.

Yog-Sothoth has some connection to the mysterious Old Ones mentioned in "The Dunwich Horror" (1929), but their nature, their number, and their connection to Yog-Sothoth are unknown. Nonetheless, they are probably allied to him in some way, since Wilbur Whateley, the half-human son of Yog-Sothoth, tried to summon them so that they could control Wilbur's more tainted twin and make it reproduce.

At the end of Lovecraft's last story "The Haunter of the Dark", the protagonist Robert Blake calls on Yog-Sothoth to save him from the eponymous malign entity that he has let loose.

Yomagn'tho edit

Yomagn'tho (The Feaster from the Stars, That Which Relentlessly Waits Outside) is a malevolent being who wishes nothing more than the destruction of humanity for unknown reasons. He waits in his home dimension in Pherkard, until he is summoned to Earth. When first summoned, Yomagn'tho appears as a small ball of fire that quickly expands to a large circle of fire with three flaming inner petals. The reptilian burrowing folk, the Rhygntu, are known to worship this malignant deity.

Elder Gods edit

In post-Lovecraft stories, the Elder Gods oppose the likes of Cthulhu. Derleth attempted to retroactively group the benevolent deity Nodens in this category (who acts as deus ex machina for the protagonists in both The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath and "The Strange High House in the Mist"). Joseph S. Pulver mentions in his Nightmare's Disciple (2006) a set of original Elder Gods, but offers no descriptions of their true forms. The story introduces entities as Adaedu, Alithlai-Tyy, Dveahtehs, Eyroix, Ovytonv, Urthuvn, Xislanyx and Xuthyos-Sihb’Bz'. Others have a cult title as Othkkartho (Sire of the Four Titans of Balance and Order), which is said to be Nodens's son, and Zehirete, who is The Pure and Holy Womb of Light. Sk'tai and Eppirfon are both siblings. Eppirfon was originally Cthulhu's second bride who bore him a son, T'ith, now dead, murdered by Cthulhu himself.

Bast edit

Bast (Goddess of Cats or Pasht) appears as a female human with a cat's head. Likely named after the ancient Egyptian goddess Bastet.

Hypnos edit

An ambiguous deity regarded as an Elder God. First appeared in Lovecraft's short story "Hypnos".

Kthanid edit

A creation of Brian Lumley, Kthanid is a sibling of Cthulhu. It looks the same as Cthulhu except for eye colour.

Nodens edit

Nodens ("Lord of the Great Abyss") appears as a human male riding a huge seashell pulled by legendary beasts. In CthulhuTech supplements, Nodens is said to be the avatar of the Forgotten One Savty'ya.

Oryx edit

Oryx was introduced without name in August Derleth's "The Lair of the Star-Spawn" (1932). The name Oryx is given in the Call of Cthulhu RPG supplement "The Creature Companion" (The Bright Flame) and manifests as a giant pillar of blinding white and purple flames. Although its expression is bright and blinding, no one feels its heat. No one can look at Oryx more than a few seconds; after the first glance, the eyes of anyone who looks become sore and watery.

Oztalun edit

Oztalun (Golden and Shimmering One) is an Elder God introduced by James Ambuehl. It is symbolized by a seven-pointed star symbol, which is his own Seal.

Paighon edit

The following is another Elder God with no description: Walter C. DeBill, Jr.'s Paighon, an extra-galactic entity which now dwells in Earth's core, said to be inimical to the Outer God Ngyr-Korath and his servitor 'Ymnar.

Shavalyoth edit

Shavalyoth (Shadowy and Shapeless One) is an Elder God introduced by James Ambuehl, supposed to be dark and formless.

Ulthar edit

Ulthar (or Uldar and also Ultharathotep[24]) is a deity sent to Earth to hold vigil over the Great Old Ones.

Vorvadoss edit

Vorvadoss* (The Flaming One, Lord of the Universal Spaces, The Troubler of the Sands, Who Waiteth in the Outer Dark) appears as a cloaked, hooded being, enveloped in green flames, with fiery eyes. He is described as a son of both the Elder God Nodens and the Great Old One Lythalia and has a twin brother, Yaggdytha.[25]

Yad-Thaddag edit

Another Brian Lumley deity. Has the same appearance as Yog-Sothoth, except its spheres are of a different color and its nature is purely benevolent.

Yaggdytha edit

Yaggdytha ("The Incandescent One") is twin brother of Vorvadoss, manifesting as a great, amorphous, incandescent ball of cyan living energy, spreading itself into a web of giant talons of light.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Robert Bloch, "Heritage of Horror", p. 8.
  2. ^ Robert M. Price, "H.P. Lovecraft and the Cthulhu Mythos", Crypt of Cthulhu #35, p. 5.
  3. ^ Daniel Harms, "A Brief History of the Cthulhu Mythos", p. viii.
  4. ^ H.P. Lovecraft. The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath.
  5. ^ Daniel Harms, The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana, "Azathoth", pp. 16; "Nyarlathotep", pp. 218; "Shub-Niggurath", pp. 275; "Tulzscha", pp. 304; Yog-Sothoth, p. 346.
  6. ^ This entity is introduced in "Eyes Between the Worlds", a roleplay game scenario featured in Kevin T. McKinnon and Dylan K. Sharpe's Call of Cthulhu RPG monograph "Tales of Dread and Wonder #1"
  7. ^ "La Fine dell'Oscurità" ("The End of Darkness").
  8. ^ This entity is a creation of TOC website (http://www.tentacules.net) and officially employed in Call of Cthulhu RPG supplement Cthulhu Rising
  9. ^ a b This entity is part of Call of Cthulhu RPG French edition.
  10. ^ Translated from French Le Interieur, referring to her location in the depths of Earth's mantle
  11. ^ Henry Kuttner, "Hydra", The Azathoth Cycle, pp. 50–63.
  12. ^ Aniolowski, Scott David (12/30/2006). Malleus Monstrorum: Creatures, Gods, & Forbidden Knowledge (Call of Cthulhu Horror Roleplaying) (Call of Cthulhu Roleplaying Game). United States, Ann Arbor, Michigan: Chaosium. pp. 161–162. ISBN 9781568821795.
  13. ^ This entity is introduced in "Full de Drames," a French "Call of Cthulhu"-type role-play game scenario available at http://www.tentacules.net/toc/toc_/scen/full_de.pdf.zip
  14. ^ This entity is introduced in "Le Regard Dans L'Abime", a French "Call of Cthulhu" -type role-play game scenario available at Tentacules.net
  15. ^ English translation of Olkoth, le Dieu des Arcs Célestes featuring in French "Call of Cthulhu" roleplay game scenario.
  16. ^ This entity is introduced in French Tentacules.net's "Call of Cthulhu" scenario available at http://www.tentacules.net/index.php?id=5046
  17. ^ See James Ambuehl & E.P. Berglund's "Whiteout" (2006).
  18. ^ Scott D. Aniolowski's Malleus Monstrorum, p. 131.
  19. ^ Daniel Harms's Encyclopaedia Cthulhiana, p. 324.
  20. ^ Scott D. Aniolowski's Malleus Monstrorum, p. 241.
  21. ^ Walter C. DeBill, Jr.'s "What Lurks Among the Dunes" (2006), Black Sutra, p. 39.
  22. ^ Harms, Daniel & Gonce, John Wisdom (1998). The Necronomicon Files. York Beach, Maine: Red Wheel/Weiser, LLC. p. 109. ISBN 1578632692.
  23. ^ Lovecraft, H. P. (1967). Selected Letters of H. P. Lovecraft IV (1932–1934). Sauk City, Wisconsin: Arkham House. Letter 617. ISBN 0-87054-035-1.
  24. ^ Daniel Harms, Encyclopaedia Cthulhiana, p. 291.
  25. ^ James Ambuehl, The Star-Seed (2004).

Bibliography edit

cthulhu, mythos, deities, american, author, lovecraft, 1890, 1937, created, number, fictional, deities, throughout, course, literary, career, these, entities, usually, depicted, immensely, powerful, utterly, indifferent, humans, barely, begin, comprehend, them. American author H P Lovecraft 1890 1937 created a number of fictional deities throughout the course of his literary career These entities are usually depicted as immensely powerful and utterly indifferent to humans who can barely begin to comprehend them however some entities are worshipped by humans These deities include the Great Old Ones and extraterrestrials such as the Elder Things with sporadic references to other miscellaneous deities e g Nodens The Elder Gods are a later creation of other prolific writers who expanded on Lovecraft s concepts such as August Derleth who was credited with formalizing the Cthulhu Mythos 1 2 Most of these deities were Lovecraft s original creations but he also adapted words or concepts from earlier writers such as Ambrose Bierce and later writers in turn used Lovecraft s concepts and expanded his fictional universe Contents 1 Great Old Ones 1 1 Table of Great Old Ones 2 Great Ones 2 1 Lobon 2 2 Nath Horthath 2 3 Oukranos 2 4 Tamash 2 5 Zo Kalar 2 6 Hagarg Ryonis 2 7 Karakal 3 Outer Gods 3 1 Abhoth 3 2 Aiueb Gnshal 3 3 Aletheia 3 4 Azathoth 3 5 Azhorra Tha 3 6 The Blackness from the Stars 3 7 The Cloud Thing 3 8 C thalpa 3 9 Cxaxukluth 3 10 Daoloth 3 11 Darkness 3 12 D endrrah 3 13 Ghroth 3 14 The Hydra 3 15 Ialdagorth 3 16 Kaajh Kaalbh 3 17 Lu Kthu 3 18 Mh ithrha 3 19 Mlandoth and Mril Thorion 3 20 Mother of Pus 3 21 The Nameless Mist 3 22 Ngyr Korath 3 23 Nyarlathotep 3 24 Nyctelios 3 25 Ny Rakath 3 26 Olkoth 3 27 Shabbith Ka 3 28 Shub Niggurath 3 29 Star Mother 3 30 Suc Naath 3 31 Tru nembra 3 32 Tulzscha 3 33 Ubbo Sathla 3 34 Uvhash 3 35 Xa ligha 3 36 Xexanoth 3 37 Ycnagnnisssz 3 38 Yhoundeh 3 39 Yibb Tstll 3 40 Yidhra 3 41 Yog Sothoth 3 42 Yomagn tho 4 Elder Gods 4 1 Bast 4 2 Hypnos 4 3 Kthanid 4 4 Nodens 4 5 Oryx 4 6 Oztalun 4 7 Paighon 4 8 Shavalyoth 4 9 Ulthar 4 10 Vorvadoss 4 11 Yad Thaddag 4 12 Yaggdytha 5 See also 6 References 7 BibliographyGreat Old Ones edit Great Old Ones redirects here For other uses see Old Ones disambiguation An ongoing theme in Lovecraft s work is the complete irrelevance of humanity in the face of the cosmic horrors that exist in the universe with Lovecraft constantly referring to the Great Old Ones a loose pantheon of ancient powerful deities from space who once ruled the Earth and who have since fallen into a deathlike sleep 3 Lovecraft named several of these deities including Cthulhu Ghatanothoa and Yig With a few exceptions Cthulhu Ghatanothoa et al this loose pantheon apparently exists outside of normal space time Although worshipped by deranged human and inhuman cults these beings are generally imprisoned or restricted in their ability to interact with most people beneath the sea inside the Earth in other dimensions and so on at least until the hapless protagonist is unwittingly exposed to them Lovecraft visited this premise in many of his stories notably his 1928 short story The Call of Cthulhu with reference to the eponymous creature However it was Derleth who applied the notion to all of the Great Old Ones The majority of these have physical forms that the human mind is incapable of processing simply viewing them renders the viewer incurably insane Sic As written by H P Lovecraft only the slumbering R lyehians are Great Old Ones The RPG Call of Cthulu is the one that originally coined Outer God and Great Old One Despite misconceptions R lyeh is not the home of Cthulu just a point of travel between the Void and the Material Realm Table of Great Old Ones edit Main article List of Great Old OnesGreat Ones editThe so called gods of the Dreamlands the Great Ones are not as powerful as the Great Old Ones and are not even as intelligent as most humans However they are protected by the Outer Gods particularly Nyarlathotep 4 While they once lived on peaks across the world they were driven off of lower mountains by the spread of humanity until they had to leave Earth entirely leaving only a mark on Mount Ngranek The Great Ones now rule from their hidden fortress of Kadath whose location in time and space is unknown As well as occasionally returning to white capped Thurai Lerion and Hatheg Kla on cloud ships under the cover of a light mist they abandoned Kadath for a brief period for the sunset city that Randolph Carter conjured in his dreams In the past the Great Ones often married human women so many human inhabitants of the Dreamlands have Great One blood in them Lobon edit Lobon also known as Lobon of the Sacred Spear is one of the Great Ones the gods of Earth that reside in Kadath He appears as an ivy crowned youth bearing a spear The Doom That Came to Sarnath H P Lovecraft s Dreamlands John Fultz s Wizards of Hyperborea Nath Horthath edit Nath Horthath is known as one of the chief gods of Celephais Celephais The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath HP Lovecraft s Dreamlands Kadath The Vision and the Journey Oukranos edit Oukranos is one of the Great Ones the gods of Earth that reside in Kadath The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath Tamash edit Tamash is a Great One dwelling on Kadath Tamash was one of the chief gods worshipped in doomed Sarnath along with Zo Kalar and Lobon The Doom That Came to Sarnath HP Lovecraft s Dreamlands Wizards of Hyperborea Zo Kalar edit Zo Kalar is a Great One dwelling on Kadath Zo Kalar was one of the chief gods worshipped in doomed Sarnath along with Tamash and Lobon HPL The Doom That Came to Sarnath It is also possibly the same being as Karakal or Karakal of Flames The Doom That Came to Sarnath Wizards of Hyperborea Hagarg Ryonis edit Hagarg Ryonis also known as The Lier in Wait is one of the Great Ones the gods of Earth that reside in Kadath He appears as a huge reptilian monster HP Lovecraft s Dreamlands Wizards of Hyperborea Karakal edit Karakal also known as Karakal of Flames is one of the Great Ones the gods of Earth that reside in Kadath He might also be the same being as Zo Kalar HP Lovecraft s Dreamlands Wizards of Hyperborea Mike Minnis The Crawler of Pnoth Outer Gods editAs it is known in the Mythos the Outer Gods are ruled by Azathoth the Blind Idiot God who holds court at the center of infinity A group of Outer Gods dance rhythmically around Azathoth in cadence to the piping of a demonic flute Among the Outer Gods present at Azathoth s court are the entities called Ultimate Gods in The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath called Lesser Outer Gods in the Call of Cthulhu RPG and possibly Shub Niggurath the Black Goat of the Woods with a Thousand Young Yog Sothoth the All in One and One in All co rules with Azathoth and exists as the incarnation of time in the cosmos yet is somehow locked outside the mundane universe Nyarlathotep the Crawling Chaos is the avatar of the Outer Gods existing as the incarnation of space and functions as an intermediary between the deities of the pantheon and their cults The only Outer God to have a true personality Nyarlathotep possesses a malign intellect and reveals a mocking contempt for his master s degree 5 Lovecraft himself never made reference to them as the Outer Gods instead calling them the Other Gods or the gods of the outer hells as noted in his short story The Other Gods Abhoth edit Main article Hyperborean Cycle Abhoth Aiueb Gnshal edit Aiueb Gnshal The Eyes Between Worlds The Child Minded God 6 is a mysterious Outer God who has his abode in a forgotten temple located somewhere in Bhutan He appears as a formless black void with seven pulsing orb like eyes and is mainly worshiped by ghouls which tribute him in a defiled cult described in the mysterious Cambuluc Scrolls of the wizard Lang Fu dating back 1295 AD Peering through the eyes of this god after a hideous and devastating ritual allows one to see straight into Azathoth s court It is rumoured that the powers of Mongolian warlord Temujin Genghis Khan was a favour of Aiueb Gnshal Aletheia edit Aletheia The End of the Darkness is a god like entity symbolizing or incarnating the truth Named after the Greek goddess of truth it manifests as a vast spiral of manifold titanic hands with a single cycloptic eye in each palm as in the Hamsa and kilometric wire like protrusions able to ensnare living beings replacing their spinal bone in puppet like fashion Introduced in Dylan Dog issue 374 7 In the plot the entity has clear features of an Outer God rather than a Great Old One as well as an appearance vaguely resembling that of Yog Sothoth and is invoked by a deranged prophet with words in Naacal or R lyehan language almost coinciding with those featured in Cthulhu s invocation with R lyeh replaced with Z lyeh Azathoth edit Azathoth sometimes referred to as the Blind Idiot God is a dreaming monster who rules the Outer Gods and created them along with many other worlds Azathoth can t understand anything in his dream hence his title Azathoth also shifts in his slumber causing reality to change Azhorra Tha edit Azhorra Tha 8 is an Outer God imprisoned on the planet Mars as it fled from Earth after the imprisonment of the Great Old Ones Its appearance is that of an insectoid to toad like squid but its shape continuously changes emitting an awful buzz The Mi Go discovered the prison of Azhorra Tha the millennia after and made everything to not reveal its location to any human being The Blackness from the Stars edit The Blackness from the Stars is an immobile blob of living sentient darkness torn from the primal fabric of the cosmos at the center of the universe It is distinguishable in darkness only as vaguely shimmering oily pitch Although intelligent it speaks no known language and ignores attempts to communicate The Cloud Thing edit A man eating cloudy mass it is an unnamed Outer God at the court of Azathoth C thalpa edit C thalpa 9 The Internal One 10 is a huge mass of living sentient magma located in the Earth s mantle She is mother of the Great Old One Shterot and five other unnamed hideous children She is also served by a race of mole like humanoid burrowers known as the Talpeurs Cxaxukluth edit Cxaxukluth Androgynous Offspring of Azathoth is one of the Seed Spawn of Azathoth grown to adulthood and monstrous proportions In appearance Cxaxukluth resembles something of a cross between Azathoth and Ubbo Sathla an amorphous writhing mass of bubbling nuclear protoplasmic gel He normally dwells alone within an unnamed dimension beyond time and space unless disturbed or summoned away Daoloth edit Main article Daoloth Darkness edit Darkness Magnum Tenebrosum The Unnamed Darkness is a mysterious entity spawned by Azathoth and is the progenitor of Shub Niggurath D endrrah edit D endrrah 9 The Divinity is a sort of blurry female entity of supernatural beauty dwelling within her obsidian palace located on Mars moon Deimos She lives in a hall composed of myriad mirrors that distort her appearance which is that of a tentacled dark abyss This Mythos entity is somewhat inspired by C L Moore s Shambleau the illusionary Martian she vampires of lust Ghroth edit Main article Ghroth The Hydra edit The Hydra dwells in an alternate dimension and appears as a vast sea of gray ooze A multitude of living heads some human and some alien sprout from the ooze sobbing and grimacing as if in great agony The Hydra s worshipers trick others into sending the god sacrifices through a pamphlet known as On the Sending Out of the Soul The last page contains a magical formula for astral projection When followed the formula always works as expected harmlessly transporting the user in astral form to whatever destination is desired However unbeknownst to the user the ritual also brings the subject into contact with the Hydra which then merges with the individual s astral self using it as a host Anyone present where the astral traveler appears is decapitated the victim s head taken to become part of the Hydra Afterwards the astral traveler is returned safely to his or her original body suffering no ill effects except perhaps receiving a terrible shock from the grisly scene so witnessed 11 Sometimes The Hydra is treated as a Great Old One 12 Ialdagorth edit Ialdagorth The Dark Devourer is both the cousin and servant of Azathoth appearing as a black shapeless malevolent mist The sight of such a fiend is unsettling if not traumatizing Kaajh Kaalbh edit Kaajh Kaalbh 13 is a lesser Outer God servitor of Azathoth but secluded in a parallel chaotic dimension where everything is unstable The god itself is constantly formed or disrupted and has no true form at all Whoever attempts summoning this entity needs the aid of a dimensional shambler and the deity may manifest in a variety of forms often as an immense lava lake or a vast pool of solidified quicksilver Lu Kthu edit Lu Kthu Birth womb of the Great Old Ones or Lew Kthew is a titanic planet sized mass of entrails and internal organs On closer examination it appears a wet warty globe covered with countless ovoid pustules and spider webbed with a network of long narrow tunnels Each pustule bears the larva of a Great Old One Mh ithrha edit An invisible wolf like fiend similar to Fenrir of Norse mythology if not coincident Mh ithrha Arch Lord of Tindalos is the lord of the Hounds of Tindalos and the most powerful Although not an actual Outer God as such its form and astounding powers defy standard classification Mh ithra s eternal battle with Yog Sothoth is said to be legendary Mlandoth and Mril Thorion edit Mlandoth is a primal entity or force not dissimilar to the Nameless Mist or Darkness although it is uncertain if it is a place conscious being or an inconceivable maelstrom of unknown forces and properties outside the perceptible cosmos It is mentioned in Uralte Schrecken as a kind of prime archetype from which all mythical god heads are derived According to the cycle surrounding these beings they are a sort of cosmic yin and yang whose meeting resulted in the creation of all things although Azathoth is usually attributed to this Their joinings routinely create and destroy matter and entities One of the beings created in this way was the inimical Outer God Ngyr Khorath Mril Thorion is an Outer God who along with Mlandoth serve as Yin and Yang Mlandoth and Mril Thorion were created by Walter C DeBill Jr but were suggested years earlier by Clark Ashton Smith Walter C DeBill Jr is an author of horror and science fiction short stories and a contributor to the Cthulhu Mythos He created the parallel Mlandoth Cycle Mother of Pus edit A Lesser Outer God composed of slime tentacles eyes and mouths The Mother of Pus was spawned through an obscene mating between a human and Shub Niggurath When summoned to Earth the Mother of Pus seeks refuge in pools of stagnant foul water The Nameless Mist edit The Nameless Mist Magnum Innominandum Nyog Sothep is a misty shapeless thing spawned by Azathoth and is the progenitor of Yog Sothoth Ngyr Korath edit Ngyr Korath The Ultimate Abomination or The Dream Death is a dark blue green mist that causes a sense of terror as it approaches Once close an eye of flame forms within He was spawned by fission of the Great Old One or the avatar of Ymnar and his nemesis is the Elder God Paighon He coincides with the entity known as the Magnum Tenebrosum Nyarlathotep edit Main article Nyarlathotep First appearing in Lovecraft s 1920 prose poem of the same name he was later mentioned in other works by Lovecraft and by other writers and in the tabletop role playing games making use of the Cthulhu Mythos Later writers describe him as one of the Outer Gods He is a shape shifter with a thousand forms most of them maddeningly horrific to humans Nyctelios edit Once an Elder God Nyctelios 14 has been punished by his peers especially Nodens for having created a race of foul servitors He has been permanently banished from the Elder Gods Olympus and imprisoned beneath the eastern Mediterranean Sea near Greece in a dark basalt built citadel named Atheron However the exiled deity is not dead but just sleeping and one day he will rise again from his abyss manifesting himself as a blue 6 metre tall cyclops like monstrosity with the bulk of his body covered entirely in crawling worms Ny Rakath edit A goat like fiendish horror with bat wings and multiple horns mentioned as the brother of Shub Niggurath Olkoth edit Olkoth God of the Celestial Arcs 15 appears as a demoniacal god like entity able to reincarnate in human bodies if the stars are right sort of a Cthulhian Antichrist 16 Olkoth may emerge in our dimension through an eyeless grotesque statue of the Virgin Mary Shabbith Ka edit Shabbith Ka appears as a shapeless roughly man sized purplish aura spitting and crackling with powerful electrical arcs A sense of power malignancy and intelligence accompanies it and persons able to gaze at its form long enough can see a rudimentary face or faces within the glowing mass Shub Niggurath edit Main article Shub Niggurath Star Mother edit The Star Mother also called The Great Mother Of All appears as a chunk of yellow green stone about the size of an infant Its shape suggests a plump huge breasted faceless female figure From it extend dozens of pencil thin root like strands It is one of the Larvae of the Other Gods and has no cult although served by zombie slaves Suc Naath edit Suc Naath is one of the mindless gods which twist and dance in the court of Azathoth It appears as a formless spinning hurricane like thing with strings of violet and golden colors across its shape constantly emitting sickening smacking and screeching noises while showing pain stricken faces across its body Suc Naath s essence is currently divided into three parts one in a comet called Aiin the other in some sort of statue located somewhere in the world while the third has been genetically passed on for eons through prehuman and now human races of Earth mostly in the Middle East The carriers of the Outer God s powers are said to have done great acts of magic and or to have been insane If these three parts are ever to be combined Suc Naath will be freed This entity is served by a small Middle Eastern cult known as the Golden Hands of Suc Naath who collect deranged intellectuals and trained assassins who wish to set Suc Naath free they may have connections to the old Hashashin cult as well Tru nembra edit Tru nembra The Angel of Music is the name given in the Malleus Monstrorum Call of Cthulhu roleplay game guide to the entity described in H P Lovecraft s novel The Music of Erich Zann It has no shape but manifests as haunting music Tulzscha edit Tulzscha The Green Flame is the name given in the Malleus Monstrorum Call of Cthulhu roleplay game guide to the entity described in H P Lovecraft s story The Festival Tulzscha appears as a blazing green ball of flame dancing with its Lesser Outer Gods at the court of Azathoth Called to our world it assumes a gaseous form penetrates the planet to the core then erupts from below as a pillar of flame It cannot move from where it emerges Ubbo Sathla edit Main article Hyperborean Cycle Ubbo Sathla Uvhash edit Uvhash The Blood Mad God of the Void appears as a colossal vampiric red mass of both tentacles and eyes It dwells within the realm of Rhylkos which matches with the red planet Mars and whoever summons Uvhash witnesses an atrocious death He has affinities with the star vampires and is rumored to have been one of mad emperor Caligula s eldritch sponsors as well There is enmity with both the Elder God Nodens and the Great Old One Gi Hoveg Xa ligha edit Xa ligha Master of the Twisted Sound or Demon of Dissonance is an entity made of maddening sound somehow similar to Tru Nembra There is some affinity with the Great Old One Hastur 17 Xexanoth edit Xexanoth is a fictional character from Clark Ashton Smith s Cthulhu Mythos work It appears only once in The Chain of Aforgomon where it is summoned by the main character Apparently Xexanoth is the bane and mortal enemy of the time god Aforgomon and because of Aforgomon likely being an avatar of the Outer God Yog Sothoth is probably an Elder or Outer God Ycnagnnisssz edit Ycnagnnisssz is a black festering amorphous mass that constantly blasts and erupts violently spewing out bits of churning lava like material She spawned the Great Old One Zstylzhemgni Yhoundeh edit Main article Yhoundeh Yibb Tstll edit A gigantic bat winged humanoid with detached eyes wearing a green robe this horrible deity sees all time and space as it slowly rotates in the centre of its clearing within the Jungle of Kled in Earth s Dreamlands Beneath its billowing cloak are a multitude of nightgaunts suckling and clutching at its breasts Having a close connection to the Great Old One Bugg Shash 18 so should Yibb Tstll be regarded as a Great Old One specifically in the Drowners group introduced by Brian Lumley parasitic alien entities which thrive by vampirizing the Great Old Ones themselves 19 though in RPG materials she is classed as an Outer God 20 Yidhra edit Yidhra The Dream Witch or Yee Tho Rah 21 usually appears as a youthful attractive earthly female though her shape may vary Yidhra has been on Earth since the first microorganisms appeared and is immortal To survive in a changing environment she gained the ability to take on the characteristics of any creature that she devoured Over time Yidhra split herself into different aspects though each part shares her consciousness Yidhra is served by devoted cults found in such widely separated places as Myanmar Chad Laos Sumer New Mexico and Texas Members of Yidhra s cult can gain immortality by merging with her though they become somewhat like Yidhra as a consequence Those who serve her are also promised plentiful harvests and healthy livestock She usually conceals her true form behind a powerful illusion appearing as a comely young woman only favored members of her cult can see her as she actually is Yog Sothoth edit nbsp Kenneth Grant suggested Lovecraft s description of Yog Sothoth as a conglomeration of malignant globes may have been inspired by the qlippoth 22 For the uniform polyhedron sometimes nicknamed yog sothoth see small retrosnub icosicosidodecahedron The cosmic entity Yog Sothoth was first mentioned in The Case of Charles Dexter Ward written 1927 first published 1941 The being is said to take the form of a conglomeration of glowing spheres It is an all knowing deity which means it knows the past present and future and its nature is different from any other class of Cthulhu Mythos deities Yog Sothoth is coterminous with all time and space yet is supposedly locked outside of the universe we inhabit Its cosmic nature is hinted at in this passage from Through the Gates of the Silver Key 1934 by Lovecraft and E Hoffmann Price It was an All in One and One in All of limitless being and self not merely a thing of one Space Time continuum but allied to the ultimate animating essence of existence s whole unbounded sweep the last utter sweep which has no confines and which outreaches fancy and mathematics alike It was perhaps that which certain secret cults of earth have whispered of as YOG SOTHOTH and which has been a deity under other names that which the crustaceans of Yuggoth worship as the Beyond One and which the vaporous brains of the spiral nebulae know by an untranslatable Sign Yog Sothoth sees all and knows all To please this deity could bring knowledge of many things However like most beings in the mythos to see it or learn too much about it is to court disaster Some authors state that the favor of the god requires a human sacrifice or eternal servitude According to the genealogy H P Lovecraft devised for his characters later published as Letter 617 in Selected Letters Yog Sothoth is the offspring of the Nameless Mists which were born of the deity Azathoth Yog Sothoth mated with Shub Niggurath to produce the twin deities Nug and Yeb while Nug sired Cthulhu through parthenogenesis 23 In Lovecraft s short story The Dunwich Horror Yog Sothoth impregnates a mortal woman Lavinia Whateley who then gives birth to twin sons the humanoid Wilbur Whateley and his more monstrous unnamed brother In Anders Fager s short story Grandmother s Journey a tribe of dog or wolf like humans analog to the ghouls of the Lovecraftian mythos is said to have sacrificed to Yog Sothoth to become different In Fager s Herr Goering s Artifact Yog Sothoth is invoked to protect a couple of witches from Father Dagon Yog Sothoth has some connection to the mysterious Old Ones mentioned in The Dunwich Horror 1929 but their nature their number and their connection to Yog Sothoth are unknown Nonetheless they are probably allied to him in some way since Wilbur Whateley the half human son of Yog Sothoth tried to summon them so that they could control Wilbur s more tainted twin and make it reproduce At the end of Lovecraft s last story The Haunter of the Dark the protagonist Robert Blake calls on Yog Sothoth to save him from the eponymous malign entity that he has let loose Yomagn tho edit Yomagn tho The Feaster from the Stars That Which Relentlessly Waits Outside is a malevolent being who wishes nothing more than the destruction of humanity for unknown reasons He waits in his home dimension in Pherkard until he is summoned to Earth When first summoned Yomagn tho appears as a small ball of fire that quickly expands to a large circle of fire with three flaming inner petals The reptilian burrowing folk the Rhygntu are known to worship this malignant deity Elder Gods editIn post Lovecraft stories the Elder Gods oppose the likes of Cthulhu Derleth attempted to retroactively group the benevolent deity Nodens in this category who acts as deus ex machina for the protagonists in both The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath and The Strange High House in the Mist Joseph S Pulver mentions in his Nightmare s Disciple 2006 a set of original Elder Gods but offers no descriptions of their true forms The story introduces entities as Adaedu Alithlai Tyy Dveahtehs Eyroix Ovytonv Urthuvn Xislanyx and Xuthyos Sihb Bz Others have a cult title as Othkkartho Sire of the Four Titans of Balance and Order which is said to be Nodens s son and Zehirete who is The Pure and Holy Womb of Light Sk tai and Eppirfon are both siblings Eppirfon was originally Cthulhu s second bride who bore him a son T ith now dead murdered by Cthulhu himself Bast edit Bast Goddess of Cats or Pasht appears as a female human with a cat s head Likely named after the ancient Egyptian goddess Bastet Hypnos edit An ambiguous deity regarded as an Elder God First appeared in Lovecraft s short story Hypnos Kthanid edit A creation of Brian Lumley Kthanid is a sibling of Cthulhu It looks the same as Cthulhu except for eye colour Nodens edit Nodens Lord of the Great Abyss appears as a human male riding a huge seashell pulled by legendary beasts In CthulhuTech supplements Nodens is said to be the avatar of the Forgotten One Savty ya Oryx edit Oryx was introduced without name in August Derleth s The Lair of the Star Spawn 1932 The name Oryx is given in the Call of Cthulhu RPG supplement The Creature Companion The Bright Flame and manifests as a giant pillar of blinding white and purple flames Although its expression is bright and blinding no one feels its heat No one can look at Oryx more than a few seconds after the first glance the eyes of anyone who looks become sore and watery Oztalun edit Oztalun Golden and Shimmering One is an Elder God introduced by James Ambuehl It is symbolized by a seven pointed star symbol which is his own Seal Paighon edit The following is another Elder God with no description Walter C DeBill Jr s Paighon an extra galactic entity which now dwells in Earth s core said to be inimical to the Outer God Ngyr Korath and his servitor Ymnar Shavalyoth edit Shavalyoth Shadowy and Shapeless One is an Elder God introduced by James Ambuehl supposed to be dark and formless Ulthar edit Ulthar or Uldar and also Ultharathotep 24 is a deity sent to Earth to hold vigil over the Great Old Ones Vorvadoss edit Vorvadoss The Flaming One Lord of the Universal Spaces The Troubler of the Sands Who Waiteth in the Outer Dark appears as a cloaked hooded being enveloped in green flames with fiery eyes He is described as a son of both the Elder God Nodens and the Great Old One Lythalia and has a twin brother Yaggdytha 25 Yad Thaddag edit Another Brian Lumley deity Has the same appearance as Yog Sothoth except its spheres are of a different color and its nature is purely benevolent Yaggdytha edit Yaggdytha The Incandescent One is twin brother of Vorvadoss manifesting as a great amorphous incandescent ball of cyan living energy spreading itself into a web of giant talons of light See also editCthulhu Mythos Cthulhu Mythos in popular cultureReferences edit Robert Bloch Heritage of Horror p 8 Robert M Price H P Lovecraft and the Cthulhu Mythos Crypt of Cthulhu 35 p 5 Daniel Harms A Brief History of the Cthulhu Mythos p viii H P Lovecraft The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath Daniel Harms The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana Azathoth pp 16 Nyarlathotep pp 218 Shub Niggurath pp 275 Tulzscha pp 304 Yog Sothoth p 346 This entity is introduced in Eyes Between the Worlds a roleplay game scenario featured in Kevin T McKinnon and Dylan K Sharpe s Call of Cthulhu RPG monograph Tales of Dread and Wonder 1 La Fine dell Oscurita The End of Darkness This entity is a creation of TOC website http www tentacules net and officially employed in Call of Cthulhu RPG supplement Cthulhu Rising a b This entity is part of Call of Cthulhu RPG French edition Translated from French Le Interieur referring to her location in the depths of Earth s mantle Henry Kuttner Hydra The Azathoth Cycle pp 50 63 Aniolowski Scott David 12 30 2006 Malleus Monstrorum Creatures Gods amp Forbidden Knowledge Call of Cthulhu Horror Roleplaying Call of Cthulhu Roleplaying Game United States Ann Arbor Michigan Chaosium pp 161 162 ISBN 9781568821795 This entity is introduced in Full de Drames a French Call of Cthulhu type role play game scenario available at http www tentacules net toc toc scen full de pdf zip This entity is introduced in Le Regard Dans L Abime a French Call of Cthulhu type role play game scenario available at Tentacules net English translation of Olkoth le Dieu des Arcs Celestes featuring in French Call of Cthulhu roleplay game scenario This entity is introduced in French Tentacules net s Call of Cthulhu scenario available at http www tentacules net index php id 5046 See James Ambuehl amp E P Berglund s Whiteout 2006 Scott D Aniolowski s Malleus Monstrorum p 131 Daniel Harms s Encyclopaedia Cthulhiana p 324 Scott D Aniolowski s Malleus Monstrorum p 241 Walter C DeBill Jr s What Lurks Among the Dunes 2006 Black Sutra p 39 Harms Daniel amp Gonce John Wisdom 1998 The Necronomicon Files York Beach Maine Red Wheel Weiser LLC p 109 ISBN 1578632692 Lovecraft H P 1967 Selected Letters of H P Lovecraft IV 1932 1934 Sauk City Wisconsin Arkham House Letter 617 ISBN 0 87054 035 1 Daniel Harms Encyclopaedia Cthulhiana p 291 James Ambuehl The Star Seed 2004 Bibliography editHarms Daniel 1998 Heritage of Horror The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana 2nd ed Oakland CA Chaosium ISBN 1 56882 119 0 Lovecraft Howard 1982 The Best of H P Lovecraft Bloodcurdling Tales of Horror and the Macabre 1st edition ed 1st ed Ballantine Books ISBN 0 345 35080 4 Price Robert M 1996 The New Lovecraft Circle New York N Y Random House ISBN 0 345 44406 X Thompson C Hall 1946 Spawn of the Green Abyss 3rd ed Robert M Price Fedogan amp Bremer 1992 ISBN 1 878252 02 X Myers Gary 1975 Xiurhn The House of the Worm Sauk City WI Arkham House ISBN 0 9789911 3 3 Pulver Joseph S 1999 Nightmare s Disciple Chaosium ISBN 1 56882 118 2 Daniel Harms John Wisdom Gonce III 2003 The Necronomicon Files The Truth Behind Lovecraft s Legend Weiser Books ISBN 978 1578632695 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cthulhu Mythos deities amp oldid 1223259578 Other Gods, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.