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Atra-Hasis : The Babylonian Story of the Flood, with the Sumerian Flood Story

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The Babylonian flood story of Atra-hasis is of vital importance to ancient Near Eastern and biblical scholars, as well as students of history, anthropology, and comparative religion.

Professors Lambert and Millard provide the reader with a detailed introduction, transliterated Akkadian with English translation, critical notes, and line drawings of the cuneiform tablets. The epic opens in a time when only the gods lived in the universe.

Having decided on their established spheres of influence, the chief Mesopotamian gods—Anu, Enlil, and Enki—began their divine labors.

In a joint effort, Enki and Mami (the mother goddess) engineered the creation of mankind from clay and the flesh and blood of a slain god.

The remainder of the story recounts the expansion of humanity, the consequent irritation of Enki by this expansion, the attempt by Enki and Enlil to destroy humankind through a great flood, and the escape from the flood by Atra-hasis in a boat, accompanied by his possessions, family, and animals. This classic scholarly edition of the epic is once again made available as a quality Eisenbrauns reprint.

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RRP £33.95
Product Details
Eisenbrauns
1575061848 / 9781575061849
Paperback / softback
892.1
30/06/1999
United States
English
xii, 198 pages, 11 pages of plates : illustrations (black and white)
23 cm
Reprint. Originally published: Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1969.