Twentieth century weird-fiction writer and creator of the Ruins of Ravencroft and the prophetic deck of The Marvel Tarot. On the 130th anniversary of weird writer’s birth, Screen Rant explores HP Lovecraft’s enduring impact on the Marvel Universe through “The Lovecraft Circle” and a swarthy barbarian from the Hyborian Age.

In the 1920s and 1930s, pulp magazines were awash in weird fiction with its supernatural horror, apocalyptic cults, and forbidden texts concealing unknown terrors yet lurking in the stars and in the dark corners of the earth. Foremost among these writers was H.P. Lovecraft, a prolific contributor to Weird Tales magazine and author of The Call of Cthulhu, At the Mountains of Madness, The Shadow Over Innsmouth, Dagon, and Whisperer in Darkness. Lovecraft’s dark and brooding tales of cosmic horror and the vast conspiracies masking hideous truths describe the Conan the Barbarian, that Lovecraft’s shadow casts its warped darkness over Marvel Comics.

Related: H.P. Lovecraft: 10 Movies Obviously Inspired By His Works (But Aren't Adaptations)

Roy Thomas, acting as Stan Lee’s assistant editor at Marvel Comics, secured the rights to Robert E. Howard’s work in 1970 and brought Conan, the sword-and-sorcery hero born on the battlefield, to the Marvel Universe. Howard not only wrote swashbuckling fantasy fiction but also crafted horror tales influenced by his contemporary H.P. Lovecraft. Through Howard’s significant correspondence with Lovecraft and their extensive exchange of ideas and inspiration within “The Lovecraft Circle,” the writer would contribute the elder evil, Shuma-Gorath of the Great Old Ones to the dark mythology though the pages of Kull, a hero of pre-cataclysmic Atlantis. As Roy Thomas advanced to editor of Marvel Comics in 1972, Howard's Conan the Barbarian, Kull the Conqueror, and puritanical Solomon Kane ed the ranks of the publisher’s comic titles … and hidden in the shadows, the Cthulhu Mythos crept in.

Cult-Of-Carnage

In 1972, Marvel Premiere: Featuring Doctor Strange, Master of the Mystic Arts launched a six-issue story arc introducing Howard’s Shuma-Gorath and the town of Starkesboro described as a “small New England town, out-of-the-way place, north of the Quabbin Reservoir.” (The Quabbin Reservoir is, coincidentally, a waterbody that covers the site of the surrealistic alien encounter immortalized in H.P. Lovecraft’s Conan the Barbarian introduced the Cimmerian’s spellcasting nemesis Thoth-Amon and a new wizard to be wary of, Kulan Gath. Intimation of Lovecraft’s work surface throughout Thomas’ tenure as writer and editor, in the black-and-white Savage Sword of Conan and in the Black Gods of R’lyeh from Kull the Destroyer, as the tentacles of the Cthulhu Mythos spread.

Lovecraft and his literary circle’s influence, like rumors of the Cthulhu cults themselves, waxes and wanes over the Marvel years, yet its persistence is felt lurking in the s - sometimes in the most unexpected places. 1979’s Marvel Team-Up: Featuring Spider-Man and Red Sonja from co-plotters Chris Claremont and John Byrne brings together the unlikely duo to fight the timeless menace of Kulan Gath, intent this time on sacrificing the She-Devil with a Sword and the wallcrawler to the Elder Gods. In 1992’s Conan the Barbarian, Vol. 1, #260, Howard’s hero destroys the "iron-bound books of Shuma-Gorath” to banish the chaotic colossus when the Great Old One is summoned to the Age of Conan by the indefatigable Kulan Gath. The shadow of the Cthulhu Mythos emerges once again in 1994’s Scarlet Witch #1, in which Lovecraft’s dread Necronomicon. And, 2007’s stylized occult compendium, The Marvel Tarot confirms the Great Old Ones and the Elder Gods as an integral part of the magical cosmology of the Marvel Universe, hidden in the stars yet an ever-present evil.

Conan The Barbarian 2019 Comic - The Life And Death Of Conan

Recent themes and recurring villains in the Marvel Comics suggest the threat of the Cthulhu Mythos yet holds sway in the Marvel Universe. 2016’s Doctor Strange, “Last Days of Magic” story arc by Jason Aaron casts Shuma-Gorath as the catastrophic catalyst for the Empirikul’s anti-magic crusade that drains Earth of its arcane energy. Gerry Duggan and Patch Zircher’s ongoing Savage Avengers series resurrects the power-mad Kulan Gath and the tentacled horror of Shuma-Gorath, as the blood rites of sinister cults call the abomination to the earth once again. And, the shadow seems to be coalescing around Frank Tieri’s gothic Ruins of Ravencroft and the Web of Venom: Cult of Carnage where cosmic horror reign and unspeakable rituals feed the elder evils of the universe, and cultists await their return across time and space. 

Lovecraft and the influence of the Cthulhu Mythos are rising on the 130th anniversary of the writer’s birth this year, beyond comic books and into mainstream popular culture. Film and Lovecraftian influence on its sleeve, particularly in season 3 and the Battle of the Starcourt. HBO’s hit Lovecraft Country is the most recent interpretation, contrasting cosmic horror with the everyday terror of “sundown towns” and the human-monsters of the world. And, the fear is palpable. H.P. Lovecraft once wrote, "The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown.” Yet sometimes, the fear one can see and recognize for what it is may be the most terrifying. 

More: Cthulhu Explained: Origin, Powers & Mythos