Albanian dragons | Bolla | In the Albanian mythology * Bolla (also known as Bullar in South Albania), is a type of serpentic dragon (or a demonic dragon-like creature) with a long, coiled, serpentine body, four legs and small wings in ancient Albanian folklore. This dragon sleeps throughout the whole year, only to wake on Saint George's Day, where its faceted silver eyes peer into the world. The Bolla does this until it sees a human. It devours the person, then closes its eyes and sleeps again.[2] Bolla was worshiped as the deity Boa by the ancestors of Albanians, Illyrians.[3] Bolla appears in the coat of arms of the House of Bua Shpata. |
Kulshedra | In its twelfth year, the bolla evolves by growing nine tongues, horns, spines and larger wings. At this time it will learn how to use its formerly hidden fire-breathing abilities, and is now called a kulshedra or kuçedra (hydra). The kuçedra causes droughts and lives off human sacrifices. Kulshedras are killed by Drangue, Albanian winged warriors with supernatural powers. Thunderstorms are conceived as battles between the drangues and the kulshedras. |
Dreq | Dreq is the dragon (draco) proper. It was demonized by Christianity and now is one of the Albanian names of the devil. |
Alpine dragons | Tatzelwurm | A lizard-like creature, often described as having the face of a cat, with a serpent-like body which may be slender or stubby, with four short legs or two forelegs.- Austrian: Tatzelwurm/ Praatzelwurm/ Linwurm/ Stutzn/ Bergstutz
- Swiss: Stollenwurm/ Tazzelwurm/ Stollwurm
- Slovenian: Daadzelwurm/ Hockwurm
- German: Daalzwurm/ Praazlwurm
- French: Arassas
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Catalan dragons | Drac | Catalan dragons are serpent-like creatures with two legs (rarely four) and, sometimes, a pair of wings. Their faces can resemble that of other animals, like lions or cattle. They have a burning breath. Their breath is also poisonous, the reason by which dracs are able to rot everything with their stench. A víbria is a female dragon. |
Chuvash dragons | Věri Şělen | Chuvash dragons are winged fire-breathing and shape shifting dragons, they originate with the ancestral Chuvash people.[4] |
Celtic dragons | Beithir | In Scottish folklore, the beithir is a large snakelike creature or dragon. Depicted with different numbers of limbs, without wings. Instead of fiery breath, Beithir was often associated with lightning. |
Y Ddraig Goch | In Welsh mythology, after a long battle (which the Welsh King Vortigern witnesses) a red dragon defeats a white dragon; Merlin explains to Vortigern that the red dragon symbolizes the Welsh, and the white dragon symbolizes the Saxons – thus foretelling the ultimate defeat of the English by the Welsh. The ddraig goch appears on the Welsh national flag. |
French dragons | Dragon | Authors tend often to present the dragon legends as symbol of Christianity's victory over paganism, represented by a harmful dragon. The French representation of dragons spans much of European history.
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Tarasque | A fearsome legendary dragon-like mythological hybrid from Provence, tamed by Saint Martha. |
Guivre | a Dragon like creature from French mythology, with a venomous bite, Guivre meaning wyvern or wyrm, or even serpent which the creatures name is derived from. |
Peluda | Also known as The Shaggy Beast, or La Velue, a legendary dragon from La Ferté-Bernard that shot deadly quills from its back. |
Germanic dragons | Wyvern | Wyverns are common in medieval heraldry. Their usual blazon is statant. Wyverns are normally shown as dragons with two legs and two wings.- Bignor Hill dragon, there is a brief mention of a dragon on Bignor Hill south of the village of Bignor near the famous Roman Villa, apparently "A large dragon had its den on Bignor Hill, and marks of its folds were to be seen on the hill". Similar legends have been told of ridges around other hills, such as at Wormhill in Derbyshire.
- Bisterne Dragon, the New Forest folktale states that the dragon lived in Burley, Hampshire, and terrorised the village of Bisterne. It was finally killed in Lyndhurst, Hampshire by Sir Maurice de Berkeley and its body turned into a hill called Boltons Bench. Though the knight survived, the trauma of the battle drove him mad, and soon after he returned to the hill to die, his corpse becoming a yew tree.
- Blue Ben of Kilve, in West Somerset is said to have once been home to a dragon called Blue Ben which the devil used as a steed. The skull of a fossilised ichthyosaur on display in the local museum is sometimes pointed out as belonging to Blue Ben.
- Green Dragon of Mordiford, of Herefordshire folklore
- Dragon of Loschy Hill, of Yorkshire folklore
- Unnamed dragon defeated by Beowulf and Wiglaf in the Anglo-Saxon epic poem Beowulf.
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Longwitton dragon | Of Northumbrian legend. |
Worm hill dragon | 700 AD the Anglo-Saxons settled and called it "Wruenele" this translates as "Wruen" worm, reptile or dragon and "ele" hill. According to local folklore the hill at Knotlow (Derbyshire) was the lair of a dragon and the terraces around it were made by the coils of its tail. Knotlow is an ancient volcanic vent and this may explain the myth. |
Knucker | A kind of water dragon, living in knuckerholes in Sussex, England. |
St. Leonard's Forest dragons | Of Sussex folklore. |
Lindworm | Lindworms are serpent-like dragons with either two or no legs. In Germanic heraldry, the lindworm looks the same as a wyvern.- Fafnir, a dragon slain by Sigurd in Nordic mythology.
- Jörmungandr, a sea serpent or dragon in Nordic mythology.
- Níðhöggr from Nordic mythology.
- Lagarfljótsormurinn, a lake monster or dragon living in the Lagarfljót, near Egilsstaðir, in Iceland.
- Stoor worm, an Orcadian sea serpent slain by the hero Assipattle.
- Lambton Worm, according to Northumbrian legend, curled around Worm Hill near Fatfield in northeast England, eating livestock and children, and was killed during the time of the Crusades by a Sir John Lambton.
- Laidly Worm of Spindleston Heugh, of Northumbrian legend.
- Worm of Linton
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Puk | Puk is a serpentine-bodied, four-footed dragon (with sometimes wings), sometimes with many heads, appearing in the legends of Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, and Germany.- Slavic - Krukis
- Germany - Puk, Puks, Puck
- Latvia - Pukis
- Lithuania - Pukys, Kaukas, Kaukas
- Estonia - Pukje, Pisuhand, Tulihand, Puuk[5]
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Greek dragons | Drákōn – δράκων | Cadmus fighting the Ismenian dragon (which guarded the sacred spring of Ares) is a legendary story from the Greek lore dating to before –550 B.C. Greek dragons commonly had a role of protecting important objects or places. For example, the Colchian dragon watched the Golden Fleece and the Nemean dragon guarded the sacred groves of Zeus.[6] The name comes from the Greek "drakeîn" meaning "to see clearly".[7]
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Agathodaemon | Agathodeamons numinous presence could be represented in art as a serpent in the classical Greek period. |
Amphisbaena | A mythological, ant-eating serpent with a head at each end. |
Hungarian dragons | Fernyiges | A black dragon that is the lord of dragons. |
Sárkány | A dragon in human form. Most are giants with more than one head, in which their strength resides. They become weaker as they lose them. In the contemporary Hungarian language, sárkány is used to mean any kind of dragon. |
Zomok | A giant winged snake. It often serves as flying mount of the garabonciás (a kind of magician). The sárkánykígyó rules over storms and bad weather. |
Italian dragons | Tarantasio | A dragon that lived in Gerundo Lake between Milan, Lodi and Cremona. |
Leonese and Asturian dragons | Cuélebre | In Asturian and Leonese mythology the Cuélebres are giant winged serpents, which live in caves where they guard treasures and kidnapped xanas. They can live for centuries and, when they grow really old, they use their wings to fly. Their breath is poisonous and they often kill cattle to eat. The Leonese term Cuelebre comes from Latin colŭbra, i.e., snake.- It is also a name for a maiden cursed into a dragon in the story of the same name.
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Lithuanian dragons | Slibinas | This dragon is more of a hydra with multiple heads, though sometimes it does appear with one head. |
Aitvaras | Aitvaras is described as a bird with the appearance of a dragon outdoors. An aitvaras will lodge itself in a house and most often refuse to leave. It brings both good and bad luck to the inhabitants of the house, providing its adopted home with stolen gold and grain, often getting the household into trouble. |
Žaltys | A household spirit in Lithuanian mythology. Part of prussian, Baltic, Latvian and Lithuanian mythology. |
Polish dragons | Wawel Dragon | Also known as Smok Wawelski, from Polish folklore, a dragon that lived in a cave on Wawel Hill on the bank of Vistula River in Kraków and was killed by a clever shoemaker's apprentice. |
Spanish / Hispanic dragons | Coca | A mythical ghost-monster, equivalent to the bogeyman, found in many Hispanic or Spanish speaking countries. The Cucuy is a male being while Cuca is a female version of the mythical monster. In Portuguese mythology coca is a female dragon that fights with Saint George. She loses her strength when Saint George cuts off one of her ears.
The Tarasca/ Coca was originally related to the Tarasque of France.[8]
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Romanian dragons | Balaur, Zburator | Balaur are very similar to the Slavic zmey: very large, with fins and multiple heads. |
Slavic dragons | Zmey, zmiy, żmij, змей, or zmaj, or drak, or smok | Similar to the conventional European dragon, but multi-headed. They breathe fire and/or leave fiery wakes as they fly. In Slavic and related tradition, dragons symbolize evil. Specific dragons are often given Turkic names (see Zilant), symbolizing the long-standing conflict between the Slavs and Turks. However, in Serbian and Bulgarian folklore, dragons are defenders of the crops in their home regions, fighting against a destructive demon Ala, whom they shoot with lightning.[9] [10] - Zirnitra, dragon-god in Wendish mythology. It was later used in the Royal Danish heraldry as a representation of Wendland
- Zmey Gorynych – The dragon of the Slavic mythology. Its name is translated as "snake son-of-mountain" (due to the fact it lives in a mountain), it has three heads, wings, and it spits fire.
- Chudo-Yudo – The dragon in Slavic mythology. Often multiheaded with any number of heads from three to ninety, it is most often an evil entity that kidnaps royal maidens or endanger the whole cities. Sometimes, he has a body of a giant human with heads of the serpent-like dragon. Most often supernaturally strong, sometimes with fiery breath, he is usually the main evil character in the story, though in some he is actually good or helping. In some versions, he is related to Koshchey the Deathless or Baba Yaga; in others, he is either of these two characters in their different form. Chudo-Yudo has a similarity to Greek Hydra, through to the fact that his head grow back (and sometimes multiply) when cut, so a lot of cunning is needed to beat him.
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Tatar dragons | Zilant | Similar to a wyvern or cockatrice, the Zilant is the symbol of the city of Kazan. Zilant itself is a Russian rendering of Tatar yılan, i.e., snake. By the Tataro-Bulgarian mythology lived in present-day Kazan and is represented on the city's coat of arms. | |
Anatolian dragons | Illuyanka | Originating from Hittite mythology, a serpentine dragon slain by Tarḫunz.[11] |
Ebren | The Turkish dragon secretes flames from its tail, and there is no mention in any legends of its having wings, or even legs. |
Arabian dragons | Al Tinnin | It contains 31 stars. It became known to Arabs through translations Greek. |
Falak | A dragon or serpent of Middle Eastern legend |
Bahamut | A gigantic cosmic winged sea serpent and later became a dragon via borrowing characteristics from Judeo-Christian Leviathan and Bahamut from modern media. |
Armenian dragons | Vishap | Related to European dragons, usually depicted as a winged snake or with a combination of elements from different animals.[12] |
Levantine dragons | Yam | The god of the sea in the Canaanite pantheon from Levantine mythology. |
Lotan | A demonic dragon reigning the waters, a servant of the sea god Yam defeated by the storm god Hadad-Baʿal in the Ugaritic Baal Cycle. From Levantine mythology and Hebrew scriptures. |
Leviathan | A creature with the form of a sea monster from Jewish belief and from Levantine mythology. |
Mesopotamian dragons | Abzu | from Babylonian mythology, sometimes considered dragons. Would have been located in now present-day Iraq and Syria. |
Marduk | Ruler of the gods and the slayer of Tiamat, then was considered the ruler of all gods. |
Mušḫuššu | A creature from ancient Mesopotamian mythology found on Ishtar Gate. A mythological hybrid, it is a scaly dragon with hind legs resembling the talons of an eagle, feline forelegs, a long neck and tail, a horned head, a snake-like tongue, and a crest. Name means "reddish snake", sometimes also translated as "fierce snake". |
Tiamat | From Babylonian mythology, sometimes considered dragons. Would have been located in now present-day Iraq and Syria. |
Kur | Kur, the first ever dragon from ancient Sumer, now present-day Southern Iraq. |
Persian dragons | Azhdaha | A mythical reptilian creature that derives from Persian folklore, a gigantic snake or lizard-like creatures sometimes associated with rains and living in the air, in the sea, or on the earth.[13] It is said that eating the heart of an Azhdaha brings courage and bravery. |
Ur | The king of the World of Darkness in Mandaeism,[14] portrayed as a dragon or snake.[15] |
Zahhak | A dragon or serpent described with three heads, and one of the heads is human.[16] However, in later text Zahhak are described a human with two snakes growing off of each shoulder. Zahhak originate in old Persian and Zoroastrian mythology. In some translated versions of the book Alif Laylah (One Thousand and One Arabian Nights) Zahhak is described as a giant python-like serpent having a hood like cobra.
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Agorghan | Persians believe they have seven heads.[19] | |
Indonesian/Malay dragons | Naga or Nogo | Derived from the Indian nāga, belief in the Indo-Malay dragon spread throughout Maritime Southeast Asia with Hinduism. The word naga is still the common Malay/Indonesian term for dragon.[21] Like its Indian counterpart, the naga is considered divine in nature, benevolent, and often associated with sacred mountains, forests, or certain parts of the sea.. In Indonesia, particularly Javanese and Balinese mythology, a naga is depicted as a crowned, giant, magical serpent, and sometimes winged.
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Khmer dragons | Neak | The Khmer dragon, or neak is derived from the Indian nāga. Like its Indian counterpart, the neak is often depicted with cobra like characteristics such as a hood. The number of heads can be as high as nine, the higher the number the higher the rank. Odd-headed dragons are symbolic of male energy while even headed dragons symbolize female energy. Traditionally, a neak is distinguished from the often serpentine Makar and Tao, the former possessing crocodilian traits and the latter possessing feline traits. A dragon princess is the heroine of the creation myth of Cambodia. |
Filipino dragons | Bakunawa | The Bakunawa, who was initially a beautiful goddess, appears as a gigantic serpent that lives in the sea. Ancient natives believed that the Bakunawa caused the moon or the sun to disappear during an eclipse. It is said that during certain times of the year, the Bakunawa arises from the ocean and proceeds to swallow the moon whole. To keep the Bakunawa from completely eating the moon, the natives would go out of their houses with pots and pans in hand and make a noise barrage in order to scare the Bakunawa into spitting out the moon back into the sky. The creature is present in Bicolano and Visayan mythologies. It is blocked by the moon goddess Haliya in Bicolano mythology, while in Visayan mythology, it is stopped by the god of death, Sidapa.[22] |
Láwû | A serpent from Kapampangan mythology which seeks to swallow the moon, and causes lunar eclipses.[23] |
Olimaw | A winged phantom dragon-serpent from Ilokano mythology. It seeks to swallow the moon.[24] |
Sawa | A huge serpent monster from Tagalog and Ati mythologies. It attempts to swallow the moon and sun. It is blocked by the god of the sun, Apolaki, and goddess of the moon, Mayari.[25] |
Samal Naga | A gigantic, trapped dragon in the milky way. It is said that it will be freed and devour all those not faithful to their respective deities in Samal mythology.[26] |
Kanlaon dragon | A mad dragon which used to live in Mount Kanlaon in Negros Island. According to Hiligaynon mythology, it was defeated by the epic heroes, Laon and Kan.[27] |
Vietnamese dragons | Rồng or Long | A dragon that is represented with a spiral tail and a long fiery sword-fin. Dragons were personified as a caring mother with her children or a pair of dragons. Much like the Chinese Dragon, The Vietnamese Dragon is a water deity responsible for bringing rain during times of drought. Images of the Dragon King have 5 claws, while images of lesser dragons have only 4 claws.- Con rit is a water dragon from Vietnamese mythology.
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Chinese dragons | Lóng (Lung2 in Wade-Giles romanization.) | The Chinese dragon, is a creature in Chinese mythology and is sometimes called the Oriental (or Eastern) dragon. Depicted as a long, snake-like creature with four legs, it has long been a potent symbol of auspicious power in Chinese folklore and art. This type of dragon, however, is sometimes depicted as a creature constructed of many animal parts and it might have the fins of fish, or the horns of a stag.- Azure Dragon a dragon that represents the east and the spring season, in Chinese mythology and one of the Four Symbols (Chinese constellation).[28]
- Dragon King, a water and weather god in Chinese mythology.
- Gonggong a destructive water god or monster in Chinese mythology
- Yellow Dragon of the Center in Chinese mythology.
- Fucanglong of the volcanic element, and god of crafting.
- Tianlong, a celestial dragon in Chinese mythology.
- Jiaolong, defined as a "scaled dragon", is a dragon in Chinese mythology.
- Panlong, the "coiled dragon", is an aquatic dragon resembling a jiaolong in Chinese mythology, an ancient motif in Chinese art, and a proper name.
- Shenlong, "god dragon" or "divine dragon", s a spiritual dragon from Chinese mythology who is the master of storms and also a bringer of rain. He is of equal significance to other creatures such as Tianlong, the celestial dragon.
- Dilong, "earth dragon", one of many types of -long dragons such as shenlong and huanglong, the "Yellow Dragon".
- Qiulong, a Chinese dragon was contradictorily defined as "horned dragon" and "hornless dragon".
- Yinglong, "responsive dragon", is a winged dragon and rain deity in ancient Chinese mythology.
- Teng, "a flying dragon", "flying-dragon snake", "soaring snake", is a flying dragon in Chinese mythology.
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Bashe or Pa snake | Bashe was a python-like Chinese mythological giant snake that ate elephants. |
Japanese dragons | Ikuchi | A water dragon youkai in Japanese mythology. |
Tatsu | Dragon of Japanese mythology, and the master of the water, like the Ryu. |
Orochi | the eight-headed serpent slain by Susanoo in Japanese mythology. |
Kuraokami | A Japanese dragon and a deity of rain and snow. |
Ryū | Similar to Chinese dragons, with three claws instead of four. They are usually benevolent, associated with water, and may grant wishes.- Ryūjin, the dragon god of the sea in Japanese mythology.
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Kuzuryū | A nine-headed dragon. |
Gozuryū | A five-headed dragon.[29] |
Hai-Riyo | The Hai-Riyo are fabulous composites from Japanese mythology. They have the body, claws, and wings of a bird with the head of a dragon. The Hai-Riyo are related to the Ying-Lung.[30]
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Uwabami | Often used to describe a giant serpent or giant python in the legends of Japan.[31] During different periods of history, they have been referred to as orochi, daija, and uwabami, but all of these refer to the same creature. |
Korean dragons | Yong (Mireu) | A sky dragon, essentially the same as the Chinese lóng. Like the lóng, yong and the other Korean dragons are associated with water and weather. In pure Korean, it is also known as 'mireu'. |
Imoogi | A hornless ocean dragon, sometimes equated with a sea serpent. Imoogi literally means, "Great Lizard". The legend of the Imoogi says that the sun god gave the Imoogi their power through a human girl, which would be transformed into the Imoogi on her 17th birthday. Legend also said that a dragon-shaped mark would be found on the shoulder of the girl, revealing that she was the Imoogi in human form. |
| A mountain dragon. In fact, the Chinese character for this word is also used for the imoogi. |
Taiwanese dragons | Han Long | A dragon that holds the power to cause droughts in Taiwanese folklore.[32] |
Tibetan dragons | Druk | From Tibetan and Himalayan Mythology, a Dragon of Thunder similar to Shenlong in China, this Orb holding serpentine creature lives in the remote areas of Mt. Everest and gives snow and rain to the Tibetan people. Some say they are protectors of Shangrila. |
Siberian dragons | Erenkyl | Erenkyl, the mythical dragon of the Yakuts (Sakha). |
Yilbegän | Related to European Turkic and Slavic dragons, multi-headed man-eating monster in the mythology of Turkic peoples of Siberia, as well as Siberian Tatars. | |
Native American dragons | Piasa Bird | A Native American dragon of Illini people. Piasa Bird is a Native American dragon depicted in one of two murals painted by Native Americans on bluffs (cliffsides) above the Mississippi River. |
Horned Serpent | One of the most common form of native American dragons, a recurring figure among many indigenous tribes of the Southeast Woodlands and other tribal groups. |
Mi-ni-wa-tu | A dragon-like horned serpent of the Lakota peoples' mythology. |
Unhcegila | A horned serpent also of Lakota mythology. |
Gaasyendietha | A lake dragon or serpent of the Great Lakes, found in Seneca mythology. |
Palulukon | Palulukon is a class of water serpent to the Hopi of North America.[33] |
European-American dragons | Thevetat | American esoteric cosmology and Theosophy of the 19th century. |
Cadborosaurus or Caddy | A sea serpent in the folklore of regions of the Pacific Coast of North America. |
Snallygaster | A tentacled dragon of appalachian Maryland, often said to be cycloptic and a hunter of black slaves. |
Mesoamerican dragons | Quetzalcoatl | From Aztec mythology, has a dragon-like aspect. |
Xiuhcoatl | A serpent from Aztec mythology. |
Kukulkan | A Mayan mythological serpent. |
Q'uq'umatz | A dragon from Mayan K'iche' mythology. |
Brazilian dragons | Boitatá | The name comes from the Old Tupi language and means "fiery serpent" (mboî tatá). Its great fiery eyes leave it almost blind by day, but by night, it can see everything. According to legend, Boi-tatá one was a big serpent which survived a great deluge. |
Paraguayan dragons | Teju Jagua | Teju Jagua from Guaraní mythology is described was a huge lizard with seven dog-like heads, entitled to a "fiery gaze", and being associated as the god of fruits, caves and (more common with the Dragons in Europe) as the protector of hidden treasures. |
Inca dragons | Amaru | Dragon or rather a Chimera of Inca Mythology. It had multiple heads consisting of either a puma's, a condor's, or a llama's head with a fox's muzzle, condor wings, snake's body, fish's tail, and coated in crocodilian or lizard scales. It was found frequently throughout Andean iconography and naming within the empire, and likely predates the rise of the Inca. |
Mapuche dragons | Ten Ten-Vilu | The serpent god of earth and fertility in traditional Mapuche religion. Part of the myth of the Legend of Trentren Vilu and Caicai Vilu. |
Coi Coi-Vilu | The serpent god of water, and the ruler of the sea in traditional Mapuche religion. Created by the god Ngenechen from his sons after a fight he had with them. | |