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Dandan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mythical sea monster
This article is about the mythical creature. For the Chinese footballer, seeWang Dandan. For the Sichuan noodle dish, seeDandan noodles.

Adandan ordendan is a mythical sea creature fromThe Book of One Thousand and One Nights (orArabian Nights) appearing in the tale "Abdullah the Fisherman and Abdullah the Merman", where a merman describes the dandan as the largest and fiercest fish, capable of swallowing large animals in a single mouthful. The fat of the dandan, described as "fat of oxen, yellow as gold and sweet of savour," is used like an ointment to allow humans to survive underwater.

'What is this, O my brother?' asked the fisherman. 'It is the liver-fat of a kind of fish called the dendan,' answered the merman, 'which is the biggest of all fish and the fellest of our foes. Its bulk is greater than that of any beast of the land, and were it to meet a camel or an elephant, it would swallow it at one mouthful.' 'O my brother,' asked Abdallah, 'what eateth this baleful [beast]?' 'It eateth of the beasts of the sea,' replied the merman. 'Hast thou not heard the byword, "Like the fishes of the sea: the strong eateth the weak?"'[1]

InJohn Payne's translation of the tale, a footnote adds a conjecture that the creature "appears to be a fabulous monster, partaking of the attributes of the shark and the cachalot or sperm-whale"[1]: 345  whileRichard Burton's translation likewise describes it as "a sun-fish or some such well-fanged monster of the deep". A dandan is capable of swallowing a ship and all its crew in a single gulp,[citation needed] but despite its massive size and lethality, the dandan is highly vulnerable to humans, as consuming human flesh or hearing a human cry can cause it to die instantly.[1]: 346 

While multiple translations of the tale mention the dandan, translators like Payne and Burton couldn't find the creature in dictionaries. A footnote in Burton's version adds his "conjecture that "Dandán" in Persian means a tooth".[2]

A dandan was depicted on aMagic: The Gathering card, from the game'sArabian Nights expansion set.[3]

See also

[edit]
  • Bahamut, another large fish in Arabian mythology

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"Abdallah the Fisherman and Abdallah the Merman".The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night. Translated byPayne, John. 1882–1884.
  2. ^Burton, Richard F., ed. (1885). "Abdullah the Fisherman and Abdullah the Merman".The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night. The Burton Club. p. 179, Footnote 1.Archived from the original on 2024-07-08.
  3. ^Jones, Callahan (2023-04-27)."An Ode to Magic's Most Forgetful Fish".TCGplayer Infinite.Archived from the original on 2024-07-08. Retrieved2024-07-08.
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