Epic of Gilgamesh

From A+ Club Lesson Planner & Study Guide

The Epic of Gilgamesh is an "epic," or

Epic poetry[edit | edit source]

  • "epic" is a heroic narrative, or story, usually in poetic verse
    • from Greek epikos, for "heroic poetry", from epos for a word, story, prophecy
      • from PIE *wekw- for "to speak"
  • epics generally address questions of human origins, mortality and gods
    • and focus on a "hero" protaganist who must overcome challenges with feats of strength or wit
  • ancient epics, such as Gilgamesh or those of the Greek Homer, were transmitted orally long before they were put in written form
    • oral story-telling frequently uses verse and rhymes in order to assist memorization

Archeaological finds of Epic of Gilgamesh[edit | edit source]

Sumer / Mesopotamia historical background[edit | edit source]

Persian Gulf formation[edit | edit source]

  • from 12,000 to about 6,000 BC, the oceans rose 400+ feet during the various stages of the ice melt.
  • as the ice melt rose the oceans, it also fed the rivers which flowed into and expanded the Black Sea, Caspian Sea
    • as well as to feed
      • and helping create enormous pro

Civilization[edit | edit source]

Characters[edit | edit source]

Narrative[edit | edit source]

Literary devices & allegorical elements[edit | edit source]

Civilization[edit | edit source]

The Flood[edit | edit source]

Shedding of skin[edit | edit source]

Parallels to Hebrew Bible (Old Testament)[edit | edit source]