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{{Inmythos}} {{Template:Redlink}}
 
 
{{Infobox character
 
{{Infobox character
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|title = Nyarlathotep, The Crawling Chaos, Chaos King
 
|image = Screenshot 20171020-130303.jpg
 
|image = Screenshot 20171020-130303.jpg
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|alias = The Crawling Chaos
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|caption = '''Nyarlathotep'''
 
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*Ahtu
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|alias = The Crawling Chaos, Ahtu, The Black Man, The Black Pharaoh, The Black Wind, The Bloated Woman, the Crawling Mist, The Dark Demon, The Black Demon, The Dark One, The Dweller in Darkness, The Faceless God, The Floating Horror, The Haunter of the Dark, Face Eater, Father of All Bats, Dark Wing, Sand Bat, Fly-The-Light, the Howler in the Dark, the God of the Bloody Tongue, or the Bloody Tongue, L'rog'g (also Lrogg), Mr Tiddles, the Bat God of L'gy'hx, Messenger of the Old Ones (also Messenger of the Great Old Ones), Mr. Skin, Randall Flagg, Shugoran, Thing in the Yellow Mask, The White Man, The Skinless One, The Masked Messenger
 
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*The God of a Thousand Forms
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*The Black Man
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*The Black Pharaoh
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*The Black Wind
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*The Bloated Woman
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*the Crawling Mist
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*The Dark Demon
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*The Black Demon
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*The Dark One
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*The Dweller in Darkness
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*The Faceless God
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*The Floating Horror
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*The Haunter of the Dark
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*Face Eater
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*Father of All Bats
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*Dark Wing
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*Sand Bat
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*Fly-The-Light
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*The Howler in the Dark
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*The God of the Bloody Tongue, or the Bloody Tongue
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*L'rog'g (also Lrogg)
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*Mr. Tiddles
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*The Bat God of L'gy'hx
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*Mr. Skin
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*Randall Flagg
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*Gardner Bose
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*Mr. Blackman
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*Sauron
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*Shugoran
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*Thing in the Yellow Mask
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*The White Man
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*The Skinless One
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*The Masked Messenger
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*The Moon Presence
 
|born = From Azathoth
 
|born = From Azathoth
 
|origin = Outer Space
 
|origin = Outer Space
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|powers = *Shapeshifting
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|first = "[[Nyarlathotep (short story)|Nyarlathotep]]"
 
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*Immortality
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|last = |created by = [[H. P. Lovecraft]]
 
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*Avatar Manipulation
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|title = Nyarlathotep, The Crawling Chaos, Chaos King
 
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*Madness Manipulation
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|powers = Shapeshifting, Immortality, Avatar Manipulation, Madness Manipulation, Superhuman Strength, Invulnerability, Capable of freely traversing every plane of existence
 
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*Superhuman Strength
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|relatives =
 
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*Invulnerability
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[[Azathoth]] (Father)<br>[[The Nameless Mist]] (sibling)<br>The Darkness (sibling)
 
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*Capable of freely traversing every plane of existence
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[[Ugga-Naach]] (Son)
 
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|relatives = {{HPL}}: [[Azathoth]] <small>(father)</small><br>
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|spouse = [[Yhoundeh]]
 
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{{HPL}}: [[The Nameless Mist]] (sibling)<br>
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{{HPL}}: [[The Darkness]] (sibling)
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|offspring = {{HPL}}: A Million Favored Ones <small>(children)</small><br>
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{{EXP}}: [[Ugga-Naach]] (son)<br>
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{{EXP}}: [[Lilith]] (daughter)
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|spouse = {{CIRCLE}}: [[Yhoundeh]]
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|affiliations = Outer Gods
 
|race = [[Outer God]]
 
|race = [[Outer God]]
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|first = {{HPL}}: "[[Nyarlathotep (short story)|Nyarlathotep]]"
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|affiliations = Outer Gods}}
 
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|appearances = *{{HPL}}: "[[Nyarlathotep (short story)|Nyarlathotep]]"
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*{{HPL}}: "[[The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath]]"
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*{{HPL}}: "[[Fungi from Yuggoth]]"
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*{{HPL}}: "[[The Dreams in the Witch-House]]"
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|created by = [[H. P. Lovecraft]]
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}}
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{{alt|''This is an article about the character. For the story in which it first appeared, see [[Nyarlathotep (short story)]].''}}
 
{{Quote|And where Nyarlathotep went, rest vanished, for the small hours were rent with the screams of nightmare.|H.P. Lovecraft about Nyarlathotep}}
 
{{Quote|And where Nyarlathotep went, rest vanished, for the small hours were rent with the screams of nightmare.|H.P. Lovecraft about Nyarlathotep}}
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{{Lovecraftcircle}} {{ImageLink}}
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'''''Nyarlathotep''''', known to many by his epithet '''''The Crawling Chaos''''', is an [[Outer God]] in the [[Cthulhu Mythos]]. He is the spawn of [[Azathoth (deity)|Azathoth]]. He is the creation of [[H. P. Lovecraft]] and first appeared in his prose poem "[[Nyarlathotep (poem)|Nyarlathotep]]" (1920). Β 
 
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'''Nyarlathotep''', known to many by his epithet '''The Crawling Chaos''', is an [[Outer God]] in the [[Cthulhu Mythos]]. He is the spawn of [[Azathoth]]. He is the creation of [[H. P. Lovecraft]] and first appeared in his prose poem "[[Nyarlathotep (poem)|Nyarlathotep]]" (1920).
   
 
NyarlathotepΒ appears in numerous subsequent stories by Lovecraft, and is also featured in the works of other authors, as well as in role-playing games based on the Cthulhu Mythos.Β 
 
NyarlathotepΒ appears in numerous subsequent stories by Lovecraft, and is also featured in the works of other authors, as well as in role-playing games based on the Cthulhu Mythos.Β 
   
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== Description ==
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==Description==
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Nyarlathotep differs from the other deities in the Mythos in a number of ways. Most of the Outer Gods are exiled to the stars, likeΒ [[Yog-Sothoth]] and [[Azathoth]], and most of the [[Great Old One]]s are sleeping and dreaming likeΒ [[Cthulhu]]; Nyarlathotep, however, is active and frequently walks the Earth in the guise of a human being, usually a tall, slim, joyous man. He has "a thousand" other forms and manifestations, most reputed to be quite horrific and sanity-blasting.
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{{quote|-a tall, lean man of dead black colouration but without the slightest sign of negroid features: wholly devoid of either hair or beard, and wearing as his only garment a shapeless robe of some heavy black fabric. His feet were indistinguishable because of the table and bench, but he must have been shod, since there was a clicking whenever he changed position. The man did not speak, and bore no trace of expression on his small, regular features. He merely pointed to a book of prodigious size which lay open on the table....|{{HPL}}|"The Dreams in the Witch-House"}}Nyarlathotep differs from the other deities in the Mythos in a number of ways. Most of the Outer Gods are exiled to the stars, likeΒ [[Yog-Sothoth]] and [[Azathoth]], and most of the [[Great Old One]]s are sleeping and dreaming likeΒ [[Cthulhu]]; Nyarlathotep, however, is active and frequently walks the Earth in the guise of a human being, usually a tall, slim, joyous man. He has "a thousand" other forms and manifestations, most reputed to be quite horrific and sanity-blasting.
   
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Most of the Outer Gods have their own cults serving them; Nyarlathotep seems to serve these cults and take care of their affairs in the other Outer Gods' absence. Most Outer Gods use strange alien languages, while Nyarlathotep uses human languages and can easily pass for a human being if he chooses to do so. Finally, most of them are all-powerful yet evidently without clear purpose or agenda, yet Nyarlathotep seems to be deliberately deceptive and manipulative, and even usesΒ propagandaΒ to achieve his goals. In this regard, he is probably the most human-like among the Outer Gods.
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Most of the Outer Gods have their own cults serving them; Nyarlathotep seems to serve as He serves several cults and takes care of their affairs in the other Outer Gods' absence. Most Outer Gods use strange alien languages, while Nyarlathotep uses human languages and can easily pass for a human being if he chooses to do so. Finally, most of them are all-powerful yet evidently without clear purpose or agenda, yet Nyarlathotep seems to be deliberately deceptive and manipulative, and even usesΒ propagandaΒ to achieve his goals. In this regard, he is probably the most human-like among the Outer Gods.
   
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Nyarlathotep enacts the will of the Outer Gods, and is their "messenger, heart and soul"; he is also the servant ofΒ [[Azathoth]], whose fitful, spastic wishes he immediately fulfills. Unlike the other Outer Gods, spreading madness is more important and enjoyable than death and destruction to Nyarlathotep. It is suggested by some that he will destroy the human race and possibly the earth as well.<ref>Harms, "Nyarlathotep", ''The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana'', pp. 218&ndash;9.</ref>
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Nyarlathotep enacts the will of the Outer Gods, and is their "messenger, heart and soul", "the immemorial figure of the deputy or messenger of hidden and terrible powers" He is also the servant ofΒ [[Azathoth]], whose fitful, spastic wishes he immediately fulfills. Unlike the other Outer Gods, spreading madness is more important and enjoyable than death and destruction to Nyarlathotep. It is suggested by some that he will destroy the human race and possibly the earth as well. ({{EXP}}: "Nyarlathotep", ''The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana'' [Harms])
   
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==In the Mythos==
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== Nyarlathotep in Lovecraft ==
 
 
Nyarlathotep's first appearance is in the eponymous short story by Lovecraft (1920), in which he is described as a "tall, swarthy man" who resembles an Egyptian Pharaoh. In this story he wanders the earth, gathering legions of followers through his demonstrations of strange and seemingly magical instruments, the narrator of the story among them. These followers lose awareness of the world around them, and through the narrator's increasingly unreliable accounts the reader gets a sense of the world's utter collapse. The story ends with the narrator as part of an army of servants for Nyarlathotep.
 
Nyarlathotep's first appearance is in the eponymous short story by Lovecraft (1920), in which he is described as a "tall, swarthy man" who resembles an Egyptian Pharaoh. In this story he wanders the earth, gathering legions of followers through his demonstrations of strange and seemingly magical instruments, the narrator of the story among them. These followers lose awareness of the world around them, and through the narrator's increasingly unreliable accounts the reader gets a sense of the world's utter collapse. The story ends with the narrator as part of an army of servants for Nyarlathotep.
   
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Nyarlathotep (usually referred to in conjunction with the subnomen, "The Crawling Chaos") subsequently appears as a major character in ''[[The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath|The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath]]'' (1926/27), in which he again manifests in the form of an Egyptian Pharaoh when he confronts protagonist [[Randolph Carter]]. He is here depicted as an avatar of the Other Gods, executing their will on Earth and in Dreamland.
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Nyarlathotep, again manifested in the form of an Egyptian Pharaoh when he confronted [[Randolph Carter]] as an avatar of the Other Gods, executing their will on Earth and in Dreamland ({{HPL}}: ''[[The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath]]'').
   
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Nyarlathotep meets [[Walter Gilman]] and witch [[Keziah Mason]] (who has made a pact with the entity) in the form of "the 'Black Man' of the witch-cult," a black-skinned avatar with the appearance of the Christian Devil (His footprints suggest cloven hooves instead of feet) associated with New England witchcraft lore ({{HPL}}: "[[The Dreams in the Witch-House]]").
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The twenty-first sonnet of Lovecraft's poem-cycle ''[[Fungi from Yuggoth]]'' (1929/30) &ndash; not to be confused with the entities identified as the fungi from Yuggoth, or [[Mi-Go]] in "[[The Whisperer in Darkness]]" &ndash; is dedicated to Nyarlathotep, and is substantially a poetic retelling of the short story "Nyarlathotep."
 
   
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The being of pure darkness dwelling, possessing a "three-lobed eye", in the steeple of the [[Church of Starry Wisdom|Starry Wisdom]] sect's church is identified as another form, or manifestation of, Nyarlathotep ({{HPL}}: "[[The Haunter of the Dark]]").
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In "[[The Dreams in the Witch-House]]" (1933), Nyarlathotep appears to [[Walter Gilman]] and witch [[Keziah Mason]] (who has made a pact with the entity) in the form of "the 'Black Man' of the witch-cult," a black-skinned avatar with the appearance of the Christian Devil associated with New England witchcraft lore.
 
   
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Nyarlathotep's name is spoken frequently by the [[Mi-Go|fungi]]Β from [[Yuggoth]] in a reverential or ritual sense, indicating that they worship or honor the entity ({{HPL}}: "[[The Whisperer in Darkness]]").
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Finally, in "[[The Haunter of the Dark]]" (1936), the being of pure darkness dwelling, possessing a "three-lobed eye", in the steeple of the [[Church of Starry Wisdom|Starry Wisdom]] sect's church is identified as another form, or manifestation of, Nyarlathotep.
 
   
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According to certain sources he is currently living or imprisonedΒ on the planet [[Abbith]]Β ({{EXP}}: [[The Horror in the Gallery]]).
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Though Nyarlathotep appears as a character in only four stories and one sonnet (still more than any other [[Great Old One]]s or [[Outer Gods]]), his name is mentioned frequently in numerous others. For example, in "[[The Whisperer in Darkness]]" Nyarlathotep's name is spoken frequently by the fungi from Yuggoth in a reverential or ritual sense, indicating that they worship or honor the entity.
 
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Despite similarities in theme and name, Nyarlathotep does not feature at all in Lovecraft's story "[[The Crawling Chaos]]," (1920/21) an apocalyptic narrative written in collaboration with Elizabeth Berkeley.
 
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==In the Lovecraft Circle Myth Cycles==
 
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{{Lovecraftcircle}}
 
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In the [[Clark Ashton Smith]]'s [[Hyperborean cycle]], he is said to be spouse of the Elk-Goddess [[Yhoundeh]]
 
   
 
==Inspiration==
 
==Inspiration==
 
In a 1921 letter to Reinhardt Kleiner, Lovecraft related the dream he had had &mdash; described as "the most realistic and horrible [nightmare] I have experienced since the age of ten" &mdash; that served as the basis for his prose poem "Nyarlathotep". In the dream, he received a letter from his friend Samuel Loveman that read:
 
In a 1921 letter to Reinhardt Kleiner, Lovecraft related the dream he had had &mdash; described as "the most realistic and horrible [nightmare] I have experienced since the age of ten" &mdash; that served as the basis for his prose poem "Nyarlathotep". In the dream, he received a letter from his friend Samuel Loveman that read:
   
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:''Don't fail to see Nyarlathotep if he comes to Providence. He is horrible &mdash; horrible beyond anything you can imagine &mdash; but wonderful. He haunts one for hours afterward. I am still shuddering at what he showed.''
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{{quote|Don't fail to see Nyarlathotep if he comes to Providence. He is horrible &mdash; horrible beyond anything you can imagine &mdash; but wonderful. He haunts one for hours afterward. I am still shuddering at what he showed.}}
   
 
Lovecraft commented:
 
Lovecraft commented:
   
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:''I had never heard the name NYARLATHOTEP before, but seemed to understand the allusion. Nyarlathotep was a kind of itinerant showman or lecturer who held forth in public halls and aroused widespread fear and discussion with his exhibitions. These exhibitions consisted of two parts &ndash; first, a horrible &ndash; possibly prophetic &ndash; cinema reel; and later some extraordinary experiments with scientific and electrical apparatus. As I received the letter, I seemed to recall that Nyarlathotep was already in Providence.... I seemed to remember that persons had whispered to me in awe of his horrors, and warned me not to go near him. But Loveman's dream letter decided me.... As I left the house I saw throngs of men plodding through the night, all whispering affrightedly and bound in one direction. I fell in with them, afraid yet eager to see and hear the great, the obscure, the unutterable Nyarlathotep.<ref>H. P. Lovecraft, letter to Reinhardt Kleiner, December 21, 1921; cited in Lin Carter, ''Lovecraft: A Look Behind the Cthulhu Mythos'', pp. 18-19.</ref>''
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{{quote|I had never heard the name NYARLATHOTEP before, but seemed to understand the allusion. Nyarlathotep was a kind of itinerant showman or lecturer who held forth in public halls and aroused widespread fear and discussion with his exhibitions. These exhibitions consisted of two parts &ndash; first, a horrible &ndash; possibly prophetic &ndash; cinema reel; and later some extraordinary experiments with scientific and electrical apparatus. As I received the letter, I seemed to recall that Nyarlathotep was already in Providence.... I seemed to remember that persons had whispered to me in awe of his horrors, and warned me not to go near him. But Loveman's dream letter decided me.... As I left the house I saw throngs of men plodding through the night, all whispering affrightedly and bound in one direction. I fell in with them, afraid yet eager to see and hear the great, the obscure, the unutterable Nyarlathotep.|{{HPL}}|''Selected Letters'' 1.094}}
   
 
Will Murray suggests that this dream image of Nyarlathotep may have been inspired by the inventor [[Nikola Tesla]], whose well-attended lectures did involve extraordinary experiments with electrical apparatus, and whom some saw as a sinister figure.<ref>Will Murray, "Behind the Mask of Nyarlathotep", ''Lovecraft Studies'' No. 25 (Fall 1991); cited in Robert M. Price, ''The Nyarlathotep Cycle'', p. 9.</ref>
 
Will Murray suggests that this dream image of Nyarlathotep may have been inspired by the inventor [[Nikola Tesla]], whose well-attended lectures did involve extraordinary experiments with electrical apparatus, and whom some saw as a sinister figure.<ref>Will Murray, "Behind the Mask of Nyarlathotep", ''Lovecraft Studies'' No. 25 (Fall 1991); cited in Robert M. Price, ''The Nyarlathotep Cycle'', p. 9.</ref>
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==Quotations==
 
==Quotations==
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:"''And it was then that Nyarlathotep came out of Egypt. Who he was, none could tell, but he was of the old native blood and looked like a Pharaoh. The fellahin knelt when they saw him, yet could not say why. He said he had risen up out of the blackness of twenty-seven centuries, and that he had heard messages from places not on this planet. Into the lands of civilisation came Nyarlathotep, swarthy, slender, and sinister, always buying strange instruments of glass and metal and combining them into instruments yet stranger. He spoke much of the sciences &ndash; of electricity and psychology &ndash;and gave exhibitions of power which sent his spectators away speechless, yet which swelled his fame to exceeding magnitude. Men advised one another to see Nyarlathotep, and shuddered. And where Nyarlathotep went, rest vanished; for the small hours were rent with the screams of a nightmare.''
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{{quote|"And it was then that Nyarlathotep came out of Egypt. Who he was, none could tell, but he was of the old native blood and looked like a Pharaoh. The fellahin knelt when they saw him, yet could not say why. He said he had risen up out of the blackness of twenty-seven centuries, and that he had heard messages from places not on this planet. Into the lands of civilisation came Nyarlathotep, swarthy, slender, and sinister, always buying strange instruments of glass and metal and combining them into instruments yet stranger. He spoke much of the sciences &ndash; of electricity and psychology &ndash;and gave exhibitions of power which sent his spectators away speechless, yet which swelled his fame to exceeding magnitude. Men advised one another to see Nyarlathotep, and shuddered. And where Nyarlathotep went, rest vanished; for the small hours were rent with the screams of a nightmare.|{{HPL}}|[[Nyarlathotep (short story)|Nyarlathotep]]}}
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{{quote|And through this revolting graveyard of the universe the muffled, maddening beating of drums, and thin, monotonous whine of blasphemous flutes from inconceivable, unlighted chambers beyond Time; the detestable pounding and piping whereunto dance slowly, awkwardly, and absurdly the gigantic, tenebrous ultimate gods β€” the blind, voiceless, mindless gargoyles whose soul is Nyarlathotep.|{{HPL}}|[[Nyarlathotep (short story)|Nyarlathotep]]}}
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::&mdash;H. P. Lovecraft, ''[[Nyarlathotep (short story)|Nyarlathotep]]''
 
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{{quote|It was the eldritch scurrying of those fiend-born rats, always questing for new horrors, and determined to lead me on even unto those grinning caverns of earth's centre where Nyarlathotep, the mad faceless god, howls blindly to the piping of two amorphous idiot flute-players.|{{HPL}}|[[The Rats in the Walls]]}}
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{{quote|What his fate would be, he did not know; but he felt that he was held for the coming of that frightful soul and messenger of infinity's Other Gods, the crawling chaos Nyarlathotep.|{{HPL}}|[[The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath]]}}
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:''And through this revolting graveyard of the universe the muffled, maddening beating of drums, and thin, monotonous whine of blasphemous flutes from inconceivable, unlighted chambers beyond Time; the detestable pounding and piping whereunto dance slowly, awkwardly, and absurdly the gigantic, tenebrous ultimate gods β€” the blind, voiceless, mindless gargoyles whose soul is Nyarlathotep.''
 
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{{quote|There was the immemorial figure of the deputy or messenger of hidden and terrible powers &ndash; the "Black Man" of the witch cult, and the "Nyarlathotep" of the Necronomicon.|{{HPL}}|[[The Dreams in the Witch-House]]}}
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::&mdash;H. P. Lovecraft, ''[[Nyarlathotep (short story)|Nyarlathotep]]''
 
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:''It was the eldritch scurrying of those fiend-born rats, always questing for new horrors, and determined to lead me on even unto those grinning caverns of earth's centre where Nyarlathotep, the mad faceless god, howls blindly to the piping of two amorphous idiot flute-players.''
 
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::&mdash;H. P. Lovecraft, ''[[The Rats in the Walls]]''
 
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:''What his fate would be, he did not know; but he felt that he was held for the coming of that frightful soul and messenger of infinity's Other Gods, the crawling chaos Nyarlathotep.''
 
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::&mdash;H. P. Lovecraft, ''[[The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath]]'<nowiki/>''
 
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:''There was the immemorial figure of the deputy or messenger of hidden and terrible powers &ndash; the "Black Man" of the witch cult, and the "Nyarlathotep" of the Necronomicon.''
 
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::&mdash;H. P. Lovecraft, ''[[The Dreams in the Witch-House]]''
 
   
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==''The Nyarlathotep Cycle''==
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==The Nyarlathotep Cycle==
 
{{Expandedmythos}}
 
{{Expandedmythos}}
 
In 1996, [[Chaosium]] published ''[[The Nyarlathotep Cycle]]'', a Cthulhu Mythos anthology focusing on works referring to or inspired by the entity Nyarlathotep. Edited by Lovecraft scholar [[Robert M. Price]], the book includes an introduction by Price tracing the roots and development of the God of a Thousand Forms. The contents include:
 
In 1996, [[Chaosium]] published ''[[The Nyarlathotep Cycle]]'', a Cthulhu Mythos anthology focusing on works referring to or inspired by the entity Nyarlathotep. Edited by Lovecraft scholar [[Robert M. Price]], the book includes an introduction by Price tracing the roots and development of the God of a Thousand Forms. The contents include:
   
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*"Alhireth-Hotep the Prophet" by Lord Dunsany
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*{{ADJ}}: "Alhireth-Hotep the Prophet" by Lord Dunsany
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*"The Sorrow of Search" by Lord Dunsany
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*{{ADJ}}: ""The Sorrow of Search" by Lord Dunsany
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*"Nyarlathotep" by H. P. Lovecraft
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*{{HPL}}: "Nyarlathotep"
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*"The Second Coming" (poem) by [[William Butler Yeats]]
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*{{ADJ}}: "The Second Coming" (poem) by [[William Butler Yeats]]
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*"Silence Falls on Mecca’s Walls" (poem) by [[Robert E. Howard]]
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*{{ADJ}}: "Silence Falls on Mecca's Walls" (poem) by [[Robert E. Howard]]
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*"Nyarlathotep" (poem) by H. P. Lovecraft
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*{{HPL}}: "Nyarlathotep" (poem)
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*"The Dreams in the Witch-House" by H. P. Lovecraft
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*{{HPL}}: "The Dreams in the Witch-House"
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*"The Haunter of the Dark" by H. P. Lovecraft
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*{{HPL}}: "The Haunter of the Dark"
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*"The Dweller in Darkness" by [[August Derleth]]
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*{{AWD}}: "The Dweller in Darkness" by [[August William Derleth]]
 
*"The Titan in the Crypt" by [[J. G. Warner]]
 
*"The Titan in the Crypt" by [[J. G. Warner]]
 
*"Fane of the Black Pharaoh" by [[Robert Bloch]]
 
*"Fane of the Black Pharaoh" by [[Robert Bloch]]
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*"The Temple of Nephren-Ka" by [[Philip J. Rahman]] & [[Glenn A. Rahman]]
 
*"The Temple of Nephren-Ka" by [[Philip J. Rahman]] & [[Glenn A. Rahman]]
 
*"The Papyrus of Nephren-Ka" by [[Robert C. Culp]]
 
*"The Papyrus of Nephren-Ka" by [[Robert C. Culp]]
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*"The Snout in the Alcove" by [[Gary Myers (writer)|Gary Myers]]
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*"The Snout in the Alcove" by [[Gary Myers]]
 
*"The Contemplative Sphinx" (poem) by [[Richard Tierney]]
 
*"The Contemplative Sphinx" (poem) by [[Richard Tierney]]
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*"Ech-Pi-El’s Γ†gypt" (poems) by [[Ann K. Schwader]]
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*"Ech-Pi-El's Γ†gypt" (poems) by [[Ann K. Schwader]]
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==Lovely Lovecraft==
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In Sara Bardi's webcomic [[Lovely Lovecraft]], Nyarlathotep carries many masks, but usually appears as a tall human with handsome features, and hair styled like a pair of lightning bolts. Some time before the comic started, he and the other Outer Gods were trapped on earth in the forms of mortals. While Yog-Sothoth and Shub-Niggurath are content to wait for the stars to align, Nyarlathotep is more impatient, and tortures Albert Wilmarth for information on the Miscatonic University's copy of the Necronomicon. He gains access to the school under the guise of Mister Noyes, an English literature teacher in Wilmarth's absence. Before he can steal the Necronomicon, however, he discovers that it's been tore apart, and only the second half is in the University's possession. He considers going into the grave where the first half was lost, when foul magic stream from the book, giving him back a fraction of his power. Using it, he releases a captive shoggoth and sends it after the first half, held by 12-year old Howard Phillips Lovecraft. Before Nyarlathotep can use the complete necronomicon, he is temporarily incapacitated by the Night Gaunt Phil'Gwanach, who pushes an amulet bearing the Elder Sign into his chest.
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He makes a reference to having made a deal with the Mi-Go at one point, possibly for information on Prof. Wilmarth.
  +
  +
Years later, he lured the adult Howard to one of his gatherings of aspiring cultists. When Lovecraft fearfully asked him if the stars were right, he responds that they are, but not for him and his people; For Lovecraft. As a horde of creatures dressed like the King in Yellow appear around Lovecraft, Nyarlathotep gleefully exclaims "You're going to die, Howard."
   
 
==Popular culture==
 
==Popular culture==
βˆ’
As one of H.P. Lovecraft's most famous creations, Nyarlathotep has appeared in and been referenced by numerous other works in popular culture.
+
As one of H.P. Lovecraft's most famous creations and the most "human" of his cosmic horrors, Nyarlathotep has appeared in and been referenced by numerous other works in popular culture.
  +
 
===Literature===
 
===Literature===
 
Nyarlathotep sometimes appears or is referred to in literature outside the Cthulhu Mythos genre of horror:
 
Nyarlathotep sometimes appears or is referred to in literature outside the Cthulhu Mythos genre of horror:
   
βˆ’
*In [[Stephen King]]'s ''[[wikipedia:The Stand|The Stand]]'' and his ''[[wikipedia:The Dark Tower (series)|Dark Tower]]'' series of books, the character [[Randall Flagg]] was known (among many other names) as Nyarlathotep. His short story "[[Crouch End (short story)|Crouch End]]" features the name spelled "Nyarlahotep". In ''[[wikipedia:The Dark Tower VII: The Dark Tower|The Dark Tower VII: The Dark Tower]]'', a fictional version of King himself mentions Nyarlathotep.
+
*In [[Stephen King]]'s ''The Stand]]'' and his ''[[wikipedia:The Dark Tower (series)|Dark Tower]]'' series of books, the character [[Randall Flagg]] was known (among many other names) as Nyarlathotep. His short story "[[Crouch End (short story)|Crouch End]]" features the name spelled "Nyarlahotep". In ''[[wikipedia:The Dark Tower VII: The Dark Tower|The Dark Tower VII: The Dark Tower]]'', a fictional version of King himself mentions Nyarlathotep.
 
*The children's horror writer [[wikipedia:Brad Strickland|Brad Strickland]] used Nyarlathotep as the main antagonist in his book ''The Wrath of the Grinning Ghost''.
 
*The children's horror writer [[wikipedia:Brad Strickland|Brad Strickland]] used Nyarlathotep as the main antagonist in his book ''The Wrath of the Grinning Ghost''.
 
* Nyarlathotep is a student in [[wikipedia:Harry Turtledove|Harry Turtledove]]'s short story "The Genetics Lecture."
 
* Nyarlathotep is a student in [[wikipedia:Harry Turtledove|Harry Turtledove]]'s short story "The Genetics Lecture."
Line 112: Line 153:
 
* In [[wikipedia:A Night in the Lonesome October|''A Night in the Lonesome October'']] by [[wikipedia:Roger Zelazny|Roger Zelazny]], Nyarlathotep and other gods are referred to and are part of the main plot.
 
* In [[wikipedia:A Night in the Lonesome October|''A Night in the Lonesome October'']] by [[wikipedia:Roger Zelazny|Roger Zelazny]], Nyarlathotep and other gods are referred to and are part of the main plot.
 
*In the novel ''[[The Arcanum (novel)|The Arcanum]]'', a case involving Nyarlathotep is said to have been solved by Lovecraft himself.
 
*In the novel ''[[The Arcanum (novel)|The Arcanum]]'', a case involving Nyarlathotep is said to have been solved by Lovecraft himself.
βˆ’
*Nyarlathotep appears in the novel ''Johannes Cabal: The Fear Institute'', by Jonathan L. Howard, as a main antagonist, in the guise of Fear Institute member Gardner Bose.
+
*Nyarlathotep appears in the novel ''Johannes Cabal: The Fear Institute'', by Jonathan L. Howard, as the main antagonist, in the guise of Fear Institute member Gardner Bose.
  +
*In ''Once Upon a Time in the Weird West'', part of Edward M. Erdelac's ''Merkabah Rider'' series of books, Nyarlathotep and the Dark Lord Sauron from [[Wikipedia: J. R. R. Tolkien|J. R. R. Tolkien]]'s [[Wikipedia: Tolkien's legendarium|Middle Earth mythology]] are revealed to be the same entity.
   
βˆ’
====Light novels====
+
===Light novels===
 
*A series of light novels in Japan started in 2009 called [[Wikipedia:Haiyore! Nyaruko-san|Haiyore! Nyaruko-san]] about Nyarlathotep, amassing 9 volumes by 2012.
 
*A series of light novels in Japan started in 2009 called [[Wikipedia:Haiyore! Nyaruko-san|Haiyore! Nyaruko-san]] about Nyarlathotep, amassing 9 volumes by 2012.
 
*Nyarlathotep appears as a character in ''Magical Girl Lulu R'lyeh'' in the guise of Megumi Urushiharao, an air-headed Japanese teacher.
 
*Nyarlathotep appears as a character in ''Magical Girl Lulu R'lyeh'' in the guise of Megumi Urushiharao, an air-headed Japanese teacher.
Line 130: Line 172:
 
*Nyarlathotep is the main antagonist in the [[Fall of Cthulhu]] series by [[wikipedia:Boom! Studios|Boom! Studios]]
 
*Nyarlathotep is the main antagonist in the [[Fall of Cthulhu]] series by [[wikipedia:Boom! Studios|Boom! Studios]]
 
*Nyarlathotep is the true form of Space Hojo, one of the main characters in the [[wikipedia:webcomic|webcomic]] [[wikipedia:Twisted Kaiju Theater|Twisted Kaiju Theater]].
 
*Nyarlathotep is the true form of Space Hojo, one of the main characters in the [[wikipedia:webcomic|webcomic]] [[wikipedia:Twisted Kaiju Theater|Twisted Kaiju Theater]].
βˆ’
*Nyarlathotep is the primary antagonist of the [http://lovelylovecraftcomic.blogspot.com/ Lovely Lovecraft] web-comic.
+
*Nyarlathotep is the primary antagonist of the [[Lovely Lovecraft]] web-comic.
   
βˆ’
====Manga====
+
===Manga===
 
In 2011, two series of manga written by Manta Aisora debuted:
 
In 2011, two series of manga written by Manta Aisora debuted:
 
*May 2011 illustrated by Kei Okazaki began running in Miracle Jump
 
*May 2011 illustrated by Kei Okazaki began running in Miracle Jump
Line 147: Line 189:
 
===Music===
 
===Music===
 
* [[wikipedia:Metallica|Metallica]]'s 1986 song "[[wikipedia:The Thing That Should Not Be|The Thing That Should Not Be]]" contains the lyric "'''crawling chaos''', underground / cult has summoned, twisted sound"
 
* [[wikipedia:Metallica|Metallica]]'s 1986 song "[[wikipedia:The Thing That Should Not Be|The Thing That Should Not Be]]" contains the lyric "'''crawling chaos''', underground / cult has summoned, twisted sound"
βˆ’  
 
*German [[wikipedia:Heavy metal music|heavy metal]] band [[wikipedia:Rage (band)|Rage]] has a song titled "The Crawling Chaos," a song seemingly about the destruction of the earth by Nyarlathotep, on their 1995 album ''Black in Mind''.
 
*German [[wikipedia:Heavy metal music|heavy metal]] band [[wikipedia:Rage (band)|Rage]] has a song titled "The Crawling Chaos," a song seemingly about the destruction of the earth by Nyarlathotep, on their 1995 album ''Black in Mind''.
βˆ’  
 
*Italian heavy metal band [[wikipedia:Bejelit|Bejelit]] has a song titled "Haunter in the Dark," based on the story of the same name, from their ''Bones and Evil'' EP.
 
*Italian heavy metal band [[wikipedia:Bejelit|Bejelit]] has a song titled "Haunter in the Dark," based on the story of the same name, from their ''Bones and Evil'' EP.
  +
* The band [[wikipedia:Nox Arcana|Nox Arcana]] has a song titled "Nyarlathotep" and a song titled "The Temple of The Black Pharah".
βˆ’  
βˆ’
*The band [[wikipedia:Nox Arcana|Nox Arcana]] has a song titled "Nyarlathotep".
+
* The Belgian [[wikipedia:metalcore|metalcore]] band [[wikipedia:Congress (band)|Congress]] has a song intro titled "Nyarlathotep" on their ''Angry With The Sun'' album.
  +
* The band [[Darkest of the Hillside Thickets]] has a song titled "Nyarlathotep" on their album ''[[The Shadow Out of Tim]]''. The songs lyrics are written entirely in [[wikipedia:Middle Egyptian|Middle Egyptian]].
βˆ’  
βˆ’
*The Belgian [[wikipedia:metalcore|metalcore]] band [[wikipedia:Congress (band)|Congress]] has a song intro titled "Nyarlathotep" on their ''Angry With The Sun'' album.
+
* The band [[wikipedia:Dream Theater|Dream Theater]] has a song titled "[[wikipedia:The Dark Eternal Night|The Dark Eternal Night]]" which is adapted from Lovecraft's writing.
  +
* The band [[wikipedia:Burning Star Core|Burning Star Core]] has a song entitled "Nyarlathotep" on their album ''The Very Heart of the World''.
βˆ’  
  +
* The band [[wikipedia:Nile (band)|Nile]] has an album titled "[[wikipedia:Amongst the Catacombs of Nephren-Ka|Amongst the Catacombs of Nephren-Ka]]".
βˆ’
*The band [[Darkest of the Hillside Thickets]] has a song titled "Nyarlathotep" on their album ''[[The Shadow Out of Tim]]''. The songs lyrics are written entirely in [[wikipedia:Middle Egyptian|Middle Egyptian]].
 
  +
* Experimental electronic project [[wikipedia:Flint Glass|Flint Glass]] has an album titled "Nyarlathotep", all music on this album was inspired by the [[Cthulhu Mythos]].
βˆ’  
  +
* The Rhode Island based rock band [http://www.Hemlok.com Hemlok] has an instrumental entitled "Nyarlathotep" on their debut album ''Shades of Passing'' (2008).
βˆ’
*The band [[wikipedia:Dream Theater|Dream Theater]] has a song titled "[[wikipedia:The Dark Eternal Night|The Dark Eternal Night]]" which is adapted from Lovecraft's writing.
 
  +
* The [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-of5C1OHX_8 music video] for the song "Foehammer" by British Doom Metal band [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conan_(band) Conan] depicts Nyarlathotep.
βˆ’  
βˆ’
*The band [[wikipedia:Burning Star Core|Burning Star Core]] has a song entitled "Nyarlathotep" on their album ''The Very Heart of the World''.
 
βˆ’  
βˆ’
*The band [[wikipedia:Nile (band)|Nile]] has an album titled "[[wikipedia:Amongst the Catacombs of Nephren-Ka|Amongst the Catacombs of Nephren-Ka]]".
 
βˆ’  
βˆ’
*Experimental electronic project [[wikipedia:Flint Glass|Flint Glass]] has an album titled "Nyarlathotep", all music on this album was inspired by the [[Cthulhu Mythos]].
 
βˆ’  
βˆ’
*The Rhode Island based rock band [http://www.Hemlok.com Hemlok] has an instrumental entitled "Nyarlathotep" on their debut album ''Shades of Passing'' (2008).
 
βˆ’
*The [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-of5C1OHX_8 music video] for the song "Foehammer" by British Doom Metal band [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conan_(band) Conan] depicts Nyarlathotep.
 
   
 
===Games===
 
===Games===
βˆ’
*Nyarlathotep appears in the ''[[wikipedia:Persona (video game)|Persona]]'' series of [[wikipedia:PlayStation|PlayStation]] games as a god symbolic of the destructive potential of [[wikipedia:Carl Jung|Carl Jung's]] [[wikipedia:collective unconscious|collective unconscious]], although, thus far, he only plays a significant role in the first title, and both parts of the second title.
+
* Nyarlathotep appears in the ''[[wikipedia:Persona (video game)|Persona]]'' series of [[wikipedia:PlayStation|PlayStation]] games as a god symbolic of the destructive potential of [[wikipedia:Carl Jung|Carl Jung]]'s [[wikipedia:collective unconscious|collective unconscious]], although, thus far, he only plays a significant role in the first title, and both parts of the second title.
  +
* As "Nylonathatep, the laddering horror" in the ''[[wikipedia:Discworld|Discworld]]'' game ''[[wikipedia:Discworld Noir|Discworld Noir]]''.
βˆ’  
βˆ’
*As "Nylonathatep, the laddering horror" in the ''[[wikipedia:Discworld|Discworld]]'' game ''[[wikipedia:Discworld Noir|Discworld Noir]]''.
+
* As the ''Thing Outside Time and Space'' in the trading card game ''[[wikipedia:Hecatomb (card game)|Hecatomb]]''.
  +
* Also asΒ ''Outer God Nyarla'' in the trading card game ''[[wikipedia:Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game|Yu-Gi-Oh]]''.
βˆ’  
  +
* Nyarlathotep is the main antagonist of the [[Demonbane]] series which spans games, comics, novels, and a TV series, in which it is trying to free its father [[Azathoth]] from the [[Shining Trapezohedron]]. It has taken on four named forms so far: Nya, an owner of a mysterious bookstore filled with dangerous grimoires, Nyarla, a maid to Augusta Derleth, Father Ny, the leader of the [[Church of Starry Wisdom]], and the Tick-Tock Man, technology incarnate. It has also taken on the forms of an unnamed black man "from Egypt," and a talking black rat, among others. Its "true" form is depicted as a great shadow filled with fangs and claws and tentacles with three flaming eyes.
βˆ’
*As the ''Thing Outside Time and Space'' in the trading card game ''[[wikipedia:Hecatomb (card game)|Hecatomb]]''.
 
  +
* In the Derelict campaign mod of the game ''[[wikipedia:FreeSpace 2|FreeSpace 2]]'', the Nyarlathotep is the designation of a Shivan Lucifer class destroyer which was found floating in subspace for centuries.
βˆ’  
  +
* His name and title (crawling chaos) is mentioned in [[wikipedia:Ice Station Santa|Ice Station Santa]], the first episode of season 2 of the ''[[wikipedia:Sam and Max|Sam and Max]]'' adventure game series by [[wikipedia:Telltale Games|Telltale Games]]. When attempting to exorcize a demon, Nyarlathotep's name is one of the incorrect guesses of the demon's true name.
βˆ’
*Also asΒ ''Outer God Nyarla'' in the trading card game ''[[wikipedia:Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game|Yu-Gi-Oh]]''.
 
  +
* Bloodborne, a 2015 videogame by From Software known for its Lovecraft-inspired story, has an optional final boss, "The Moon Presence", that was likely inspired by and modeled after Nyarlathotep.
βˆ’  
βˆ’
*Nyarlathotep is the main antagonist of the [[Demonbane]] series which spans games, comics, novels, and a TV series, in which it is trying to free its father [[Azathoth]] from the [[Shining Trapezohedron]]. It has taken on four named forms so far: Nya, an owner of a mysterious bookstore filled with dangerous grimoires, Nyarla, a maid to Augusta Derleth, Father Ny, the leader of the [[Church of Starry Wisdom]], and the Tick-Tock Man, technology incarnate. It has also taken on the forms of an unnamed black man "from Egypt," and a talking black rat, among others. Its "true" form is depicted as a great shadow filled with fangs and claws and tentacles with three flaming eyes.
 
βˆ’  
βˆ’
*In the Derelict campaign mod of the game ''[[wikipedia:FreeSpace 2|FreeSpace 2]]'', the Nyarlathotep is the designation of a Shivan Lucifer class destroyer which was found floating in subspace for centuries.
 
βˆ’  
βˆ’
*His name and title (crawling chaos) is mentioned in [[wikipedia:Ice Station Santa|Ice Station Santa]], the first episode of season 2 of the ''[[wikipedia:Sam and Max|Sam and Max]]'' adventure game series by [[wikipedia:Telltale Games|Telltale Games]]. When attempting to exorcize a demon, Nyarlathotep's name is one of the incorrect guesses of the demon's true name.
 
βˆ’
*Bloodborne, a 2015 videogame by From Software known for its Lovecraft-inspired story, has an optional final boss, "The Moon Presence", that was likely inspired by and modeled after Nyarlathotep.
 
 
*Nyarlathotep appears in Sundered as the player's guide throughout the story. later on he either becomes one of the bosses or your ally depending on your choices.
 
*Nyarlathotep appears in Sundered as the player's guide throughout the story. later on he either becomes one of the bosses or your ally depending on your choices.
   
 
===Film===
 
===Film===
βˆ’
* A 13-minute short film version of ''Nyarlathotep''<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0325913/ Nyarlathotep (2001)<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> was released in 2001, directed by Christian Matzke.<ref>[http://www.miskatonic.net/pickman/mythos/nyar1.html H. P. LOVECRAFT'S NYARLATHOTEP: The Official Website<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> It was re-released on DVD in 2004 as part of the ''H. P. Lovecraft Collection Volume 1: Cool Air''.<ref>[http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0006HCT3S Amazon.com: The H.P. Lovecraft Collection Volume 1: Cool Air: Movies & TV<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
+
* A 13-minute short film version of ''Nyarlathotep''<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0325913/ Nyarlathotep (2001)]</ref> was released in 2001, directed by Christian Matzke.<ref>[http://www.miskatonic.net/pickman/mythos/nyar1.html H. P. LOVECRAFT'S NYARLATHOTEP: The Official Website]</ref> It was re-released on DVD in 2004 as part of the ''H. P. Lovecraft Collection Volume 1: Cool Air''.<ref>[http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0006HCT3S Amazon.com: The H.P. Lovecraft Collection Volume 1: Cool Air: Movies & TV]</ref>
   
βˆ’
=== Podcasts ===
+
===Podcasts===
βˆ’
* In the Brazilian podcast ''Nerdcast'', Nyarlathotep features heavily during the ''Call of Cthulhu RPG ''episode ''O MistΓ©rio de William Faraday (the mystery of William Faraday)''
+
* In the Brazilian podcast ''[https://jovemnerd.com.br/?podcast=rpg-call-of-cthulhu-1-o-misterio-de-william-faraday Nerdcast]'', Nyarlathotep features heavily during the ''Call of Cthulhu RPG ''episode ''O MistΓ©rio de William Faraday (the mystery of William Faraday)''
   
βˆ’
==== {{Rt}} ====
+
==Gallery==
  +
<gallery>
  +
Nyarlathotep_(Γ‰ditions_Sans-DΓ©tour).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Call of Cthulhu, French version)
  +
Nyarlthotep.jpg
  +
nyarlathotep_by_erkanerturk-d4h5bgg.jpg
  +
Avatar_of_Nyarlathotep_(Dust_Studio).jpg|Avatar of Nyarlathotep (Dust 1947)
  +
Nyarlathotep_(Yu-Gi-Oh).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Yu-Gi-Oh)
  +
Nyarlathotep_(Fantasy_Flight_Games).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Fantasy Flight Games)
  +
Nyarlathotep_(Petersen_Games).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Cthulhu Wars)
  +
Nyarlathotep_2_(Richard_Luong).jpg
  +
Nyarlathotep_(Dynamite_Entertainment).jpg
  +
sota-nightmares-resin-statue-nyarlathotep-black-variant.jpg|Nyarlathotep figurine by SOTA
  +
Nyarlathotep.png|Nyarlathotep, as it appears in Russell's Guide (merzo.net)
  +
Nyarlathotep_(Persona).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Persona)
  +
Nyarlathotep_2_(Persona).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Persona)
  +
Nyarlathotep_3_(Persona).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Persona)
  +
Nyarlathotep_(Megami_Tensei).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Megami Tensei)
  +
Nyarlathotep_(Dragalia_Lost).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Dragalia Lost)
  +
Nyarlathotep.jpg
  +
Haunter of the Dark.jpg
  +
Nyarlathotep2.jpg
  +
Nyarlathotep_3.jpg
  +
Black_Pharoah,_Avatar_of_Nyarlathotep_(Γ‰ditions_Sans-DΓ©tour).jpg|Black Pharaoh (Call of Cthulhu, French version)
  +
The_Haunter_of_the_Dark,_Avatar_of_Nyarlathotep_(Γ‰ditions_Sans-DΓ©tour).jpg|Haunter of the Dark (Call of Cthulhu, French version)
  +
Nyarlathotep,_Bloated_Woman_(Editions_Sans-Detour).jpg|Bloated Woman (Call of Cthulhu, French version)
  +
Nyarlathotep,_Chakota_(Editions_Sans-Detour).jpg|Chakota (Call of Cthulhu, French version)
  +
Nyarlathotep,_Tick-Tock_Man_(Internet).jpg|Tick-Tock Man
  +
Nyarlathotep,_Tick-Tock_Man_(Beastrider9).jpg|Tick-Tock Man
  +
Dark_Pharoah_2_(Fantasy_Flight_Games).jpg|Dark Pharaoh (Fantasy Flight Games)
  +
Dark_Pharoah_(Fantasy_Flight_Games).jpg|Dark Pharaoh (Fantasy Flight Games)
  +
Nyarlathotep,_Black_Pharaoh_(Paizo_Inc).jpg|Dark Pharaoh (Pathfinder)
  +
Nyarlathotep_(Demonbane).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Demonbane)
  +
Nyarlathotep_2_(Demonbane).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Demonbane)
  +
Nyarlathotep_3_(Demonbane).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Demonbane)
  +
Johnny_Carcosa,_an_avatar_of_Nyarlathotep_(Alan_Moore's_Providence).jpg|Johnny Carcosa, Avatar of Nyarlathotep (Providence)
  +
M,_an_avatar_of_Nyarlathotep_(Shikkoku_no_Sharnoth).jpg|M, Avatar of Nyarlathotep (Shikkoku no Sharnoth)
  +
Nyarlathotep,_Nikola_Tesla_(AkilΓ©os).jpg|Nyralathotep, as Nikola Tesla (AkilΓ©os)
  +
Carsai_the_King_(Paizo_Inc).jpg|Carsai the King (Starfinder)
  +
Aku-Shin_Kage,_Avatar_of_Nyarlathotep_(Secrets_of_Japan).jpg|Aku-Shin Kage (Secrets of Japan)
  +
Nyarlathotep_(Fate-Grand_Order).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Fate-Grand Order)
  +
Nyarlathotep_2_(Fate-Grand_Order).jpg|Nyarlathotep 2 (Fate-Grand Order)
  +
Nyarlathotep_(Nyaruko,_Crawling_with_Love).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Nyaruko, Crawling with Love)
  +
Nyarlathotep_2_(Nyaruko,_Crawling_with_Love).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Nyaruko, Crawling with Love)
  +
Nyarlathotep,_Lathna_(Dragalia_Lost).jpg|Nyarlathotep, as Lathna (Dragalia Lost)
  +
Nyarlathotep,_Grey_Lama_of_Tibet_(Secrets_of_Tibet).jpg|Grey Lama
  +
Nyarlathotep_(Marvel_Comics).jpg|Nyarlathotep (Journey into Mystery)
  +
</gallery>
   
βˆ’
==Illustrations by Michael Bukoswki==
+
===Illustrations by Michael Bukowski===
 
The following depictions based on descriptions of the [[avatar]]s of Nyarlathotep as described in the "[[Masks of Nyarlathotep]]" and other assorted stories.
 
The following depictions based on descriptions of the [[avatar]]s of Nyarlathotep as described in the "[[Masks of Nyarlathotep]]" and other assorted stories.
 
<gallery>
 
<gallery>
  +
Nyarlathotep3.jpg
 
idol of the headless man.jpg
 
idol of the headless man.jpg
 
obsidian pharoah.jpg
 
obsidian pharoah.jpg
Line 225: Line 298:
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   
  +
==Behind the Mythos==
βˆ’
==Gallery==
 
  +
*Though Nyarlathotep appears as a character in only four stories and one sonnet (still more than any other [[Great Old One]]s or [[Outer God]]s), his name is mentioned frequently in numerous others.
βˆ’
<gallery>
 
  +
*Despite similarities in theme and name, Nyarlathotep does not feature at all in Lovecraft's story "[[The Crawling Chaos]]," (1920/21) an apocalyptic narrative written in collaboration with Winifred V. Jackson.
βˆ’
Nyarlathotep.jpg
 
  +
* George Olshevsky named the nonconvex snub polyhedra after some other Great Old Ones, with the Inverted snub dodecadodecahedron as "Nyarlathotep".
βˆ’
Nyarlathotep2.jpg
 
βˆ’
sota-nightmares-resin-statue-nyarlathotep-black-variant.jpg|Nyarlathotep figurine by SOTA
 
βˆ’
Nyarlthotep.jpg
 
βˆ’
Nyarlathotep.png|Nyarlathotep, as it appears in Russell's Guide (merzo.net)
 
βˆ’
nyarlathotep_by_erkanerturk-d4h5bgg.jpg
 
βˆ’
</gallery>
 
   
 
==References==
 
==References==
  +
{{dwx}}
βˆ’
* [http://www.mythostomes.com/content/view/23/ Nyarlathotep]. Last accessed on 21 February 2007.
 
βˆ’
* [http://www.psci.net/nyarla/Masks%20of%20Nyarlathotep.htm Masks of Nyarlathotep]. Last accessed on 25 January 2006.
+
* [http://www.mythostomes.com/content/view/23/ Nyarlathotep]. Last accessed on February 21 2007.
  +
* [http://www.psci.net/nyarla/Masks%20of%20Nyarlathotep.htm Masks of Nyarlathotep]. Last accessed on January 25 2006.
 
* Harms, Daniel. "Nyarlathotep" in ''The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana'' (2nd ed.), pp. 218&ndash;222. Oakland, CA: Chaosium, 1998. [[ISBN 1-56882-119-0]].
 
* Harms, Daniel. "Nyarlathotep" in ''The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana'' (2nd ed.), pp. 218&ndash;222. Oakland, CA: Chaosium, 1998. [[ISBN 1-56882-119-0]].
   
 
===Role-playing game material===
 
===Role-playing game material===
 
* Aniolowski, Scott D. (1990). "The Sundial of Amen-Tet". ''Lurking Fears''. Lockport, NY: Triad Entertainments.
 
* Aniolowski, Scott D. (1990). "The Sundial of Amen-Tet". ''Lurking Fears''. Lockport, NY: Triad Entertainments.
  +
* Aniolowski, Scott D. (1994). ''Ye Booke of Monstres''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 1-56882-019-4].
βˆ’  
βˆ’
* Aniolowski, Scott D. (1994). ''Ye Booke of Monstres''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [[ISBN 1-56882-019-4]].
+
* Conyers, David (2007). ''Secrets of Kenya''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 1-568821-88-3].
  +
* Detwiller, Dennis; Adam Scott Glancy and John Tynes (1997). ''Delta Green: A Call of Cthulhu Sourcebook of Modern Horror and Conspiracy''. Tynes Cowan Corp. [ISBN 1-887797-08-4].
βˆ’  
βˆ’
* Conyers, David (2007). ''Secrets of Kenya''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [[ISBN 1-568821-88-3]].
 
βˆ’  
βˆ’
* Detwiller, Dennis; Adam Scott Glancy and John Tynes (1997). ''Delta Green: A Call of Cthulhu Sourcebook of Modern Horror and Conspiracy''. Tynes Cowan Corp. [[ISBN 1-887797-08-4]].
 
βˆ’  
 
* Diaper, John; et al (1983). ''The Arkham Evil''. Theatre of the Mind.
 
* Diaper, John; et al (1983). ''The Arkham Evil''. Theatre of the Mind.
  +
* DiTillio, Larry; Lynn Willis (1987). "City beneath the Sands". ''Terror Australis''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 0-933635-40-0].
βˆ’  
βˆ’
* DiTillio, Larry; Lynn Willis (1987). "City beneath the Sands". ''Terror Australis''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [[ISBN 0-933635-40-0]].
+
* DiTillio, Larry; Lynn Willis (1996). ''Masks of Nyarlathotep''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 1-56882-069-0].
  +
* Gillian, Geoff (1991). "Regiment of Dread". ''Tales of the Miskatonic Valley''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 0-933635-83-4].
βˆ’  
βˆ’
* DiTillio, Larry; Lynn Willis (1996). ''Masks of Nyarlathotep''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [[ISBN 1-56882-069-0]].
 
βˆ’  
βˆ’
* Gillian, Geoff (1991). "Regiment of Dread". ''Tales of the Miskatonic Valley''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [[ISBN 0-933635-83-4]].
 
βˆ’  
 
* Gillian, Geoff; et al (1991). ''Horror on the Orient Express''.
 
* Gillian, Geoff; et al (1991). ''Horror on the Orient Express''.
βˆ’  
 
* Hallet, David; L.N. Isinwyll (1991). "Eyes for the Blind". ''Dark Designs''.
 
* Hallet, David; L.N. Isinwyll (1991). "Eyes for the Blind". ''Dark Designs''.
βˆ’  
 
* Hamblin, William (1983). "Thoth's Dagger". ''Different Worlds'' #27.
 
* Hamblin, William (1983). "Thoth's Dagger". ''Different Worlds'' #27.
βˆ’  
 
* Herber, Keith (1990). "Dead of Night". ''Arkham Unveiled''.
 
* Herber, Keith (1990). "Dead of Night". ''Arkham Unveiled''.
βˆ’  
 
* Herber, Keith (1984). ''The Fungi from Yuggoth''.
 
* Herber, Keith (1984). ''The Fungi from Yuggoth''.
βˆ’  
 
* Herber, Keith (1991). ''Return to Dunwich''.
 
* Herber, Keith (1991). ''Return to Dunwich''.
  +
* Johnson, Sam (1997). ''A Resection of Time''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 1-56882-095-X].
βˆ’  
βˆ’
* Johnson, Sam (1997). ''A Resection of Time''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [[ISBN 1-56882-095-X]].
 
βˆ’  
 
* Lyons, Doug; L.N. Isinwyll (1989). "One in Darkness". ''The Great Old Ones''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium.
 
* Lyons, Doug; L.N. Isinwyll (1989). "One in Darkness". ''The Great Old Ones''. Oakland, CA: Chaosium.
βˆ’  
 
* Petersen, Sandy (1982). "The Rise of R'lyeh". ''Shadows of Yog-Sothoth''.
 
* Petersen, Sandy (1982). "The Rise of R'lyeh". ''Shadows of Yog-Sothoth''.
βˆ’  
 
* Petersen, Sandy; John B. Monroe (1990). "The Ten Commandments of Cthulhu Hunting". ''The Cthulhu Casebook''.
 
* Petersen, Sandy; John B. Monroe (1990). "The Ten Commandments of Cthulhu Hunting". ''The Cthulhu Casebook''.
  +
* Ross, Kevin (1997). ''Escape from Innsmouth'' (2nd ed.). Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 1-56882-115-8].
βˆ’  
βˆ’
* Ross, Kevin (1997). ''Escape from Innsmouth'' (2nd ed.). Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [[ISBN 1-56882-115-8]].
+
* Williams, Chris; Sandy Petersen (1997). ''The Complete Dreamlands'' (4th ed.). Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 1-56882-086-0].
βˆ’  
βˆ’
* Williams, Chris; Sandy Petersen (1997). ''The Complete Dreamlands'' (4th ed.). Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [[ISBN 1-56882-086-0]].
 
βˆ’  
 
* D, Kay (2007). ''Nyarlathotep''.
 
* D, Kay (2007). ''Nyarlathotep''.
   
 
===Notes===
 
===Notes===
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== External links ==
 
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*[http://www.lovecraft-stories.com/story/nyarlathotep "Nyarlathotep"], the original prose poem by H. P. Lovecraft
 
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[[Category:Immortals]]
 
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[[Category:Cthulhu Mythos deities]]
 
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[[Category:Eldritch Characters]]
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[[Category:Dynamite (Cthulhu Mythos)]]
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[[Category:Hyborian (Cthulhu Mythos)]]

Revision as of 23:23, 6 April 2020

πŸ”€ This is an article about the character. For the story in which it first appeared, see Nyarlathotep (short story).
β€œ And where Nyarlathotep went, rest vanished, for the small hours were rent with the screams of nightmare. β€ž
~ H.P. Lovecraft about Nyarlathotep


This subject contains information from the "Lovecraft Circle" Myth Cycles, and while guided by HPL are not based on his work alone. 🎨 Nyarlathotep, known to many by his epithet The Crawling Chaos, is an Outer God in the Cthulhu Mythos. He is the spawn of Azathoth. He is the creation of H. P. Lovecraft and first appeared in his prose poem "Nyarlathotep" (1920).

Nyarlathotep appears in numerous subsequent stories by Lovecraft, and is also featured in the works of other authors, as well as in role-playing games based on the Cthulhu Mythos. 

Description

β€œ -a tall, lean man of dead black colouration but without the slightest sign of negroid features: wholly devoid of either hair or beard, and wearing as his only garment a shapeless robe of some heavy black fabric. His feet were indistinguishable because of the table and bench, but he must have been shod, since there was a clicking whenever he changed position. The man did not speak, and bore no trace of expression on his small, regular features. He merely pointed to a book of prodigious size which lay open on the table.... β€ž
~ HPL , "The Dreams in the Witch-House"


Nyarlathotep differs from the other deities in the Mythos in a number of ways. Most of the Outer Gods are exiled to the stars, like Yog-Sothoth and Azathoth, and most of the Great Old Ones are sleeping and dreaming like Cthulhu; Nyarlathotep, however, is active and frequently walks the Earth in the guise of a human being, usually a tall, slim, joyous man. He has "a thousand" other forms and manifestations, most reputed to be quite horrific and sanity-blasting.

Most of the Outer Gods have their own cults serving them; Nyarlathotep seems to serve as He serves several cults and takes care of their affairs in the other Outer Gods' absence. Most Outer Gods use strange alien languages, while Nyarlathotep uses human languages and can easily pass for a human being if he chooses to do so. Finally, most of them are all-powerful yet evidently without clear purpose or agenda, yet Nyarlathotep seems to be deliberately deceptive and manipulative, and even uses propaganda to achieve his goals. In this regard, he is probably the most human-like among the Outer Gods.

Nyarlathotep enacts the will of the Outer Gods, and is their "messenger, heart and soul", "the immemorial figure of the deputy or messenger of hidden and terrible powers" He is also the servant of Azathoth, whose fitful, spastic wishes he immediately fulfills. Unlike the other Outer Gods, spreading madness is more important and enjoyable than death and destruction to Nyarlathotep. It is suggested by some that he will destroy the human race and possibly the earth as well. (EXP: "Nyarlathotep", The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana [Harms])

In the Mythos

Nyarlathotep's first appearance is in the eponymous short story by Lovecraft (1920), in which he is described as a "tall, swarthy man" who resembles an Egyptian Pharaoh. In this story he wanders the earth, gathering legions of followers through his demonstrations of strange and seemingly magical instruments, the narrator of the story among them. These followers lose awareness of the world around them, and through the narrator's increasingly unreliable accounts the reader gets a sense of the world's utter collapse. The story ends with the narrator as part of an army of servants for Nyarlathotep.

Nyarlathotep, again manifested in the form of an Egyptian Pharaoh when he confronted Randolph Carter as an avatar of the Other Gods, executing their will on Earth and in Dreamland (HPL: The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath).

Nyarlathotep meets Walter Gilman and witch Keziah Mason (who has made a pact with the entity) in the form of "the 'Black Man' of the witch-cult," a black-skinned avatar with the appearance of the Christian Devil (His footprints suggest cloven hooves instead of feet) associated with New England witchcraft lore (HPL: "The Dreams in the Witch-House").

The being of pure darkness dwelling, possessing a "three-lobed eye", in the steeple of the Starry Wisdom sect's church is identified as another form, or manifestation of, Nyarlathotep (HPL: "The Haunter of the Dark").

Nyarlathotep's name is spoken frequently by the fungi from Yuggoth in a reverential or ritual sense, indicating that they worship or honor the entity (HPL: "The Whisperer in Darkness").

According to certain sources he is currently living or imprisoned on the planet Abbith (EXP: The Horror in the Gallery).

Inspiration

In a 1921 letter to Reinhardt Kleiner, Lovecraft related the dream he had had — described as "the most realistic and horrible [nightmare] I have experienced since the age of ten" — that served as the basis for his prose poem "Nyarlathotep". In the dream, he received a letter from his friend Samuel Loveman that read:

β€œ Don't fail to see Nyarlathotep if he comes to Providence. He is horrible — horrible beyond anything you can imagine — but wonderful. He haunts one for hours afterward. I am still shuddering at what he showed. β€ž



Lovecraft commented:

β€œ I had never heard the name NYARLATHOTEP before, but seemed to understand the allusion. Nyarlathotep was a kind of itinerant showman or lecturer who held forth in public halls and aroused widespread fear and discussion with his exhibitions. These exhibitions consisted of two parts – first, a horrible – possibly prophetic – cinema reel; and later some extraordinary experiments with scientific and electrical apparatus. As I received the letter, I seemed to recall that Nyarlathotep was already in Providence.... I seemed to remember that persons had whispered to me in awe of his horrors, and warned me not to go near him. But Loveman's dream letter decided me.... As I left the house I saw throngs of men plodding through the night, all whispering affrightedly and bound in one direction. I fell in with them, afraid yet eager to see and hear the great, the obscure, the unutterable Nyarlathotep. β€ž
~ HPL , Selected Letters 1.094



Will Murray suggests that this dream image of Nyarlathotep may have been inspired by the inventor Nikola Tesla, whose well-attended lectures did involve extraordinary experiments with electrical apparatus, and whom some saw as a sinister figure.[1]

Robert M. Price proposes that the name Nyarlathotep may have been subconsciously suggested to Lovecraft by two names from Lord Dunsany, an author he much admired: Alhireth-Hotep, a false prophet from Dunsany's The Gods of Pegana, and Mynarthitep, a god described as "angry" in his "The Sorrow of Search".[2]

Quotations

β€œ "And it was then that Nyarlathotep came out of Egypt. Who he was, none could tell, but he was of the old native blood and looked like a Pharaoh. The fellahin knelt when they saw him, yet could not say why. He said he had risen up out of the blackness of twenty-seven centuries, and that he had heard messages from places not on this planet. Into the lands of civilisation came Nyarlathotep, swarthy, slender, and sinister, always buying strange instruments of glass and metal and combining them into instruments yet stranger. He spoke much of the sciences – of electricity and psychology –and gave exhibitions of power which sent his spectators away speechless, yet which swelled his fame to exceeding magnitude. Men advised one another to see Nyarlathotep, and shuddered. And where Nyarlathotep went, rest vanished; for the small hours were rent with the screams of a nightmare. β€ž
~ HPL , Nyarlathotep


β€œ And through this revolting graveyard of the universe the muffled, maddening beating of drums, and thin, monotonous whine of blasphemous flutes from inconceivable, unlighted chambers beyond Time; the detestable pounding and piping whereunto dance slowly, awkwardly, and absurdly the gigantic, tenebrous ultimate gods β€” the blind, voiceless, mindless gargoyles whose soul is Nyarlathotep. β€ž
~ HPL , Nyarlathotep


β€œ It was the eldritch scurrying of those fiend-born rats, always questing for new horrors, and determined to lead me on even unto those grinning caverns of earth's centre where Nyarlathotep, the mad faceless god, howls blindly to the piping of two amorphous idiot flute-players. β€ž
~ HPL , The Rats in the Walls


β€œ What his fate would be, he did not know; but he felt that he was held for the coming of that frightful soul and messenger of infinity's Other Gods, the crawling chaos Nyarlathotep. β€ž
~ HPL , The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath


β€œ There was the immemorial figure of the deputy or messenger of hidden and terrible powers – the "Black Man" of the witch cult, and the "Nyarlathotep" of the Necronomicon. β€ž
~ HPL , The Dreams in the Witch-House



The Nyarlathotep Cycle

This subject contains information from the Expanded Cthulhu Mythos, and not based on H.P. Lovecraft's works directly. In 1996, Chaosium published The Nyarlathotep Cycle, a Cthulhu Mythos anthology focusing on works referring to or inspired by the entity Nyarlathotep. Edited by Lovecraft scholar Robert M. Price, the book includes an introduction by Price tracing the roots and development of the God of a Thousand Forms. The contents include:

  • ADJ: "Alhireth-Hotep the Prophet" by Lord Dunsany
  • ADJ: ""The Sorrow of Search" by Lord Dunsany
  • HPL: "Nyarlathotep"
  • ADJ: "The Second Coming" (poem) by William Butler Yeats
  • ADJ: "Silence Falls on Mecca's Walls" (poem) by Robert E. Howard
  • HPL: "Nyarlathotep" (poem)
  • HPL: "The Dreams in the Witch-House"
  • HPL: "The Haunter of the Dark"
  • AWD: "The Dweller in Darkness" by August William Derleth
  • "The Titan in the Crypt" by J. G. Warner
  • "Fane of the Black Pharaoh" by Robert Bloch
  • "Curse of the Black Pharaoh" by Lin Carter
  • "The Curse of Nephren-Ka" by John Cockroft
  • "The Temple of Nephren-Ka" by Philip J. Rahman & Glenn A. Rahman
  • "The Papyrus of Nephren-Ka" by Robert C. Culp
  • "The Snout in the Alcove" by Gary Myers
  • "The Contemplative Sphinx" (poem) by Richard Tierney
  • "Ech-Pi-El's Γ†gypt" (poems) by Ann K. Schwader

Lovely Lovecraft

In Sara Bardi's webcomic Lovely Lovecraft, Nyarlathotep carries many masks, but usually appears as a tall human with handsome features, and hair styled like a pair of lightning bolts. Some time before the comic started, he and the other Outer Gods were trapped on earth in the forms of mortals. While Yog-Sothoth and Shub-Niggurath are content to wait for the stars to align, Nyarlathotep is more impatient, and tortures Albert Wilmarth for information on the Miscatonic University's copy of the Necronomicon. He gains access to the school under the guise of Mister Noyes, an English literature teacher in Wilmarth's absence. Before he can steal the Necronomicon, however, he discovers that it's been tore apart, and only the second half is in the University's possession. He considers going into the grave where the first half was lost, when foul magic stream from the book, giving him back a fraction of his power. Using it, he releases a captive shoggoth and sends it after the first half, held by 12-year old Howard Phillips Lovecraft. Before Nyarlathotep can use the complete necronomicon, he is temporarily incapacitated by the Night Gaunt Phil'Gwanach, who pushes an amulet bearing the Elder Sign into his chest.

He makes a reference to having made a deal with the Mi-Go at one point, possibly for information on Prof. Wilmarth.

Years later, he lured the adult Howard to one of his gatherings of aspiring cultists. When Lovecraft fearfully asked him if the stars were right, he responds that they are, but not for him and his people; For Lovecraft. As a horde of creatures dressed like the King in Yellow appear around Lovecraft, Nyarlathotep gleefully exclaims "You're going to die, Howard."

Popular culture

As one of H.P. Lovecraft's most famous creations and the most "human" of his cosmic horrors, Nyarlathotep has appeared in and been referenced by numerous other works in popular culture.

Literature

Nyarlathotep sometimes appears or is referred to in literature outside the Cthulhu Mythos genre of horror:

  • In Stephen King's The Stand]] and his Dark Tower series of books, the character Randall Flagg was known (among many other names) as Nyarlathotep. His short story "Crouch End" features the name spelled "Nyarlahotep". In The Dark Tower VII: The Dark Tower, a fictional version of King himself mentions Nyarlathotep.
  • The children's horror writer Brad Strickland used Nyarlathotep as the main antagonist in his book The Wrath of the Grinning Ghost.
  • Nyarlathotep is a student in Harry Turtledove's short story "The Genetics Lecture."
  • The Book of the SubGenius briefly mentions an entity called "Nyardim Thothep"
  • Pulp novelist Barry Reese uses Nyarlathotep in several of his Rook Universe stories. Nyarlathotep appears in "Kingdom of Blood" and "The Gasping Death". Nyarlathotep also appears under the guise Mr. Blackman in the short story "The Great Work" which was printed in both Thrilling Adventures and the fifth edition of Startling Stories
  • In A Night in the Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny, Nyarlathotep and other gods are referred to and are part of the main plot.
  • In the novel The Arcanum, a case involving Nyarlathotep is said to have been solved by Lovecraft himself.
  • Nyarlathotep appears in the novel Johannes Cabal: The Fear Institute, by Jonathan L. Howard, as the main antagonist, in the guise of Fear Institute member Gardner Bose.
  • In Once Upon a Time in the Weird West, part of Edward M. Erdelac's Merkabah Rider series of books, Nyarlathotep and the Dark Lord Sauron from J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle Earth mythology are revealed to be the same entity.

Light novels

  • A series of light novels in Japan started in 2009 called Haiyore! Nyaruko-san about Nyarlathotep, amassing 9 volumes by 2012.
  • Nyarlathotep appears as a character in Magical Girl Lulu R'lyeh in the guise of Megumi Urushiharao, an air-headed Japanese teacher.

Comics

Manga

In 2011, two series of manga written by Manta Aisora debuted:

  • May 2011 illustrated by Kei Okazaki began running in Miracle Jump
  • October 2011 illustrated by Sōichirō Hoshino, Haiyore! Super Nyaruko-chan Time began running in Flex Comic Blood.

Anime

The light novel series was adapted into 4 anime series:

  • 2009: nine episodes of 3-minute OVAs called Haiyoru! Nyaruani
  • 2010: twelve episodes of 5-minute TV shorts called Haiyoru! Nyaruani: Remember My Mr. Lovecraft
  • 2012: twelve episodes of 25-minute full TV episodes called Haiyore! Nyaruko-san
  • 2013: twelve episodes of 24-minute full TV episodes called Haiyore! Nyaruko-san W
  • A 12 episode series known as Demonbane.

Music

  • Metallica's 1986 song "The Thing That Should Not Be" contains the lyric "crawling chaos, underground / cult has summoned, twisted sound"
  • German heavy metal band Rage has a song titled "The Crawling Chaos," a song seemingly about the destruction of the earth by Nyarlathotep, on their 1995 album Black in Mind.
  • Italian heavy metal band Bejelit has a song titled "Haunter in the Dark," based on the story of the same name, from their Bones and Evil EP.
  • The band Nox Arcana has a song titled "Nyarlathotep" and a song titled "The Temple of The Black Pharah".
  • The Belgian metalcore band Congress has a song intro titled "Nyarlathotep" on their Angry With The Sun album.
  • The band Darkest of the Hillside Thickets has a song titled "Nyarlathotep" on their album The Shadow Out of Tim. The songs lyrics are written entirely in Middle Egyptian.
  • The band Dream Theater has a song titled "The Dark Eternal Night" which is adapted from Lovecraft's writing.
  • The band Burning Star Core has a song entitled "Nyarlathotep" on their album The Very Heart of the World.
  • The band Nile has an album titled "Amongst the Catacombs of Nephren-Ka".
  • Experimental electronic project Flint Glass has an album titled "Nyarlathotep", all music on this album was inspired by the Cthulhu Mythos.
  • The Rhode Island based rock band Hemlok has an instrumental entitled "Nyarlathotep" on their debut album Shades of Passing (2008).
  • The music video for the song "Foehammer" by British Doom Metal band Conan depicts Nyarlathotep.

Games

  • Nyarlathotep appears in the Persona series of PlayStation games as a god symbolic of the destructive potential of Carl Jung's collective unconscious, although, thus far, he only plays a significant role in the first title, and both parts of the second title.
  • As "Nylonathatep, the laddering horror" in the Discworld game Discworld Noir.
  • As the Thing Outside Time and Space in the trading card game Hecatomb.
  • Also as Outer God Nyarla in the trading card game Yu-Gi-Oh.
  • Nyarlathotep is the main antagonist of the Demonbane series which spans games, comics, novels, and a TV series, in which it is trying to free its father Azathoth from the Shining Trapezohedron. It has taken on four named forms so far: Nya, an owner of a mysterious bookstore filled with dangerous grimoires, Nyarla, a maid to Augusta Derleth, Father Ny, the leader of the Church of Starry Wisdom, and the Tick-Tock Man, technology incarnate. It has also taken on the forms of an unnamed black man "from Egypt," and a talking black rat, among others. Its "true" form is depicted as a great shadow filled with fangs and claws and tentacles with three flaming eyes.
  • In the Derelict campaign mod of the game FreeSpace 2, the Nyarlathotep is the designation of a Shivan Lucifer class destroyer which was found floating in subspace for centuries.
  • His name and title (crawling chaos) is mentioned in Ice Station Santa, the first episode of season 2 of the Sam and Max adventure game series by Telltale Games. When attempting to exorcize a demon, Nyarlathotep's name is one of the incorrect guesses of the demon's true name.
  • Bloodborne, a 2015 videogame by From Software known for its Lovecraft-inspired story, has an optional final boss, "The Moon Presence", that was likely inspired by and modeled after Nyarlathotep.
  • Nyarlathotep appears in Sundered as the player's guide throughout the story. later on he either becomes one of the bosses or your ally depending on your choices.

Film

  • A 13-minute short film version of Nyarlathotep[3] was released in 2001, directed by Christian Matzke.[4] It was re-released on DVD in 2004 as part of the H. P. Lovecraft Collection Volume 1: Cool Air.[5]

Podcasts

  • In the Brazilian podcast Nerdcast, Nyarlathotep features heavily during the Call of Cthulhu RPG episode O MistΓ©rio de William Faraday (the mystery of William Faraday)

Gallery

Illustrations by Michael Bukowski

The following depictions based on descriptions of the avatars of Nyarlathotep as described in the "Masks of Nyarlathotep" and other assorted stories.

Behind the Mythos

  • Though Nyarlathotep appears as a character in only four stories and one sonnet (still more than any other Great Old Ones or Outer Gods), his name is mentioned frequently in numerous others.
  • Despite similarities in theme and name, Nyarlathotep does not feature at all in Lovecraft's story "The Crawling Chaos," (1920/21) an apocalyptic narrative written in collaboration with Winifred V. Jackson.
  • George Olshevsky named the nonconvex snub polyhedra after some other Great Old Ones, with the Inverted snub dodecadodecahedron as "Nyarlathotep".

References

Role-playing game material

  • Aniolowski, Scott D. (1990). "The Sundial of Amen-Tet". Lurking Fears. Lockport, NY: Triad Entertainments.
  • Aniolowski, Scott D. (1994). Ye Booke of Monstres. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 1-56882-019-4].
  • Conyers, David (2007). Secrets of Kenya. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 1-568821-88-3].
  • Detwiller, Dennis; Adam Scott Glancy and John Tynes (1997). Delta Green: A Call of Cthulhu Sourcebook of Modern Horror and Conspiracy. Tynes Cowan Corp. [ISBN 1-887797-08-4].
  • Diaper, John; et al (1983). The Arkham Evil. Theatre of the Mind.
  • DiTillio, Larry; Lynn Willis (1987). "City beneath the Sands". Terror Australis. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 0-933635-40-0].
  • DiTillio, Larry; Lynn Willis (1996). Masks of Nyarlathotep. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 1-56882-069-0].
  • Gillian, Geoff (1991). "Regiment of Dread". Tales of the Miskatonic Valley. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 0-933635-83-4].
  • Gillian, Geoff; et al (1991). Horror on the Orient Express.
  • Hallet, David; L.N. Isinwyll (1991). "Eyes for the Blind". Dark Designs.
  • Hamblin, William (1983). "Thoth's Dagger". Different Worlds #27.
  • Herber, Keith (1990). "Dead of Night". Arkham Unveiled.
  • Herber, Keith (1984). The Fungi from Yuggoth.
  • Herber, Keith (1991). Return to Dunwich.
  • Johnson, Sam (1997). A Resection of Time. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 1-56882-095-X].
  • Lyons, Doug; L.N. Isinwyll (1989). "One in Darkness". The Great Old Ones. Oakland, CA: Chaosium.
  • Petersen, Sandy (1982). "The Rise of R'lyeh". Shadows of Yog-Sothoth.
  • Petersen, Sandy; John B. Monroe (1990). "The Ten Commandments of Cthulhu Hunting". The Cthulhu Casebook.
  • Ross, Kevin (1997). Escape from Innsmouth (2nd ed.). Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 1-56882-115-8].
  • Williams, Chris; Sandy Petersen (1997). The Complete Dreamlands (4th ed.). Oakland, CA: Chaosium. [ISBN 1-56882-086-0].
  • D, Kay (2007). Nyarlathotep.

Notes

  1. ↑ Will Murray, "Behind the Mask of Nyarlathotep", Lovecraft Studies No. 25 (Fall 1991); cited in Robert M. Price, The Nyarlathotep Cycle, p. 9.
  2. ↑ Price, p. vii, 1-5.
  3. ↑ Nyarlathotep (2001)
  4. ↑ H. P. LOVECRAFT'S NYARLATHOTEP: The Official Website
  5. ↑ Amazon.com: The H.P. Lovecraft Collection Volume 1: Cool Air: Movies & TV