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Dieudonné de Gozon

Grand Master of the Knights of Rhodes from 1346 to 1353

Dieudonné de Gozon

Summary

Grand Master of the Knights of Rhodes from 1346 to 1353

Early 18th century engraving of Dieudonné de Gozon by [[Jean-François Cars
Tombstone of Dieudonné de Gozon, Rhodes. [[Musée de Cluny]].

Dieudonné de Gozon was the Grand Master of the Knights of Rhodes from 1346 to 1353. He was born to a noble family in Languedoc, France. He carried the nickname Extinctor Draconis, which means "The Dragon Slayer" in Latin.

In 1347 and 1348, Gozon led his order in a march to aid King Constantine V of Armenia, who was threatened by the army of the Sultan of Egypt.

The Dragon of Rhodes

A story tells of a dragon in the island of Rhodes, Greece, hiding in the local swamp and killing the cattle of the local farmers. Despite the orders of the previous Grand Master not to disturb the beast, Gozon slew the dragon and hung the head on one of the seven gates of the medieval town of Rhodes. The head was on display until around 1837, when it was disposed of by workers responsible for repairing the castle.

However, the Museum of the Order of St. John, in a 2015 article, states that there is no mention by any author of such a trophy on display before a 17th-century travelogue, which was written centuries after the head was supposedly hung on a gate at Rhodes. Historian Frederick William Hasluck suggests that Gozon's participation in a then-common Rogation festival, in which a facsimile of a dragon was "slain" to represent defeat of a symbolic "Spirit of Evil," may have evolved over time into a story where Gozon slew an actual, living dragon.

References

  • Pavlidis, Vangelis. Rhodes, A Story 1306 - 1522. Rhodes: Kasseris Publications.

before=Helion de Villeneuve | title=Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller | years=1346–1353 | after=Pierre de Corneillan

References

  1. Ward, Alec. (August 18, 2015). "Wednesday Talks – "Gozon The Dragon Slayer"".
  2. Hasluck, Frederick W. "Dieudonné de Gozon and the Dragon of Rhodes." Annual of the British School at Athens 20 (1914), 70-79.
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