Secondary Source: C.W. Ceram, Gods, Graves and Scholars,
Alfred Knopf: New York, 1978.
Gilgamesh, the story of the Sumerians, the oldest civilization
in the world.
In Mesopotamia, a rich
agricultural region located between the Tigrus and Euphrates
Rivers
4000-3000 B.C. Sumeria
2000 B. C. Assyria, to the north -- Ninevah, chief city
2000 B.C. Babylonia, to the south -- Babylon, chief city
(presently, Baghdad, Iraq
Nebuchadnezzar, the last ruler of New Babylonia
Ninevah, Assyria was the parvenue of the pre-historic world, much
like Rome was to Greece.
Paul Emile Botta, physician to a rich Arab and who later became a
French consul, in 1841, discovered the first Assyrian palace.
This was the first substantiation of the places of the Old Testament.
He discovered the out-skirts of Ninevah.
Later excavation by Layard uncovered Ninevah and Nimrud.
Rassam, for the British Museum, discovered the Gilgamesh
tables.(25,000) brought back to London)
The Gilgamesh tablets were written in Akkadian, a language much like Hebrew.
Assurbanipal, the last great Assyrian king in the seventh
century B.C. had older versions, versions in the Sumerian language,
translated into the more modern Akkadian and housed in a great
library. It is this translation, albeit from Akkadian to English,
that we are reading today.
George Smith, at the British Museum, translated the first
Gilgamesh tablets and returned to Mesopotamia to find the
missing tablets; he found tablets relating the account of the flood.
Smith died of hunger and exposure in Mesopotamia at the age of
36.
These early amateur excavators began to see that there was a much
older culture, the Sumerican culture, which seemed to date back to
the time of Genesis or before. Questions arose, such as were these
the people who were wiped out by the flood?
Graves of the rulers of Ur (Sumeria) were found and evidence of human
sacrificial ritual uncovered -- soldiers, servants,
ladies-in-waiting. Such sacrifices were probably carried out by
priests to affirm the divinity of their king. No evidence that this
practice was carried out in Babylonia or Assyria.
Sumerians -- believed to come from the Indus Valley, 1500 miles
away.They were non-semitic people who came to the Tigris-Euphrates
Valley which was originally inhabited by tribes of Semites.
Gilgamesh, originally a Sumerian legend recopied by the
Assyrians, was composed and recited before written down.
Assurbanipal, the last great king of Assyria, sent messengers out to
search the archives of the ancient seats of learning in Babylon,Uruk,
and Nippur, and to copy and translate into the contemporary Akkadian
Semitic those texts which were in the older Sumerian language of
Mesopotamia. Amongst these texts, was the poem which we call the
Epic of Gilgamesh.