A brief history of the devil - Brian A. Pavlac

1,641,399 views ・ 2021-03-30

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Satan, the beast crunching sinners’ bones in his subterranean lair.
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Lucifer, the fallen angel raging against the established order.
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Mephistopheles, the trickster striking deals with unsuspecting humans.
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These three divergent devils are all based on Satan of the Old Testament,
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an angelic member of God’s court who torments Job in the Book of Job.
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But unlike any of these literary devils,
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the Satan of the Bible was a relatively minor character,
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with scant information about his deeds or appearance.
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So how did he become the ultimate antagonist, with so many different forms?
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In the New Testament, Satan saw a little more action:
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tempting Jesus, using demons to possess people,
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and finally appearing as a giant dragon who is cast into hell.
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This last image particularly inspired medieval artists and writers,
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who depicted a scaled, shaggy-furred creature with overgrown toenails.
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In Michael Pacher’s painting of St. Augustine and the Devil,
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the devil appears as an upright lizard—
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with a second miniature face glinting on his rear and.
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The epitome of these monster Satans
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appeared in Italian poet Dante Alighieri’s “Inferno.”
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Encased in the ninth circle of hell,
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Dante’s Satan is a three-headed, bat-winged behemoth who feasts on sinners.
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But he’s also an object of pity:
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powerless as the panicked beating of his wings
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only encases him further in ice.
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The poem’s protagonist escapes from hell by clambering over Satan’s body,
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and feels both disgust and sympathy for the trapped beast—
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prompting the reader to consider the pain of doing evil.
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By the Renaissance, the devil started to assume a more human form.
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Artists painted him as a man with cloven hooves and curling horns
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inspired by Pan, the Greek god of the wild.
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In his 1667 masterpiece “Paradise Lost,”
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English poet John Milton depicted the devil as Lucifer,
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an angel who started a rebellion on the grounds that God is too powerful.
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Kicked out of heaven, this charismatic rebel becomes Satan,
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and declares that he’d rather rule in hell than serve in heaven.
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Milton’s take inspired numerous depictions of Lucifer as an ambiguous figure,
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rather than a purely evil one.
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Milton’s Lucifer later became an iconic character for the Romantics of the 1800s,
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who saw him as a hero who defied higher power in pursuit of essential truths,
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with tragic consequences.
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Meanwhile, in the German legend of Doctor Faust,
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which dates to the 16th century,
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we get a look at what happens when the devil comes to Earth.
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Faust, a dissatisfied scholar,
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pledges his soul to the devil in exchange for bottomless pleasure.
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With the help of the devil’s messenger Mephistopheles,
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Faust quickly seizes women, power, and money—
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only to fall into the eternal fires of hell.
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Later versions of the story show Mephistopheles in different lights.
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In Christopher Marlowe's account,
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a cynical Doctor Faustus is happy to strike a deal with Mephistopheles.
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In Johann Wolfgang van Goethe’s version,
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Mephistopheles tricks Faust into a grisly deal.
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Today, a Faustian bargain refers to a trade that sacrifices integrity
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for short-term gains.
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In stagings of Goethe’s play,
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Mephistopheles appeared in red tights and cape.
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This version of the devil was often played as a charming trickster—
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one that eventually paraded through comic books,
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advertising, and film in his red suit.
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These three takes on the devil are just the tip of the iceberg:
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the devil continues to stalk the public imagination to this day,
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tempting artists of all kinds to render him
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according to new and fantastical visions.
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