Embed
Email

GILGAMESH BACKGROUND

Document Sample

Shared by: qinmei liao
Categories
Tags
Stats
views:
2
posted:
11/11/2011
language:
Galician
pages:
45
GILGAMESH BACKGROUND

• World Literature I

• Presentation by:

• Ralph Monday









1

Mesopotamia









2

Mesopotamia









3

The Descent of Inanna



• This journey into the underworld is a

bit older than Gilgamesh.

• It is probably the oldest extant written

story in the world.

• The story can actually be located in

the urban culture of Sumer to 3500

B.C.E.

4

• Both Sumer and Egypt developed a

written language at about 3200

B.C.E.

• Mesopotamia and Egypt have the

oldest written literature in the world.

• Urban civilization is thought to begin

with Sumer.





5

Ancient Sumer









6

Gilgamesh

• The story came to us from 22,000

clay tablets of cuneiform writing from

• modern day Iraq.

• The Akkadian king, Ashurbanipal had

it written down sometime during the

eighth century B.C.E.





7

Cuneiform Writing

• Genesis 10:10 And

the beginning of

his kingdom was

Babel and

Erech and Accad

and Calneh in the

land of Shinar

(Sumer) .....



8

Language

• Sumerian is a linguistically isolated

and extinct language. All attempts to

connect Sumerian with any other

tongue have so far failed. Sumerian is

preserved only on clay tablets in a

corpus of texts written in cuneiform.

After 2000 B.C.E. the Semitic

language Akkadian became

dominant. 9

Cuneiform Script

• The Sumerian

civilization is

thought to be the

earliest culture to

use written

language, in

about 3200

B.C.E.

10

11

Gilgamesh Continued

• The story of Gilgamesh was lost until

1839 when A.H. Layard found the

tablets in Nineveh.

• In 1872 George Smith translated

them into English.







12

Present Day Uruk









13

Gilgamesh Summary

• The epic begins with a list of

Gilgamesh’s accomplishments.

• We learn that he is self-indulgent and

that he sleeps with all the virgins

before they sleep with their lovers.







14

The Coming of Enkidu



• Enkidu is created to be a challenger

to Gilgamesh.

• He is first civilized by a ritual orgy of

six days and seven with a temple

priestess.

• This symbolizes the loss of his animal

nature.

15

Seduction of Enkidu









16

• Enkidu challenges

Gilgamesh to a

physical battle,

stopping him from

claiming “first night.”

• Gilgamesh wins,

though not easily, and

he and Enkidu

become friends.

• Enkidu can be seen

as a type of double or

foil for Gilgamesh.

17

Humbaba

Gilgamesh









18

• Gilgamesh wants some of the lumber

of Enlil’s forest, up the Euphrates

River.

• He and Enkidu travel to the forest that

is guarded by a giant, Humbaba.

• When Gilgamesh begins to cut down

trees, Humbaba is enraged.

• Humbaba offers the entire forest if he

can live, but Enkidu persuades

Gilgamesh to kill him.

19

Confronting Humbaba









20

Ishtar

• The fertility goddess, Ishtar, proposes

to Gilgamesh and wants to make love

to him.

• He refuses and insults her about her

poor record as a lover.

• Whining, Ishtar goes to her father and

asks for the Bull of Heaven so that

Gilgamesh will be destroyed.

21

The Goddess Ishtar









22

Phoenician Ivory Plaque of Ishtar









23

Bull of Heaven









24

• Anu grants the bull, but Enkidu and

Gilgamesh kill it, dedicating its heart

to Shamash.

• Ishtar is even more upset.

• Enkidu then dreams that either he or

Gilgamesh must die for having killed

the Bull and Humbaba.





25

• Enkidu curses the gate made of the

cedar he stole and the woman who

brought him to civilization.

• Anu reminds Enkidu of how good the

woman was and he retracts the

curse.

• Enkidu can then only speak his

terrifying dreams to Gilgamesh who

watches him die.

26

Gilgamesh Mourns the Death of

Enkidu









27

Gilgamesh Wanders the Earth



• Alone and terrified of death, Gilgamesh

travels eastward toward the mountain of

Mashu (perhaps in Iran or Kashmir?).

• He kills lions and wears their hides until he

meets dangerous scorpion men who

inquire about his quest.





28

Persian impression of a cornelian

cylinder seal









Scorpion men

29

• Gilgamesh responds to the Scorpion

men by telling them that he is looking

• For Utnapishtim, a mortal who

became a god, so that he too, can

discover the secret of eternal life.

• They let him pass and he goes into a

tunnel beneath the mountain to

emerge on the other side in the land

of the gods.

30

• There he meets Siduri, a veiled bar

maid for the gods.

• She does not recognize Gilgamesh,

for his long journey and mourning for

Enkidu have made him haggard and

emaciated.







31

Siduri









32

• Siduri reveals to Gilgamesh the

paradox of divinity: because men are

mortal they can at least enjoy life,

• For it is rare and a mysterious gift.

• The gods, however, being immortal

have no need to fear death; life is

nothing to them.

• Life is all the same, one enjoyment

after the other, none spectacular.

33

• Gilgamesh asks her for the way to

Utnapishtim.

• She directs him to a forest, and

beyond the forest is a mooring where

• The mysterious boatman, Urshnabi,

stands waiting.





34

Urshnabi









35

• Gilgamesh smashes a box on the

boat because he is angry and afraid

of death.

• He must supply the ship with poles

painted with tar in order to cross the

sea of death.

• He does so and is taken to meet

Utnapishtim, the Faraway.



36

Utnapishtim









37

• The conversation they have is similar

to the one that Gilgamesh had with

Siduri and Urshnabi.

• Utnapishtim tells him that there is no

such thing as “permanence,” that

nothing lasts forever.

• However, Gilgamesh wants to know

how Utnapishtim, who once was a

mortal, came to be among the gods.

38

• Utnapishtim then tell Gilgamesh the

story of the gods being upset and

• Destroying the world by sending a

great flood.

• All humans were destroyed except

Utnap and his family.

• The story is almost identical to the

one in Genesis.



39

• It is time for Gilgamesh to return to

the land of the living.

• Utnapishtim offers him a test: Stay

awake for six days and seven nights,

• And he might just become immortal.

• Gilgamesh fails before he even

begins.





40

• He falls asleep and when he wakes

up the baked loaves of bread beside

• His bed tell him that he has slept for

seven days.

• Utnapishtim’s wife wants a going

away present for Gilgamesh.







41

• The old man tells Gilgamesh about a

plant growing at the bottom of the sea

that grants immortal life.

• However, a snake steals the plant

away from him and he loses the gift of

immortal life.







42

Snake Stealing Plant of Life









43

• Gilgamesh arrives as a hero in Uruk.

He then engraves his life’s story on

stones.

• Gilgamesh dies, granted immortality

only through the monuments he has

built and the poem that we read.

• The people praise his deeds and the

greatness of their king.



44

Gilgamesh, Immortality Through Art









45



Related docs
Other docs by qinmei liao
Arrival RSE Financial Year
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Take chill pill Workshop GO KART RACING
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Abe cough with sputum
Views: 2  |  Downloads: 0
SDPI Healthy Heart Project
Views: 2  |  Downloads: 0
Alternative Trade Adjustment Assistance ATAA
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Improving the Bjorken estimate PHENIX
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Teacher Erase Color Rhyme
Views: 1  |  Downloads: 0
Estimates of District Domestic Product
Views: 4  |  Downloads: 0
By registering with docstoc.com you agree to our
privacy policy

You are almost ready to download!

You are almost ready to download!