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#REDIRECT [[Cthulhu Mythos deities]] |
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The '''Brian Lumley deities''' are [[supernatural]] entities created for the [[Cthulhu Mythos]] universe of shared fiction by British horror writer [[Brian Lumley]]. |
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==Bugg-Shash== |
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The title monstrosity of Lumley's "The Kiss of Bugg-Shash", Bugg-Shash is a gelatinous creature with innumerable human-like eyes and mouths within its black mass. It attacks human victims by wrapping its mass around them and drowning them in slime, often attacking several individuals at once. Once dead, the victim(s) can be controlled, puppet-like, to perform a task where there is light, something which Bugg-Shash cannot endure. Bugg-Shash is a name which Lumley first mentioned in-passing in his early story "Rising with Surtsey", and later applied to the nameless creature of David Sutton's "Demoniacal" when he wrote "Kiss" as a sequel to it. |
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==Kthanid==<!-- This section is linked from [[Cthulhu]] --> |
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'''Kthanid''' is said to be the "brother" of [[Cthulhu]]. He looks like his sibling, but has golden eyes. He resides within a crystal cave on [[Elysia (Cthulhu)|Elysia]]. It is said that he is as ''good'' as his brother is ''evil''. He bears a great hatred for the old ones for they had killed his family, while he lay sleeping. |
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It first appeared in Lumley's 1975 novel ''The Transition of Titus Crow'', and appeared again in his next novel ''The Clock of Dreams'' (1978). |
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==Mnomquah==<!-- This section is linked from [[Great Old One]] --> |
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'''Mnomquah''', the ''Lord of the Black Lake'', is first referenced in Lumley's short story "The Sorcerer's Book" ([[1984 in literature|1984]]). Mnomquah is trapped inside the [[Dreamlands]] moon, though how he became imprisoned there is not known. He appears as a vast [[reptile]] with a crown of snaking feelers, and empty sockets in place of eyes (though they still serve as sensory organs). His mate is the repulsive [[#Oorn|Oorn]]. It is said that when the other Great Old Ones return to lay waste to the world, Mnomquah will be reunited with his bride. |
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Mnomquah is called the Lord of the Black Lake because he rules over the Lake of Ubboth beneath the surface of the moon. |
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==Oorn==<!-- This section is linked from [[Great Old One]] --> |
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'''Oorn''' is mentioned in the book ''Mad Moon of Dreams'' ([[1987 in literature|1987]]) by [[Brian Lumley]]. She is the wife of the reptilian [[#Mnomquah|Mnomquah]]. She has the form of a huge tentacled [[mollusk]], with snaking appendages that can spew digestive fluid on things she wishes to eat. Like her husband, her only true worshippers are the [[Men of Leng]] and the [[Moon-beast]]s. A temple devoted to Oorn and Mnomquah is near [[Sarkomand]] in the [[Dreamlands]]. |
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==Shudde M'ell==<!-- This section is linked from [[Great Old One]] --> |
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'''Shudde M'ell''' is the creation of [[Brian Lumley]] and is featured in his [[novel]] ''The Burrowers Beneath'' ([[1974 in literature|1974]]). |
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Shudde M'ell is "a great gray thing, a mile long, chanting and exuding strange acids... charging through the depths of the earth at a fantastic speed, in a dreadful fury... melting basaltic rocks like butter under a blowtorch." <ref>Lumley, ''The Burrowers Beneath''. {{page needed|date=October 2014}} ISBN 9781466818378 </ref> Shudde M'ell is the supreme regent of the [[Chthonian (Cthulhu Mythos)|chthonians]], a horrifying race of burrowing creatures, and is probably the largest and most malignant member of his kind. According to some legends, he was once imprisoned beneath ''G'harne'', but now is free to wander the earth with his kin. |
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==Summanus==<!-- This section is linked from [[Great Old One]] --> |
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'''Summanus''' (''Lord of Hell'', ''Monarch of the Night'', ''The Terror that Walketh in Darkness'') is the creation of [[Brian Lumley]] — who based the Great Old One on the [[Summanus|Roman deity of the same name]] — and first appeared in Lumley's [[short story]] "What Dark God?" ([[1975 in literature|1975]]). The god appears as a mouthless human with whitish tentacles hidden under his clothing. He can use these tentacles to siphon blood from his victims. |
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Summanus had a following in [[Ancient Rome|Roman times]], but if he is worshiped today, his cult is even more secretive. The rites needed for the proper worship of Summanus are found in the ''Tuscan Rituals''. |
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==Yad-Thaddag== |
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Yad-Thaddag is possibly the Elder God equivalent of the [[Outer God]] [[Yog-Sothoth]]. This being has the same appearance as Yog-Sothoth, except its spheres are of a different color and its nature is purely benevolent. It appears in Lumley's 1989 novel ''Elysia''. |
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==Yibb-Tstll==<!-- This section is linked from [[Great Old One]] --> |
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'''Yibb-Tstll''' (''The Drowner'') is an obscure god, said to watch at the center of all time as the universe revolves. Because of this insight, only [[Yog-Sothoth]] is said to be wiser. Its blood, the Black, is a weapon which takes the form of black snowflakes that stick to and smother a victim. This is stated in [[The Caller of the Black]]. The god's touch causes an instant change in the person affected—this change is usually fatal but occasionally brings some benefit. |
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Yibb-Tstll is sometimes described as an immobile, dark, tentacled entity with a pulpy, alien head, detached eyes, and large bat wings under which countless [[Nightgaunt]]s suck black milk from its innumerable breasts. In [[Brian Lumley]]'s short story "Rising with Surtsey" ([[1971 in literature|1971]]), the narrator proclaims: "... I wanted to bound, to float in my madness through eldritch depths of unhallowed black blood. I wanted to cling to the writhing breasts of Yibb-Tstll. Insane....". Yibb-Tstll makes its major appearance in [[The Horror at Oakdeene]]. |
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Having a close connection to the Great Old One [[#Bugg-Shash|Bugg-Shash]],<ref>Aniolowski's, ''Malleus Monstrorum'', p. 131. ISBN 9781568821795</ref> 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 vampyrizing the Great Old Ones themselves<ref>Harms', ''Encyclopaedia Cthulhiana'', p. 324. ISBN 9781568821696</ref> - though in RPG materials she is classed as "Outer God".<ref>Aniolowski's, ''Malleus Monstrorum'', p. 241. ISBN 9781568821795</ref> |
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==See also== |
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*[[Elements of the Cthulhu Mythos]] |
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==References== |
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{{reflist}} |
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[[Category:Cthulhu Mythos deities|Lumley deities, Brian]] |
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[[Category:Lists of fictional deities]] |
Latest revision as of 14:00, 30 June 2020
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