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Jinn

Jinn

Elemental spirits from Mesopotamian and Islamic mythology.

Name:
Jinn
Aliases:
  • Djinn
  • Genies
  • Jinni
First issue:
National Comics (1940) #4
cover

Spirits in the middle-east. They can be evil or good. Control other beings, or help them.

In original Middle Eastern lore, djinni occupy a position somewhere between European notions of angels and faeries and exist in both folklore and religious writings.

In most (not all) United States pop culture story universes with their fondness for hierarchies in their kitchen-sink magical realities, genies are the apex magical beings, second only to the gods themselves and more powerful than even Puck in the *Gargoyles* storyline or the *Bewitched* witches in crossover fanfic. Nearly all depictions of genies in American stories can be traced back to either the gigantic godlike genie in the 1930s *Thief of Bagdad* film starring Sabu or various film/TV versions of the *Aladdin and the Lamp* story that had been appended to *1001 Nights* and have little to do with their original depiction in Middle East myth and folklore.

Issues

February 1946

February 1951

June 1955

December 1956

August 1957

February 1958

September 1958

November 1958

December 1965

November 1974

June 1978

January 1979

September 1979

November 1983

April 1998

August 2000

December 2002

January 2006

February 2006

July 2006

August 2006

September 2006

January 2007

November 2007

September 2009

November 2009

December 2009

January 2010

February 2010

Volumes

1938

1940

1951

1956

1973

1974

1976

1978

1993

1997

1998

2002

2006

2007

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2016

Members

Friends

Enemies