The Lord mentioned to Noah, there’s going to be a floody, floody; then to get these children out of the muddy, muddy; then to construct him an arky, arky. This a lot we heard whereas toasting marshmallows across the camphearth, at the least if we grew up in a certain modern Protestant tradition. As adults, we could or could not imagine that there ever lived a person referred to as Noah who constructed an ark to avoid wasting all of the world’s innocent animal species from a sin-cleansing flood. However until we’ve taken a deep dive into historical history, we probably don’t know that this especially well-known Bible story wasn’t the primary of its particular substyle. As defined in the Hochelaga video above, there are even outdateder global-deluge tales to be reckoned with.
The truth is, one such fable seems within the outdatedest recognized work of literature in human history, the Epic of Gilgamesh. “In it, the god Ea learns of this divine flood, and secretly warns the people about this coming disaster,” says Hochelaga creator Tommie Trelawny. Thus knowledgeable, the king Utnapishtim builds an enormous coracle, a type of circular boat “used to navigate the rivers of Mesopotamia for centuries.”
Like Noah, Utnapishtim brings his family and a number of animals aboard, and after riding out the worst of the storm, finds that his craft has come to relaxation on a mountainprime. Additionally like Noah, he then sends birds out to seek out dry land. However ultimately, “the story takes an odd flip: as a substitute of being happy, the gods are indignant,” although Ea does step in to take responsibility and be sure that Utnapishtim is rewarded.
There are other versions with other gods, floods, and ark-builders as nicely. In the Religion for Breakquick video simply above, religious studies scholar Andrew Mark Henry compares the Biblical story of Noah and the Utnapishtim episode of the Epic of Gilgamesh with the “Sumerian flood story” from the second millennium BC and the two-centuries-older “Atrahasis epic.” All of those versions have deal in common, not least the executive decision by an exasperated excessiveer being (or beings) to wipe out virtually wholely the humanity they themselves created. Ironically, we moderns are likely to have first encountered this story of godly wrath and subsequent mass destruction in gentlecoronary hearted, even cheerful presentations. Whether or not historical Sumerians additionally sang about it in youth teams, no clay pill has but revealed.
Related content:
Did the Tower of Babel Actually Exist?: A Have a look at the Archaeological Evidence
The Epic of Gilgamesh, the Outdatedest-Recognized Work of Literature in World History
Based mostly in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. His tasks embrace the Substack newsletter Books on Cities and the e book The Statemuch less Metropolis: a Stroll by way of Twenty first-Century Los Angeles. Follow him on the social webwork formerly often called Twitter at @colinmarshall.