Gog
Redirected from Magog
Gog and Magog are the respective names of a mysterious Biblical ruler, and his people, who feature in apocalyptic prophecy. They appear in the Book of Ezekiel and the Book of Revelation. They are also giants who appear in English folklore.
Ezekiel begins:
The prophecy says that Gog will be defeated after he attacks Israel. Ezekiel 38 and 39 continues to speak of Gog, and that Gog together with Persians, Lydians, Ethiopians, and others, like Gomer[?] and the house of Togarmah[?], whose identities at this remove are even harder to identify. We are told that Gog dwelt north of Israel, but apart from this direction, there is little else to identify Gog in the passage. Gog and his allies are to be defeated in a mighty bloodbath; according to chapter 39, it will take seven months to bury all the dead.
Gog reappears in Revelation 20:7-8, which says:
Gog's attack here is represented as an eschatological event that will occur after the Millennium, and that will be vanquished by divine intervention.
The identity of Gog remains mysterious. Many Bible scholars believe that Gyges (Greek Γυγες), king of Lydia, is meant; in Assyrian letters, Gyges appears as Gu-gu; in which case Magog is his territory in Anatolia. Josephus identifies Magog with Scythia, but this name was used generally in antiquity for any land north of the Black Sea.
Given this somewhat frightening Biblical imagery, it is somewhat odd that images of Gog and Magog depicted as giants are carried in a traditional procession by the Lord Mayor of London, England. According to the Lord Mayor, the giants Gog and Magog are traditional guardians of the City of London. Images of Gog and Magog have been carried in the Lord Mayor's procession since the days of King Henry V. The Lord Mayor's procession takes place each year on the second Saturday in November.
According to Geoffrey of Monmouth, Gogmagog was a giant who was slain by the eponymous Cornish hero Corin or Corineus. The tale figures in the body of unlikely lore that has Britain settled by "Brutus" and other fleeing heroes from the Trojan War. Corineus is supposed to have slain the giant by throwing him into the sea near Plymouth. John Milton's History of Britain gives this version of the story:
Michael Drayton's Polyolbion preserves the tale as well:
The biblical Gog and Magog:
Gog and Magog in England:

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