Online Library TheLib.net » The Standard Babylonian Creation Myth: Enuma Elish
STATE ARCHIVES OF ASSYRIA - CUNEIFORM TEXTS: The Standard Babylonian Creation Myth Enūma Eliš: Introduction, Cuneiform Text, Transliteration, and Sign List, With a Translation and Glossary in French ... Texts, 4) (English and French Edition). From the Introduction: "The Babylonian Myth of Creation has been known to assyriologists for more than a century through the works of G. Smith, L. W. King and St. Langdon.1 With the discovery of more material, R. Labat gave a comprehensive edition and a commentary in 1935.2 W. G. Lambert started to collect the unpublished material in the British Museum and elsewhere and was able to give a preliminary cuneiform edition in 1966. 3 This remarkable work has given every assyriologist the opportunity to read that important text in class and it remains unchallenged till this day. Since its publication, however, many new texts have come to light, the most important coming from Sultantepe and the Sippar Library. Almost forty years after its publication, Lambert's cuneiform text is still the unavoidable base for every reconstruction of Enüma Elish. W. G. Lambert himself has continued to gather the unpublished material and we can expect a definitive new treatment of this work in the near future. Nevertheless, many translations have been offered recently in various languages and it is always the burden of their authors to recompile all fragments and try to present an up-to-date version of the myth. With the advent of the State Archives of Assyria Cuneiform Texts, it seemed to me a good opportunity to publish a new version of Enüma Elish that would take into account all the available material and offer an update of Lambert’s 1966 cuneiform text, along with a glossary and sign list, as is usual in the series. My interest in Enüma EUS started a long time ago and, as probably all of us have, I read it several times with my students. I also tried to make it known to my colleagues in other fields during a seminar on the reading of myths in Antiquity at the Université Libre de Bruxelles, particularly because of the transmission of its tradition to later Neoplatonic philosophers.4 ------ 1 G. Smith, A Chaldaean Account of Genesis, London, 1878; L. W. King, The Seven Tablets of Creation, London, 1902; St. Langdon, The Babylonian Epic of Creation, Oxford, 1923. 2 R. Labat, Le poème babylonien de la création, Paris, 1935. 3 W. G. Lambert and S. B. Parker, Enuma EUS. The Babylonian Epic of Creation. The Cuneiform Text, Oxford, 1966. 4 One of the most striking features of this transmission is the fact that the Neoplatonic author Damascius (born ca. AD 460) was still able to present a very precise description of the beginning of Enüma Elish several centuries after the disappearance of cuneiform writing." Lorsqu’en haut, les cieux n’étaient pas nommés, qu’en bas la terre ne portait pas de nom, c’est Apsû qui était le premier, leur ancêtre, la créatrice était Tiamat, leur mère à tous...


STATE ARCHIVES OF ASSYRIA - CUNEIFORM TEXTS: The Standard Babylonian Creation Myth Enūma Eliš: Introduction, Cuneiform Text, Transliteration, and Sign List, With a Translation and Glossary in French ... Texts, 4) (English and French Edition. From the Introduction: "The Babylonian Myth of Creation has been known to assyriologists for more than a century through the works of G. Smith, L. W. King and St. Langdon.1 With the discovery of more material, R. Labat gave a comprehensive edition and a commentary in 1935.2 W. G. Lambert started to collect the unpublished material in the British Museum and elsewhere and was able to give a preliminary cuneiform edition in 1966. 3 This remarkable work has given every assyriologist the opportunity to read that important text in class and it remains unchallenged till this day. Since its publication, however, many new texts have come to light, the most important coming from Sultantepe and the Sippar Library. Almost forty years after its publication, Lambert's cuneiform text is still the unavoidable base for every reconstruction of Enüma EUS. W. G. Lambert himself has continued to gather the unpublished material and we can expect a definitive new treatment of this work in the near future. Nevertheless, many translations have been offered recently in various languages and it is always the burden of their authors to recompile all fragments and try to present an up-to-date version of the myth. With the advent of the State Archives of Assyria Cuneiform Texts, it seemed to me a good opportunity to publish a new version of Enüma EUS that would take into account all the available material and offer an update of Lambert’s 1966 cuneiform text, along with a glossary and sign list, as is usual in the series. My interest in Enüma EUS started a long time ago and, as probably all of us have, I read it several times with my students. I also tried to make it known to my colleagues in other fields during a seminar on the reading of myths in Antiquity at the Université Libre de Bruxelles, particularly because of the transmission of its tradition to later Neoplatonic philosophers.4 ------ 1 G. Smith, A Chaldaean Account of Genesis, London, 1878; L. W. King, The Seven Tablets of Creation, London, 1902; St. Langdon, The Babylonian Epic of Creation, Oxford, 1923. 2 R. Labat, Le poème babylonien de la création, Paris, 1935. 3 W. G. Lambert and S. B. Parker, Enuma EUS. The Babylonian Epic of Creation. The Cuneiform Text, Oxford, 1966. 4 One of the most striking features of this transmission is the fact that the Neoplatonic author Damascius (born ca. AD 460) was still able to present a very precise description of the beginning of Enüma Elish several centuries after the disappearance of cuneiform writing."


The Standard Babylonian Creation Myth Enūma Eliš: Introduction, Cuneiform Text, Transliteration, and Sign List, With a Translation and Glossary in French ... Texts, 4) (English and French Edition)


The Standard Babylonian Creation Myth Enuma Elish: Introduction, Cuneiform Text, Transliteration, and Sign List, With a Translation and Glossary in French ... Texts, 4) (English and French Edition)
Download the book The Standard Babylonian Creation Myth: Enuma Elish for free or read online
Read Download
Continue reading on any device:
QR code
Last viewed books
Related books
Comments (0)
reload, if the code cannot be seen