Epic Hero
How a self-taught British genius rediscovered the Mesopotamian saga of Gilgamesh after 2,500 years
- By David Damrosch
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
At the time, the dominant figure in British cuneiform studies was Sir Henry Creswicke Rawlinson. Haughty, ambitious and accustomed to command, Rawlinson had been knighted after a distinguished military career in India, Persia and Iraq. Though not a museum employee, Rawlinson was a frequent presence in the department's workroom. It was he who had made the decisive breakthrough in the decipherment of cuneiform writing; 50 years of age in 1860, he had just published the first volume of his Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western Asia.
Everyone sensed that there were exciting discoveries to be made in the chaotic mass of tablets, and newspapers such as the Illustrated London News published dramatic reports of every new confirmation of a biblical name or date. Yet the museum's professional staff were not particularly well qualified to make these discoveries themselves. The head, or "keeper," of the Department of Oriental Antiquities was a learned Egyptologist, Samuel Birch, who had no direct expertise in Mesopotamian studies and left the supervision of the cuneiform collection to his sole assistant, a young classical scholar named William Henry Coxe.
At first, Birch and Coxe paid little attention to the quiet but persistent young engraver. But it gradually became apparent to the two men that Smith could read the tablets better than they. In time, Birch brought him to Rawlinson's attention.
Rawlinson was impressed by the young man's ability to piece tablets together, a task requiring both exceptional visual memory and manual dexterity in creating "joins" of fragments. A given tablet might have been broken into a dozen or more pieces that were now widely dispersed among the thousands of fragments at the museum. Rawlinson persuaded the museum to hire Smith to work on sorting and assembling tablets—a job involving more manual labor than scholarship. As Budge noted, Smith "worked for some years for a salary that was smaller than that then received by a master carpenter or master mason."
But Smith made the fullest use of his new position to increase his command of the language and its script, and by the mid-1860s he was making real discoveries: identifying Hebrew monarchs mentioned in Assyrian inscriptions and giving new detail to biblical chronology. In 1866 Smith published his first article, and he received an important promotion when Rawlinson persuaded the museum's trustees to hire him as his assistant for the next volume of his Cuneiform Inscriptions. "Thus, in the beginning of 1867," Smith later recalled with quiet pride, "I entered into official life, and regularly prosecuted the study of the cuneiform texts."
In addition to tablets and fragments, the museum held many paper "squeezes"—impressions that had been made by pressing damp paper onto inscriptions too big to move. It was an extraordinary trove, if only it could be read, but the problems were not only linguistic. The squeezes deteriorated on handling and were further damaged when mice got at them. Unbaked clay tablets could crumble, and even those that had been baked, giving them the heft and durability of terra cotta tiles, had often been broken amid the ruins of Nineveh. Tablets were stored loose in boxes and sometimes damaged each other; items under active consideration were laid out on planks set on trestles in a dimly lit room. (Fearful of fire, the museum's trustees had refused to allow gas lighting in the building.)
Eager to become a full-fledged archaeologist, Smith longed to go to Iraq to excavate. But museum trustees felt that they had more than enough Assyrian and Babylonian artifacts and wanted Smith at work on the premises. He had no way to support himself in a distant province of the Ottoman Empire, or even to pay his own way there, as he was now supporting a wife and a growing family on his slender wages. Discouraged, he wrote to a friend in February 1872 that the "Government will not assist the movement in the least, at present, in fact I think they will not give a penny until something is discovered." It was then that Smith began systematically surveying the museum's collection for texts that might shed new light on biblical studies. In chancing upon the Flood story, Smith felt he had found the passport to the land of his dreams.
Word of the find spread rapidly, and Prime Minister Gladstone himself was in the audience when Smith presented a lecture to the Biblical Archaeology Society on December 3, 1872. Edwin Arnold, editor of the Daily Telegraph, promptly put up the sum of a thousand guineas to fund Smith on an expedition—much as the Telegraph had successfully sent Henry Morton Stanley to find the explorer-missionary David Livingstone in Central Africa, after Livingstone had ceased to be in contact with England during a long journey of exploration begun in 1866. In January 1873, Smith was at last on his way.
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Comments (4)
National Geographic: The Epic of Gilgamesh
There were five separate and distinct regions around waters that include the following; buildings, governments, towns, irrigations, families, and extended societies. Individuals were not influenced by one another. Instead, the story focuses on individuals working together and levels of power. Most societies left something behind namely in Pakistan near India. However historians are not sure of the language.
Places such as Iraq and Tigris had the concept that foundational civilizations created ideas. Inherited ideas such as the "Epic of Gilgamesh" had a profound effect on society that had been lost for 2500 years. The epic is a lengthy poem that covers the travels of Gilagamesh and his seduction of a woman . The story also includes how Gilgamesh leaves civilization behind and forms of oppression.
Gilgamesh and his friend Enkido go through combat together. From this activity Inkado is able to understand his friend's vision. Unfortunately Inkado is killed in combat. In addition, Gilgamesh hopes to find the meaning of life and death (immortality). This story is ancient and epic. Noah, a prototype of the this story is warned about a fantastic flood. The character is built on an arc where the arc rests on a mountain. In this story a sacrifice to the gods means the cooking of flesh (Noah sacrificing to his god).
Finally, the first known copy of a great king was discovered by a British linguist George Smith during the 1840's. Additionally, other links similar to this story are available that include topics such as Abraham and Ancient Egypt.
Valencia Galloway
Posted by valencia galloway on September 30,2011 | 12:31 AM
Recently discovered this. Certainly helped me with my discussions about theology.
Posted by Gerard on May 6,2011 | 06:54 AM
Whoa, what a story. What a pity that such a man was not considered of enough value to protect.
Posted by Kitty on March 29,2010 | 04:27 PM
i loveeeeee this story it is a beautiful tale about a man who stood up for himself
Posted by on September 29,2009 | 12:04 PM