depicting
Khidr and
Alexander watching the Water of Life revive a salted fish Objects that can sustain or restore youth are common in ancient literature.
Sîn-lēqi-unninni's The Epic of Gilgamesh (1300 BCE–1000 BCE) describes a magical plant called The-Old-Man-Will-Be-Made-Young that grows in the watery abyss.
Herodotus mentions a fountain containing a special kind of water in the
land of the
Macrobians, which gives the Macrobians their exceptional longevity. A story of the "Water of Life" appears in the
Alexander romance, which describes
Alexander the Great and his servant crossing the
Land of Darkness to find the restorative spring. These earlier accounts inspired the popular medieval fantasy
The Travels of Sir John Mandeville, which also mentions the Fountain of Youth as located at the foot of a mountain outside Lombe (modern
Kollam Due to the influence of these tales, the Fountain of Youth legend was popular in courtly
Gothic art, appearing for example on the
Gothic ivory casket
Casket with Scenes of Romances and several ivory mirror-cases, and remained popular through the European
Age of Exploration. European
iconography is fairly consistent, as
The Fountain of Youth (
Der Jungbrunnen), a painting by
Cranach, and an ivory mirror-case from 200 years earlier demonstrate:
Der Jungbrunnen depicts old people, often carried, who enter at left, strip, and enter a pool that is as large as space allows. The people in the pool are youthful and naked, and after a while they leave it, and are shown fashionably dressed enjoying a courtly party, sometimes including a meal. On the carved ivory mirror-cover, elderly men and women walk or travel by cart from the left to the mythical Fountain of Youth at the right. They bathe and reemerge as young couples who enter into the castle at the center and the court above. There are countless indirect sources for the tale as well.
Eternal youth is a gift frequently sought in myth and legend, and stories of things such as the
philosopher's stone,
universal panaceas, and the
elixir of life are common throughout
Eurasia and elsewhere. An additional inspiration may have been taken from the account of the
Pool of Bethesda where a
paralytic man was healed in the
Gospel of John. In the
possibly interpolated , the pool is said to be periodically stirred by an angel, upon which the first person to step into the water would be healed of whatever afflicted them. ==Bimini==