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Gilgamesh |
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Gilgamesh (gĭl`gəmĕsh), in Babylonian legend, king of Uruk. He is the hero of the Gilgamesh epic, a work of some 3,000 lines, written on 12 tablets c.2000 B.C. and discovered among the ruins at Nineveh. It tells of the adventures of the warlike and imperious Gilgamesh and his friend Enkidu. When Enkidu suddenly sickened and died, Gilgamesh became obsessed by a fear of death. His ancestor Ut-napishtim (who with his wife had been the only survivor of a great flood) told him of a plant that gave eternal life. After obtaining the plant, however, Gilgamesh left it unguarded and a serpent carried it off. The hero then turned to the ghost of Enkidu for consoling knowledge of the afterlife, only to be told by his friend that a gloomy future awaited the dead.
BibliographySee verse translation by H. Mason (1970); prose translation by N. K. Sandars (1960); A. Heidel, Gilgamesh Epic and Old Testament Parallels (2d ed. 1949). GilgameshHero of the ancient Akkadian-language Epic of Gilgamesh. The great literary work of ancient Mesopotamia, the epic is known from 12 incomplete tablets discovered at Nineveh in the library of Ashurbanipal. Gaps in the narrative have been filled in with fragments found elsewhere. The character Gilgamesh is probably based on the Gilgamesh who ruled Uruk in the 3rd millennium BC. The epic presents Gilgamesh as a great warrior and builder, who rejects the marriage proposal of the goddess Ishtar. With the aid of his friend and companion Enkidu, he kills the divine bull that Ishtar sends to destroy him. Enkidu's death prompts Gilgamesh to seek Utnapishtim, survivor of the legendary flood, to learn how to escape death. He obtains a youth-renewing plant only to have it stolen. The epic ends with the return of the spirit of Enkidu, who gives a dismal report on the underworld. Gilgamesh Babylonian epic of myth and folklore, centered on the king, Gilgamesh. [Babyl. Myth.: Gilgamesh] See : Epic Gilgamesh the semilegendary ruler of the city of Uruk in Sumer (2800 B.C.). Sumerian epic songs about Gilgamesh arose in the third millennium B.C. and have survived to our time. At the turn of the second millennium, a major epic poem on Gilgamesh was created in the Akkadian (Assyro-Babylonian) language. It describes the friendship of Gilgamesh with the wild man Enkidu, Gilgamesh’s despair after his friend’s death, his wanderings in search of the secret of immortality, his visit to his ancestor Utnapishtim, who had survived the flood, and so forth. The Gilgamesh legend was also widespread among the Hetts, Hurrites, Palestinians, and other peoples. The best-known version, from the early first millennium B.C., is from Nineveh. PUBLICATIONSEpos o Gil’ gameshe (“O vsë vidavshem”). Moscow-Leningrad, 1961. (Translated from Akkadian.)“Shumerskii geroicheskii epos.” Vestnik drevnei istorii, 1964, no. 3. I. M. D’IAKONOV Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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