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Mammon in popular culture : ウィキペディア英語版 | Mammon in popular culture :See also Mammon (disambiguation) The Hebrew term mammon, personifying money in the New Testament, has led to many take-ups of the name in popular culture. ==Literature== In John Milton's ''Paradise Lost'', Mammon is a fallen angel, described as being "more interested in heaven's pavements," than the leader. He tells the other fallen angels to be content in Hell. The Phantom of the Opera worships Mammon in Frederick Forsyth's ''The Phantom of Manhattan''. In The Alchemist by Ben Jonson, Sir Epicure Mammon is a man obsessed with material wealth. In Dungeons & Dragons, Mammon is an archdevil, one of the archdukes and the ruler of the Third Layer of Hell.
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