PREFACE
This volume deals with the myths and legends of Babylonia and Assyria, and
as these reflect the civilization in which they developed, a historical narrative
has been provided, beginning with the early Sumerian Age and concluding with
the periods of the Persian and Grecian Empires. Over thirty centuries of human
progress are thus passed under review.
During this vast interval of time the cultural influences emanating from
the Tigro-Euphrates valley reached far-distant shores along the intersecting
avenues of trade, and in consequence of the periodic and widespread migrations
of peoples who had acquired directly or indirectly the leavening elements of
Mesopotamian civilization. Even at the present day traces survive in Europe
of the early cultural impress of the East; our "Signs of the Zodiac", for instance,
as well as the system of measuring time and space by using 60 as a basic numeral
for calculation, are inheritances from ancient Babylonia.
As in the Nile Valley, however, it is impossible to trace in Mesopotamia
the initiatory stages of prehistoric culture based on the agricultural mode
of life. What is generally called the "Dawn of History" is really the beginning
of a later age of progress; it is necessary to account for the degree of civilization
attained at the earliest period of which we have knowledge by postulating a
remoter age of culture of much longer duration than that which separates the
"Dawn" from the age in which we now live. Although Sumerian (early Babylonian)
civilization presents distinctively local features which justify the application
of the term "indigenous" in the broad sense, it is found, like that of Egypt,
to be possessed of certain elements which suggest exceedingly remote influences
and connections at present obscure. Of special interest in this regard is Professor
Budge's mature and well-deliberated conclusion that "both the Sumerians and
early Egyptians derived their primeval gods from some common but exceedingly
ancient source". The prehistoric burial customs of these separate peoples are
also remarkably similar and they resemble closely in turn those of the Neolithic
Europeans. The cumulative effect of such evidence forces us to regard as not
wholly satisfactory and conclusive the hypothesis of cultural influence. A remote
racial connection is possible, and is certainly worthy of consideration when
so high an authority as Professor Frazer, author of The Golden Bough,
is found prepared to admit that the widespread "homogeneity of beliefs" may
have been due to "homogeneity of race". It is shown (Chapter
1 ) that certain ethnologists have accumulated data which establish a racial
kinship between the Neolithic Europeans, the proto-Egyptians, the Sumerians,
the southern Persians, and the Aryo-Indians.
Throughout this volume comparative notes have been compiled in dealing with
Mesopotamian beliefs with purpose to assist the reader towards the study of
linking myths and legends. Interesting parallels have been gleaned from various
religious literatures in Europe, Egypt, India, and elsewhere. It will be found
that certain relics of Babylonian intellectual life, which have a distinctive
geographical significance, were shared by peoples in other cultural areas where
they were similarly overlaid with local colour. Modes of thought were the products
of modes of life and were influenced in their development by human experiences.
The influence of environment on the growth of culture has long been recognized,
but consideration must also be given to the choice of environment by peoples
who had adopted distinctive habits of life. Racial units migrated from cultural
areas to districts suitable for colonization and carried with them a heritage
of immemorial beliefs and customs which were regarded as being quite as indispensable
for their welfare as their implements and domesticated animals.
When consideration is given in this connection to the conservative element
in primitive religion, it is not surprising to find that the growth of religious
myths was not so spontaneous in early civilizations of the highest order as
has hitherto been assumed. It seems clear that in each great local mythology
we have to deal, in the first place, not with symbolized ideas so much as symbolized
folk beliefs of remote antiquity and, to a certain degree, of common inheritance.
It may not be found possible to arrive at a conclusive solution of the most
widespread, and therefore the most ancient folk myths, such as, for instance,
the Dragon Myth, or the myth of the culture hero. Nor, perhaps, is it necessary
that we should concern ourselves greatly regarding the origin of the idea of
the dragon, which in one country symbolized fiery drought and in another overwhelming
river floods.
The student will find footing on surer ground by following the process which
exalts the dragon of the folk tale into the symbol of evil and primordial chaos.
The Babylonian Creation Myth, for instance, can be shown to be a localized and
glorified legend in which the hero and his tribe are displaced by the war god
and his fellow deities whose welfare depends on his prowess. Merodach kills
the dragon, Tiamat, as the heroes of Eur-Asian folk stories kill grisly hags,
by casting his weapon down her throat.
He severed her inward parts, he pierced her heart,
He overcame her and cut off her life;
He cast down her body and stood upon it . . .
And with merciless club he smashed her skull.
He cut through the channels of her blood,
And he made the north wind to bear it away into secret places.
He divided the flesh of the Ku-puand devised a cunning
plan.
He split her up like a flat fish into two halves.
Afterwards Mr. L. W. King, from whose scholarly Seven Tablets of Creationthese lines are quoted, notes that "Ku-pu" is a word of uncertain meaning. Jensen
suggests "trunk, body". Apparently Merodach obtained special know-ledge after
dividing, and perhaps eating, the "Ku-pu". His "cunning plan" is set forth in
detail: he cut up the dragon's body:
He formed the heavens with one half and the earth with the other, and then
set the universe in order. His power and wisdom as the Demiurge were derived
from the fierce and powerful Great Mother, Tiamat.
In other dragon stories the heroes devise their plans after eating the dragon's
heart. According to Philostratus, 1 Apollonius of Tyana was worthy of being remembered for two things--his bravery
in travelling among fierce robber tribes, not then subject to Rome, and his
wisdom in learning the language of birds and other animals as the Arabs do.
This accomplishment the Arabs acquired, Philostratus explains, by eating the
hearts of dragons. The "animals" who utter magic words are, of course, the Fates.
Siegfried of the Nibelungenlied, after slaying the Regin dragon, makes
himself invulnerable by bathing in its blood. He obtains wisdom by eating the
heart: as soon as he tastes it he can understand the language of birds, and
the birds reveal to him that Mimer is waiting to slay him. Sigurd similarly
makes his plans after eating the heart of the Fafner dragon. In Scottish legend
Finn-mac-Coul obtains the power to divine secrets by partaking of a small portion
of the seventh salmon associated with the "well dragon", and Michael Scott and
other folk heroes become great physicians after tasting the juices of the middle
part of the body of the white snake. The hero of an Egyptian folk tale slays
a "death-less snake" by cutting it in two parts and putting sand between the
parts. He then obtains from the box, of which it is the guardian, the book of
spells; when he reads a page of the spells he knows what the birds of the sky,
the fish of the deep, and the beasts of the hill say; the book gives him power
to enchant "the heaven and the earth, the abyss, the mountains and the sea".
1
Magic and religion were never separated in Babylonia; not only the priests
but also the gods performed magical ceremonies. Ea, Merodach's father, overcame
Apsu, the husband of the dragon Tiamat, by means of spells: he was "the great
magician of the gods". Merodach's division of the "Ku-pu" was evidently an act
of contagious magic; by eating or otherwise disposing of the vital part of the
fierce and wise mother dragon, he became endowed with her attributes, and was
able to proceed with the work of creation. Primitive peoples in our own day,
like the Abipones of Paraguay, eat the flesh of fierce and cunning animals so
that their strength, courage, and wisdom may be increased.
The direct influence exercised by cultural contact, on the other hand, may
be traced when myths with an alien geographical setting are found among peoples
whose experiences could never have given them origin. In India, where the dragon
symbolizes drought and the western river deities are female, the Manu fish and
flood legend resembles closely the Babylonian, and seems to throw light upon
it. Indeed, the Manu myth appears to have been derived from the lost flood story
in which Ea figured prominently in fish form as the Preserver. The Babylonian
Ea cult and the Indian Varuna cult had apparently much in common, as is shown.
Throughout this volume special attention has been paid to the various peoples
who were in immediate contact with, and were influenced by, Mesopotamian civilization.
The histories are traced in outline of the Kingdoms of Elam, Urartu (Ancient
Armenia), Mitanni, and the Hittites, while the story of the rise and decline
of the Hebrew civilization, as narrated in the Bible and referred to in Mesopotamian
inscriptions, is related from the earliest times until the captivity in the
Neo-Babylonian period and the restoration during the age of the Persian Empire.
The struggles waged between the great Powers for the control of trade routes,
and the periodic migrations of pastoral warrior folks who determined the fate
of empires, are also dealt with, so that light may be thrown on the various
processes and influences associated with the developments of local religions
and mythologies. Special chapters, with comparative notes, are devoted to the
Ishtar-Tammuz myths, the Semiramis legends, Ashur and his symbols, and the origin
and growth of astrology and astronomy.
The ethnic disturbances which occurred at various well-defined periods in
the Tigro-Euphrates valley were not always favourable to the advancement of
knowledge and the growth of culture. The invaders who absorbed Sumerian civilization
may have secured more settled conditions by welding together political units,
but seem to have exercised a retrogressive influence on the growth of local
culture. "Babylonian religion", writes Dr. Langdon, "appears to have reached
its highest level in the Sumerian period, or at least not later than 2000 B.C.
From that period onward to the first century B.C. popular religion maintained
with great difficulty the sacred standards of the past." Although it has been
customary to characterize Mesopotamian civilization as Semitic, modern research
tends to show that the indigenous inhabitants, who were non-Semitic, were its
originators. Like the proto-Egyptians, the early Cretans, and the Pelasgians
in southern Europe and Asia Minor, they invariably achieved the intellectual
conquest of their conquerors, as in the earliest times they had won victories
over the antagonistic forces of nature. If the modern view is accepted that
these ancient agriculturists of the goddess cult were of common racial origin,
it is to the most representative communities of the widespread Mediterranean
race that the credit belongs of laying the foundations of the brilliant civilizations
of the ancient world in southern Europe, and Egypt, and the valley of the Tigris
and Euphrates.
Footnotes
viii:1 Life of Apollonius
of Tyana, i, 20.
ix:1 Egyptian Tales(Second Series), W. M. Flinders Petrie, pp. 98 et seq.
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