Figured I'd give this empty board something for folks to chew on. So, I'll throw out a subject that I've been gnawing on myself for some time. How, when looking through history, we see so many cultures with dragon or serpent deities. Or rather, did until recently (thanks, followers of Abraham).
Flying reptilians are an oddly consistent theme among many cultures... that did not have much chance to contact one another, due to distance or geography. It's very strange that we would have as many cultures as we do that all seemed to agree on a depicition of things draconic.
There are caves in Australia, belonging to the aboriginal peoples there. Until Europeans arrived, they did not have much in the way of a written language, but did make plenty of cave depicitions of what they saw, and what they held sacred. Some of these depictions go back 6000 years. One of the most common depicions in these caves are of their creator and protector, the
Rainbow Serpent. Responsible for good weather/rain, fertility, and healing if you get your rituals right. During droughts, it would keep the major watering holes going, making a rainbow as it travelled from place to place. And, when these people looked up to the sky at night, where we see the Milky Way side-on, they saw the underbelly of the giant serpent, stretching across the sky. A very powerful and world-controlling, flying, fabulously colored serpent.
If we hop over to another continent, South/Central America, the Olmecs had something going on very curious as well. About 3500 years ago we start to see evidnece of their culture, and of a central feathered-serpent deity, which the later Aztecs and Maya would call "Quetzalcoatl". While prone to eating men whole, this serpent was the patron of the priesthood for the Aztecs, of learning and knowledge. Massive temple-cities were even dedicated to him, like
Teotihuacan. Also, another example of a fabulously colored snake deity.
You've also got the pretty standard (at least to us) European stories of dragons and serpents, though no deities. Christianity, like mesoamerican cultures, do also associate serpents with learning and knowledge, though in a "sinful" context in Genesis. Still, a talking snake being involved with a major pivot point in a religion's creation story.
It seems before the Abrahamic faiths took off and spread around the planet (along with their distaste for anything scaled), there were quite a few faiths around the planet that did worship dragon-like things, and put them front-and-center to other gods. And, that they seem to have come to these conclusions independent of one another. Curious!
This is what I often find most fascinating and can chew on for the longest: How did this idea come about? Are these reminants of some ancient proto-religion that spread with the very first populations of humanity? Perhaps there was more contact than we thought possible? Maybe some species of scaled megafauna (feathery dragon things?) existed early in humanity's history that they deified? Something else entirely? Dunno! But it's fun to research and speculate.