Post by Lee on Sept 27, 2014 15:52:21 GMT
DAGON (Dāʹ ḡŏn) Name of a god meaning “little fish” or “dear.” Dagon is a god associated with the Philistines. However, his origin was in Mesopotamia during the third millennium B.C. By 2000 B.C. a major temple was erected for him in the maritime city of Ugarit. Ugaritic commerce carried his cult into Canaan when Canaan was still a part of the Egyptian Empire. When the Philistines conquered the coastal region of Canaan, they adopted Dagon as their chief deity.
According to a popular etymology of Dagon, the name came from the Hebrew word for fish, and so it was postulated that he was a sea god. However, archaeological evidence does not support this view. The name probably was derived originally from the word for grain or possibly from a word for clouds. Thus Dagon was a grain god or a storm god, much like Baal. According to Ugaritic documents from the fourteenth century B.C., Dagon was the father of Baal. Little else is known about his mythology or cult.
After the Philistines subdued Samson, they credited the victory to Dagon (Judg. 16:23). However, when Samson collapsed Dagon’s temple upon himself and the Philistines, he proved the superiority of Israel’s God. Likewise, the overthrow of the idol of Dagon before the ark of the covenant demonstrated God’s predominance (1 Sam. 5:1–7). Nevertheless the Philistines later displayed the head of Saul as a trophy in the temple of Dagon (1 Chron. 10:10).
Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary