For centuries skeptics have questioned the authenticity of a great flood that covered the Earth. First mentioned in the Genesis account, a great flood has also been reported in other ancient writings such as the story of The Epic Gilgamesh from the Sumerian civilization. Ever since the Gilgamesh text finding in the mid-nineteenth century, questions have arisen about the connection these stories could have with each other. The question is if one has historical truth and the other is based on it
text is called The Epic of Atrahasis. This text survived on three tablets from the reign of king Ammi-saduqa of Babylonia from 1647-1626 BCE. Despite all of the evidence in favor of an actual flood some still choose to believe there was no flood. Some call the story a myth. Even though I believe that the flood actually happens. I can see how some would say that the story is a fable. As a matter, some people do not even believe Noah ever lived. They are some pretty good evidence that support this story
behavior within a culture. Both the Tale of the Flood from the “Epic of Gilgamesh” and the story of the flood from the Old Testament exhibit these intentions. In the Tale of the Flood from the “Epic of Gilgamesh”, Utnapishtim was instructed by the god Ea to build a large boat to save himself, his family, and “the seed of all living things”. Utnapishtim was given this instruction because the gods were angry with mankind and were planning to send a flood to destroy all living beings, save those on Utnapishtim’s
Two well known stories are Genesis and Gilgamesh. Both stories contain a part where there is a flood that wipes out mankind. Although two different stories, the flood story from Genesis and the flood story from Gilgamesh share a plethora of similarities that connect the two stories. Some key similarities include the cause of the flood, the animals on the boat, and the way of how each hero in the two stories find dry land. Firstly, the reason for the floods in both stories involve the wiping out
The book of “Gilgamesh” and “Noah And The Flood” are both epic stories with a different outlook on the flood. The two stories are clashing tales with flood and deals and death. They both have different religions and story lines which leads to the great Floods. Utnapishtim haves many Gods, and Noah haves one God. Utnapishtim gained everlasting life because of the flood. Noah got reward with grace and peace for flood. The cause of the floods were quite similar but didn’t really connect. In the book
the Gilgamesh and Genesis Floods The rendition of the historic, worldwide Flood recorded in Genesis of the Old Testament is similar to the account recorded on Tablet 11of the Sumero-Babylonian version of the epic of Gilgamesh, discovered in the 1800’s by British archaeologists in Assyria. Let us compare the two in this essay. Alexander Heidel in his book, The Gilgamesh Epic and Old Testament Parallels, provides a background for the survivor of the Sumero-Babylonian Flood, Utnapishtim:
September 4, 2011 Period 2 Comparative Essay In the ‘Epic of Gilgamesh’ and ‘The Biblical Flood Story’ have a very similar plot line, but many several key differences. In both stories a flood occurs, which were caused by the God/s( This shows that in Gilgamesh they were polytheistic while in the Biblical version they were monotheistic. ) to destroy the people of the earth. For both flood stories, a specific person is chosen to build an arc but for different reasons. In the Biblical story, Noah
Gilgamesh Flood In the Epic of Gilgamesh, the Mesopotamian culture believes a flood from the gods can destroy mankind. Ancient Mesopotamians viewed the world as a small place. They were skilled craftsmen that built a boat that could withstand the might of the gods. They valued gold and silver. They needed to please the gods thru sacrifice and other religious practices. Their gods would communicate with them by secrecy and held council meetings like them. If it was not for the immortality and the
In many flood stories, destruction happens. A flood could wipe out a whole city and leave everybody with nothing. In the story of Gilgamesh, a flood destructed all of mankind. In Genesis, God blotted out any existence on earth, using a flood. Today in many current events floods cause destruction and leave many people with nothing and can take some people's lives. During the story of Gilgamesh, humans were really noisy. The gods were tired of not being able to sleep, so they created a flood to get
The Flood of Noah and the Gilgamesh Flood The Sumero-Babylonian version of the epic of Gilgamesh, after two and a half millennia of dormancy, was resurrected by British archaeologists in the nineteenth century. Amid the rubble of an Assyrian palace, the twelve clay tablets inscribed the adventures of the first hero of world literature – King Gilgamesh, whose oral folk tales go back to at least 3000 years before Christ (Harris 1). Tablet XI contains the story of the Flood. In this essay