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Difference between revisions of "Mephistopheles"

 
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[[Image:Mephistopheles2.jpg|350px|thumb|Mephistopheles flying over Wittenberg, in a lithograph by Eugène Delacroix.]]


'''Mephistopheles''' (also '''Mephisto''', '''Mephistophilus''', '''Mephist''', '''Murphy''', '''Mephy''', '''Murphy Stoffelis''',  '''Mephistophilis''', '''Mephostophiles''', '''Mephostophiel''', and '''Mephisophilus''') is a name given to one of the chief [[demon]]s of Christian mythology that figure in European literary traditions.
==Origin==
While the name '''Mephistopheles''' is frequently used as an alternative form of [[Satan]] or [[Devil|the Devil]], it evolved during the Renaissance; the name Mephistopheles makes no appearance in the [[Bible]].
===Etymology===
The name is associated with the story of [[Faust]], a scholar who sold his soul to the demon Mephistopheles for knowledge. There have been a number of attempts to guess the source from which the name is derived.
#Some believe it is a play on ''"Me Fausto philos"'' and the Latin ''"Ne Fausto filius"'', which means either "Friend of Faust" or "No son of Faust".
#Some believe that the name means "He who shuns the light."
#Others trace it to the Latin word 'mefitis' (also spelt 'mephitis,' meaning pungent, sulphurous, stinking, and anoxious exhalation from the ground) and 'fel' (bile, poison), and orthographically dressed as a Greek name, as if transliterated from an imaginary Greek
#Still others trace it to a rhyme with the name '(Aristotle), which connotes its opposite. They claim while the name 'Aristotelēs' means 'noblest purpose' in Greek, 'Mephistophelēs' means 'noxious bile,' in a semi-educated, or perhaps deliberately comic, mixture of Greek and Latin.
#Some trace it to the Hebrew word "''Tophel''" which means liar. Also, Bachtold-Stäubli has other Hebrew explanations yet for the name.
A look at how the name has changed elucidates the matter, although it does not elucidate why the name arose and changed. In the 16th century Faustbook, the first literary work about Faust, the name is Mephostophiles.
In Greek, this literally means "Not a lover of light," and could mean, "He who shuns the light".  Mephostophiles is also the name for the character in Christopher Marlowe's 1604 play, ''The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/Texts/faustus.html].'' In both, he is not [[Satan]] himself but a minion of Satan's.
That does not mean the name Mephistopheles did not start in the 16th Century. The Passauer Hollenzwang, which was contemporary with the Faustbook, mentions Mephistophiel and Mephistophiles. The first adds Hebrew to the Latin and Greek mix. In addition, Shakespeare mentions Mephistophilus, with its Latinate ending, in the "Merry Wives of Windsor (Act1, Sc1, line 64)." In the 1616 edition of the ''"Tragical History of Doctor Faustus"'', Mephostophiles became Mephistophilus. Did the name make the transition from being "He who shuns the light" to stinking and noxious, or was it a parallel development? We do not know. 
===Goethe’s Faust===
Still, while the process was already begun in the 16th Century, it was not until the 19th century that Faust's demon was known as Mephistopheles. He appeared with that name in ''Faust'' (''Part 1'' (1808) and ''Part 2''(1832)) by the influential German writer and humanist Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Also, in both, Faust's demon became the Devil himself.
==Main Beliefs==
Several legends grew up about Mephistophiles. According to certain extra-biblical texts relating to Christian mysticism, and a number of related works written during the 17th century, Mephistophiles was the first to join with [[Lucifer]] during the rebellion against [[God]] at the beginning of time. When the rebel angels were banished from [[Heaven]], Mephistophiles was the second to fall, after Lucifer. In exchange for his loyalty, Lucifer granted him power in [[Hell]], appointing him his second-in-command.
Another belief was that Mephistophiles was an angel that assisted God in the creation of the universe. He was known for the designing of [[orca whales, seals, and a few other ocean mammals typically working with a fellow angel named [[Cerenus]]. Cerenus is known for creating dolphins in particular. Eventually, Mephistophiles joined Lucifer's banner due to his jealousy toward humans.
==Popular Culture==
===Literature===
*Mephistopheles is known throughout Goethe's plays as a "[[fallen angel]]" himself, as he clearly states to Faust. He rebels against the authority of [[God]] and is thrown out of Heaven into Hell.
*In a passage from Marlowe's ''Faustus'', Mephostophiles says:
:"''Why this is hell, nor am I out of it./ Think'st thou that I, who saw the face of God,/And tasted the eternal joys of heaven,/ Am not tormented with ten thousand hells/ In being deprived of everlasting bliss?''"
*''Mefisto'' is also the title of a book by contemporary Irish writer John Banville. The novel treats the descent of a young math prodigy, and burn victim, Gabriel Swann, into a personal hell, accompanied by various Mephisotopholean characters, including Felix and Mr. Kasperl.
{{wikipedia}}
[[Category:Angels and demons]] [[Category:Christian mythology]]

Revision as of 01:37, 18 April 2007