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See also: Mahabharata 22–25 ■ Iliad 26–33 ■ Beowulf 42–43 ■
Njal’s Saga 52–53
W
riting first appeared in
Mesopotamia at the
beginning of what is
now known as the Bronze Age
(c.3300–1200 bce). Cuneiform
symbols, originally devised as a
means of recording commercial
transactions, had evolved from
numerals into representations of
sounds, which offered a means
of writing down the Sumerian
and Akkadian languages.
Among the fragments of texts
discovered in 1853 by the Assyrian
archaeologist Hormuzd Rassan are
tablets inscribed with tales of the
legendary King Gilgamesh of Uruk,
which are some of the earliest
examples of written literature.
The stories had probably been
passed down orally in a form that
combined history and mythology.
From tyrant to hero
The Epic of Gilgamesh, as the
collected tales are known, tells
how the oppressive ruler of the
Mesopotamian city of Uruk is
taught a lesson, and goes on to
become a local hero. To punish
Gilgamesh for his arrogance, the
gods send the “wild man” Enkidu,
formed from clay, to torment him.
After a fight, however, they become
friends, and embark on a series
of monster-slaying adventures.
Angered by this turn of events,
the gods sentence Enkidu to death.
Gilgamesh is distraught at the loss
of his companion, but also becomes
aware of his own mortality. The
second half of the tale tells of
Gilgamesh’s quest for the secret
of eternal life and of his return to
Uruk—still a mortal, but a wiser
man and more noble ruler. ■
ONLY THE GODS DWELL
FOREVER IN SUNLIGHT
THE EPIC OF GILGAMESH (FROM 2100 bce)
IN CONTEXT
FOCUS
Bronze Age literature
BEFORE
30th century bce Systems
of writing first emerge in
Mesopotamia and Egypt.
c.2600 bce The earliest known
texts—although not literary
ones—are written on tablets,
in the Sumerian language, at
Abu Salabikh, Mesopotamia.
c.2285–2250 bce The earliest
known author, Akkadian
princess and priestess
Enheduanna, lives and works
in the Sumerian city of Ur.
AFTER
c.1700–1100 bce The Rig
Veda, the first of the four
Hindu sacred texts known
as Vedas, is written in
northwestern India.
c.1550 bce The Egyptian Book
of the Dead is the first of the
Egyptian funerary texts to be
written on papyrus rather than
the walls of tombs or coffins.
The life that you seek
you never will find.
The Epic of Gilgamesh
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