
Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison
𐤃𐤂𐤍
The name in its original Phoenician form. Dāgan (𐤃𐤂𐤍) is attested in the source tradition — “Grain”. Its macron-length vowels carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.
dagan
Reduced to plain dagan, the name loses everything that made it specific: macron-length vowels. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.
Dāgan
The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Dāgan restores macron-length vowels, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.
Dāgan.com → xn--dgan-qsa.com
The non-ASCII characters in Dāgan are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Dāgan.
How Dāgan travels from ancient script to the modern URL
Semitic dgn “grain"; Dāgan is a grain and fertility god worshipped across the Levant and Mesopotamia.
How Dāgan was spoken
Fertility, Agriculture, and Divine Fatherhood
Dāgan is the grain god of the ancient Levant, the divine power who fills the storehouses and makes the fields fertile. In Ugaritic myth he is the father of Baal and the patron of the agricultural cycle; in Philistine religion he is the national god whose temple Samson pulls down. His domain is not the storm on the mountain but the quiet miracle by which seed becomes bread.
His name and cult center on wheat, barley, and the harvest that sustains city and village alike.
In Ugaritic texts Dāgan is Baal's father, grounding the storm god's power in the agricultural cycle.
A major temple dedicated to Dāgan stood in the city of Ugarit, receiving royal offerings.
Worshipped by the Philistines as a national god, his temple at Gaza is destroyed by Samson.
Stories of Dāgan
Dāgan is a father figure rather than a warrior. In the Ugaritic texts he receives offerings and grants blessings; in the Hebrew Bible he is a foreign god whose temple symbolizes Philistine power. His myths are few, but his cultural importance is immense: he is the god of the staple crop on which every Near Eastern society depended.
Ugaritic ritual texts record sacrifices and offerings to Dāgan, especially at the time of planting and harvest. In KTU 1.12 and related texts, Baal is called 'son of Dāgan,' and the grain god's favor is sought for the fertility of the land. Dāgan does not ride the clouds; he sits in his temple and receives the first fruits of the field.
Judges 16:23–30 describes the Philistine nobility gathering in the temple of Dagon at Gaza to offer a great sacrifice. They bring Samson to entertain them, but he prays for strength, seizes the two central pillars, and pulls the temple down upon himself and his captors. The story marks Dāgan/Dagon as the defeated god of Israel's enemies.
Mari archives from the eighteenth century BCE mention Dāgan as a god of the middle Euphrates and the steppe, receiving dedications from kings and nomads alike. His cult crossed the boundary between sedentary farmers and pastoral peoples, suggesting a deity of broad agricultural and territorial significance.
Dāgan is the god of the harvest, the silent partner in every loaf of bread. He asks us to notice that civilization rests on grass: wheat and barley tamed, sown, reaped, and ground. In a world of industrial food systems, Dāgan reminds us that fertility is not a commodity but a relationship between soil, seed, rain, and human labor. To remember him is to remember the sacredness of daily bread.
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