Difference between revisions of "Kong"
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Tomes, cults, alien/monster races, etc. related to the GOO. | Tomes, cults, alien/monster races, etc. related to the GOO. | ||
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| − | * races - | + | * races, servitor - Kong or his ancestors in antiquity could have been encountered by, and possibly worshiped by: |
| + | ** [[Frazetta Man]] | ||
| + | ** [[Serpent Man|Serpent Men]] | ||
| + | ** [[Deep One]]s | ||
| + | ** [[Lemurian]]s | ||
| + | ** ...and other humanoid and proto-humanoid beings | ||
| + | * races, other - Skull Island is home to many strange and terrifying monsters, most of which are hostile to Kong and man alike... | ||
* cult: [[Human Cultist|Skull Islanders]] (see above) | * cult: [[Human Cultist|Skull Islanders]] (see above) | ||
* location: [[Skull Island]], which is possibly a remnant of [[Lemuria]] or [[Mu]] | * location: [[Skull Island]], which is possibly a remnant of [[Lemuria]] or [[Mu]] | ||
| − | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
Revision as of 05:45, 28 June 2022
Under Construction! Some (or all) of the information on this page was started by a (well meaning) fanatical cultist, but was never completed, and appears to have been abandoned. Please help complete it if you are able! See this YSDC Forum discussion for details on how you can help: (link) Problem logged on: 03:18, 28 June 2022 (UTC) The specific problem is: This article is a stub. (More details may be found on the Discussion Page.)
Kong (AKA: "King Kong", "Mighty Kong", "Kong the Unvanquished", "Kong: Eighth Wonder of the World") first appears in King Kong (1933 film), as a gigantic ape-god worshiped by the natives of "Skull Island", a mysterious, uncharted Pacific island hidden beyond a wall of mist.
In the Mythos
Quote:
— Author, "Story"
Kong was a gigantic ape-god worshiped by the natives of "Skull Island", a mysterious, uncharted Pacific island hidden beyond a wall of mist, the remnant of a Lost civilization. In 1933, an expedition of American and English explorers took Kong from the island to New York to exploit the discovery as a curiosity for the entertainment of thrill-seekers, with disastrous results, with Kong being killed soon afterward.
Kong would have lived on the island at least since the Gaslight era, through the 1920s, and into the Pulp Era until 1933, but it is unknown just how old Kong and his native cult really are - it's assumed that Kong was the last of his kind, but it's not even that clear whether he was the first and only one of his kind; worship of Kong and possibly his ancestors might date far back into antiquity, even pre-history.
Heresies and Controversies
Cult
By the 1920s, Kong is worshiped by a decadent native cult clinging to the rapidly eroding edge of "Skull Island", a remnant of lost Lemuria or Mu, once home to an advanced civilization which has since either vanished from the surface of the Earth as their continent disintegrated, or perhaps fallen into decay and surviving today as the pitiful wretches who now inhabit Skull Island, though there is evidence to suggest that the Skull Islanders today are at least in part relative latecomers this ancient continent, who either found the land uninhabited, or conquered and mixed with whatever original inhabitants might have remained on the island when the current "natives" arrived. This "civilized" part of the island has all but completely been eroded into the sea, with the islanders' villages perched precariously on cliffs overhanging the sea.
Kong himself is kept isolated from the "civilized" part of Skull Island on what is today the main, wild part of the island, in a dense, dangerous jungle behind a vast wall of cyclopean stone (which the natives say was built by the "Old Ones" when the Earth was created), the wall fortified in places by the natives with gigantic wooden palisades as it crumbles from the ravages of time and the erosion of the island. A gigantic wooden gate set into the wall is constructed before a sacrificial platform to which human sacrifices - young maidens of the village - are tied, offerings to appease Kong when the gate is opened for him and drums and gongs beaten to summon him, in hopes of ensuring that the villagers, who today have little territory left for hunting or agriculture, will not be allowed to starve, which would now drive them to either cannibalism or extinction - if Kong is appeased, hunters and gatherers might pass beyond the gate into the deadly jungles of Skull Island, in search of food - with the blessing and protection of Kong, some of the hunters and gatherers might return with food for another season. The fate of the maiden sacrifices is unknown, but the islanders consider the sacrifices to be honored "brides" of Kong.
It is difficult to say how long this relationship between the Islanders and Kong has existed, or indeed how old Kong really is: the Islanders consider Kong a god, the only one of his kind, as old as Skull Island itself, dwelling there (with the natives themselves) since the creation of the Earth. With evidence suggesting that the island is far older than the islanders themselves, and some suspicion that the Islanders arrived late in the island's history to find it uninhabited, and with the main part of Skull Island practically unexplored, the truth is uncertain, though it is possible that some of the prehistoric tomes of the Cthulhu Mythos contain hints of the secrets hidden behind the wall of Kong's island. Indeed, though scientifically unlikely, we might wildly conjecture from native accounts that worship of Kong might well extend thousands or millions of years into prehistory, with Lemurian cults making terrible sacrifices to Kong as long ago as the Hyborian Age or even the Thurian Age....
Following the expedition of 1933 when Kong was taken by force from the island by American and English explorers and later killed, the fate of the natives without the protection of Kong is uncertain: Kong seems likely to have been the mightiest force beyond the gate which the natives could have bargained with, and in his absence the natives would surely have been driven to darker extremes and bargains to stave off hunger on one side of the gate, and the horrors concealed by the jungles on the other side of the gate, which only Kong could tame.
Skull Island
TO_DO
Keeper Notes
Associated Mythos Elements
- races, servitor - Kong or his ancestors in antiquity could have been encountered by, and possibly worshiped by:
- Frazetta Man
- Serpent Men
- Deep Ones
- Lemurians
- ...and other humanoid and proto-humanoid beings
- races, other - Skull Island is home to many strange and terrifying monsters, most of which are hostile to Kong and man alike...
- cult: Skull Islanders (see above)
- location: Skull Island, which is possibly a remnant of Lemuria or Mu
References
- film: King Kong (1933 film) (and its sequels, remakes, reboots, clones, etc.)