Epic of Gilgamesh
[2024-02-01 02:43:45]
Epic of Gilgamesh, the Odyssey of ancient Mesopotamia is recorded in Akkka, about King Gilgamesh of the city of Urk (Elek) in Mesopotamia.
The most complete text of Gilgamesh is twelve incomplete academic movies discovered in the library of Ashurbanipal (AD 668 - 627 bce) king of Assyria by Hormuzd Rassam of Assyria of Turkey in the mid-nineteenth century. The gaps in the tablet are partially filled with various fragments found in Mesopotamia and elsewhere in Anatolia. In addition, the five short poetry in Scots is known from the tablet written in the first half of the 2nd century; the poems are "Gilgamesh and Fuwa", "Gilgamesh and the bulls of the sky", "Gilgamesh and Aga" quiche " "Gilgamesh, Enkidou, and The Netherworld", and "Death of Gilgamesh".
Epic of the Ninevite version begins with a tribute to tribute to the knowledge of Gilgamesh, a sacred part, part of mankind, great builders and warriors, and everything on land and in the sea. In order to suppress the severe regulations of Gilgamesh, God Anu originally caused the creation of a barbarian, Enkidou who lived in animals. But soon, Enkidu started entering city life and traveled to Uruk where Gilgamesh was waiting for him. Tablet II describes the test of power between two men, among which Gilgamesh is the winner, then Enkidu is Gilgamesh's friend and companion (in Sumerian's text, servant). In Tablet III-V, two males started all together to Huwawa (Humbaba), a guardian of a sacred designated remote Sugi forest, but the rest of the participants were not recorded in the surviving debris . In Tablet VI, Gilgamesh who returned to Uruk rejected the goddess Ishtar 's marriage proposal, killed her with the help of Njidu and killed him to destroy his sacred bull. Tablet VII starts with the explanation of Enkidu's dream. There, God Anu, Ea, Shamash decided that Enkidu had to die to kill the bulls. After that Enkidu became sick and dreamed of waiting for his "Dust House". Condolences for his funeral in Gilgamesh's state and Nidu's state are listed in Tablet VIII. Later, Gilgamesh did a dangerous journey (tablet IX and X) to discover Utnapishtim, the survivor of the flood of Babylonia, and learned how to escape from death. When he finally arrived at Utnapishtim, Gilgamesh heard stories of the flood and showed where to find plants that can regain youth (Tablet XI). But after Gilgamesh acquired the plant, it was caught and eaten by snakes, and Gilgamesh still returned to Uruk. The epic XII appendix is about the loss of objects from Ishtar to Gilgamesh's pukku and mikku (probably "drums" and "drumsticks"). Epic ended with the return of Enkidu's spirit, Enkidu regained the item and then promised to make a serious report in the underworld.
Epic of Gilgamesh Epic of Gilgamesh introduces King Ratger Gilgamesh, which is one-third of the people, two-thirds of God. The activity he saw in the story was the construction of a magnificent temple tower built around the city walls in the fields and orchards. The magnificent overture is the beauty, wisdom and great power of his body. He is a god both physically and mentally, and his kingdom is beginning to be regarded as the ruler of a cruel tyrant. - The epic poem Gilgamesh of Gilgamesh conveys another world full of fantasies in his long and poetic form of epics. But among the stories of the gods, semi-gods, and living things, there are many well-known themes that are still relevant and explorative in contemporary literature. The idea of friendship, power of God, and love is proposed in the story. One of them is to seek desire and immortality.
There are many vices and virtues in Gilgamesh's epic. The girugamesh epic is the story of Babylon. That hero, King Urk, Gilgamesh is two thirds of the gods, one third of the people. In the whole epic of three stories, the role of Gilgamesh developed. This is accomplished by changing the habit he had at the beginning of the epic and replacing them with the virtue he received when he finished.