Old Man of the Sea

E135972

Old Man of the Sea is a parasitic, mythical figure from the Sinbad tales in One Thousand and One Nights who clings to a victim’s shoulders and forces them to carry him endlessly.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Old Man of the Sea canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (40)

Predicate Object
instanceOf literary character
mythical figure
parasitic being
adaptedIn various retellings of Sinbad stories
alignment malevolent
appearsIn The Arabian Nights
surface form: One Thousand and One Nights

Sinbad the Sailor
associatedWith islands
sea voyages
behavior manipulative
parasitic
culture Arabic literature
defeatedBy Sinbad the Sailor
surface form: Sinbad
defeatMethod being killed by Sinbad while intoxicated
getting drunk on wine
firstEncounterLocation an island visited by Sinbad
forcesAction carrying him continuously
genre fantasy
influenced later literary metaphors for economic or social burdens
languageOfOrigin Arabic
medium folklore
oral tradition
methodOfControl locking his legs around the victim’s neck
refusing to dismount from the victim’s shoulders
motif inescapable rider
parasitic hitchhiker
narrativeTradition frame tale of One Thousand and One Nights
notableFor clinging to a victim’s shoulders
forcing victims to carry him endlessly
originatesFrom Middle Eastern folklore
physicalForm old man
relatedConcept metaphor for a heavy burden
relatedWork The Seven Voyages of Sinbad the Sailor
requires a host to carry him
roleInStory antagonist
symbolizes burdensome obligations
inescapable burden
parasitic dependence
threatTo travelers
victim Sinbad the Sailor
surface form: Sinbad

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Sinbad the Sailor encounters Old Man of the Sea
Nereus epithet Old Man of the Sea