Lamassu: Difference between revisions
1d4chan>SaltyMan No edit summary |
1d4chan>Nubnuber No edit summary |
||
| Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
'''Lammasu Gallery''' | '''Lammasu Gallery''' | ||
<gallery> | <gallery> | ||
Lammasu ODD5.png|Original D&D | |||
Lamassu 1e.jpg|1e | Lamassu 1e.jpg|1e | ||
Lammasu MCV2.jpg|2e | Lammasu MCV2.jpg|2e | ||
Revision as of 23:39, 28 November 2021

The Lamassu is an obscure monster from ancient Sumeria, also known as a Shedu. It appears as a winged bull or lion with the head of a human man and is regarded as a protector spirit, as well as being associated with a particular goddess. Its Sumerian origin is probably one of the reasons it's so obscure, as it doesn't originate from Greek/Roman, Egyptian, or Lovecraftian mythos. Muslims adopted the critter as Buraq, the creature that carried Mohammad to Paradise for a one-on-one with God.
D&D
In Dungeons & Dragons, Lamassu (usually misspelled as Lammasu) and Shedu are two seperate Good aligned outsiders. Lamassu are winged man-headed lions with the powers of a 7th level Cleric, whilst Shedu are winged man-headed bulls with psionic powers.
Lammasu Gallery
-
Original D&D
-
1e
-
2e
-
3e
Shedu Gallery
-
1e
-
2e
-
3e
Wahammer Fantasy
In Warhammer Fantasy Battles, one of the mount options for Chaos Dwarf sorcerers is a lamassu also-misspelled lammasu, which is a magic-eating monster depicted as a winged bull/lion thing with the head of a chaos dwarf. Lammasu also appeared as one of the bindable monsters in Storm of Magic.