Topic Archive

Myths about Serpent

Explore myths connected by the recurring theme of Serpent across cultures, characters, and sacred places.

12 myths currently featured for Serpent.

Bai Suzhen and Xiaoqing Fiercely Summoning a Massive Flood to Drown Jinshan Temple

🐉 Chinese MythologyJinshan Temple, Zhenjiang, ChinaBai Suzhen (Lady White Snake) • Xiaoqing (Green Snake) • Xu Xian

This myth details the climactic battle where the white snake spirit Bai Suzhen and her sister Xiaoqing summon the Yangtze River to flood Jinshan Temple. Driven by love and desperation, they attempt to rescue Bai's husband, Xu Xian, who was imprisoned by the dogmatic monk Fahai. The event is a central tragedy in the Legend of the White Snake, illustrating the clash between spiritual law and...

Bai Suzhen Magically Creating an Umbrella to Share with Xu Xian

🐉 Chinese MythologyBroken Bridge, West Lake, HangzhouBai Suzhen • Xu Xian • Xiao Qing

Deep within the spiritual peaks of Mount Emei, a white snake achieves immortality and transforms into the beautiful woman Bai Suzhen. Seeking to experience the human world, she travels to Hangzhou's West Lake where she meets a kind scholar named Xu Xian during a sudden spring rain. By magically summoning a paper umbrella, she creates a chance to share shelter with him, sparking one of the...

Yu the Great Slaying the Venomous Nine-Headed Snake Monster Xiangliu

🐉 Chinese MythologyQilian Mountains, Gansu, ChinaYu the Great • Xiangliu

The legendary Yu the Great battles the monstrous nine-headed serpent Xiangliu, whose venom transforms fertile lands into desolate miasmas. Through strategic cunning and endurance, Yu manages to slay the beast to end the Great Flood's devastation and restore life to the earth.

Krishna Dancing on and Taming the Many-Headed Serpent Kaliya

🕉️ Hindu MythologyYamuna River, Vrindavan, IndiaKrishna • Kaliya • Nagapatnis

This myth recounts the divine pastime of Krishna, the eighth avatar of Vishnu, as he confronts the venomous serpent king Kaliya who had poisoned the Yamuna River. Through a celestial dance upon the serpent's many heads, Krishna humbles the creature and restores purity to the waters of Vrindavan. The story illustrates the victory of divine grace over ego and the importance of ecological balance.

Loki’s Binding and the Shaking of the Earth

🪓 Norse MythologyFjarðarárgljúfur Canyon, IcelandLoki • Sigyn • Odin

Following the tragic death of the god Baldur, Loki is apprehended by the Aesir and sentenced to an eternal punishment in a subterranean cavern. Bound with the iron-hard entrails of his own son and subjected to the venom of a serpent, Loki’s violent convulsions in response to the poison create the phenomenon known as earthquakes. His faithful wife Sigyn remains by his side, catching the venom...

Thor's Final Nine Steps

🪓 Norse MythologySkåne Plains, SwedenThor • Jörmungandr • Odin

During the final battle of Ragnarök, Thor faces his arch-nemesis, the World Serpent Jörmungandr. Although Thor successfully slays the beast with a mighty blow from Mjölnir, he is coated in the serpent's lethal venom. The god of thunder manages to walk exactly nine steps away from the fallen monster before the poison takes his life, marking the end of the protector of Midgard.

Jörmungandr Releasing Its Tail and Rising to Poison the Seas

🪓 Norse MythologyNorwegian SeaJörmungandr • Thor • Loki

Jörmungandr, the world-spanning Midgard Serpent, represents the boundary of the known world and the herald of its destruction. When the cataclysmic era of Ragnarök begins, this colossal beast releases its own tail, which it had held in its mouth for eons, and rises from the depths of the Norwegian Sea. As it ascends to the surface, it exhales a lethal venom called Eitr, poisoning the waters...

Loki Bound by the Aesir Beneath a Venomous Serpent

🪓 Norse MythologySurtshellir Lava Cave, IcelandLoki • Odin • Thor

Following the death of Baldur, the trickster god Loki is pursued by the Aesir and captured in the form of a salmon. As punishment for his many crimes, he is bound in a dark cavern with the entrails of his son, while a venomous serpent drips poison onto his face, causing earthquakes whenever his wife Sigyn must empty the bowl catching the venom.

Aesculapius Brought to Rome as a Serpent

🏛️ Greek MythologyTiber Island, Rome, ItalyAesculapius • Quintus Ogulnius Gallus • The Sacred Serpent

During a devastating plague in 293 BC, the Roman Senate sent an embassy to Epidaurus to bring the Greek god of healing, Asclepius, to Rome. The god manifested as a giant serpent, boarded the Roman ship, and upon arrival, swam to Tiber Island, where a temple was built in his honor. This event transformed the island into a permanent site for medicine and healing, a legacy that continues today...

Iphicles Struck by Fear at the Serpents

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Thebes, GreeceIphicles • Heracles • Alcmene

In the ancient city of Thebes, the infant twins Heracles and Iphicles faced a deadly trial when the goddess Hera sent two serpents to their cradle. While Iphicles reacted with a natural, mortal terror that defined his humanity, his half-brother Heracles displayed the divine strength of Zeus, forever separating their destinies. This pivotal moment highlighted the distinction between the mortal...