Camp Gagnon - Epic of Gilgamesh: Annunaki, Great Flood, & Immortality
Episode Date: January 5, 2025GILGAMESH! The oldest story known to man. From Annunaki conspiracies to the ancient Great Flood and the quest for immortality, we’re unpacking one of humanity's oldest stories. WELCOME TO (religion)... CAMP! 🏕️ JOIN S'MORE CAMP INNER SANCTUM HERE: https://camp.beehiiv.com/ Timestamps: 0:00 Intro 2:07 The Discovery Of The Epic 3:40 Gilgamesh’s Reign As King 5:20 Creation Of Enkidu 9:29 Enkidu and Gilgamesh’s Battle 14:23 Journey To Cedar Forest 18:19 The Bull of Heaven 22:09 The Death of Enkidu 29:00 Search For Immortality 35:06 Flood Story + Return To Uruk 39:12 Tablet 12 40:16 Similarities To Other Stories 44:33 The Annunaki 46:31 Gilgamesh’s Impact Today
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The epic of Gilgamesh.
Why did it make such an impact when it was discovered?
What Gilgamesh would do is he would sleep with the brides on their wedding night.
Anki-Doo, he's invincibly strong, covered in hair, and lives in the wilderness with his herd of animal relatives.
They say in some of the translations that Gilgamesh loved him like a woman.
Gilgamesh goes and meets with an alewife, a barkeeper.
Gilgamesh tells her the purpose of his journey.
I'm looking for immortality.
rejects the advances of the goddess Ishtar.
Ishtar asked her father Anu to send Gulana the bull of heaven to avenger.
Putin Abysician tells Gilgamesh that at the bottom of the sea lives a box-thorn-like plant that will make him young again.
It's conjectured that Gilgamesh exhaust the men through tests of strength, forced labor, or building projects.
Gilgamesh is two-thirds god, one-third man.
And he's being a dick.
What's up, everybody, and welcome back to Religion Camp.
This is the show where I'm going to explore all of the most interesting stories from religion, mythology, and all things divine from around the world of all ages. That's right, all the secret teachings. And today, we're talking about the Epic of Gilgamesh. I don't know if you've ever heard of it. It might be the oldest piece of literature of all time. And today we're going to be doing a couple spoilers. So if you haven't read it yet, too late. You had 4,000 years. So catch up, okay? The Epic of Gilgamesh is an
absolutely amazing story. It is the prototypical hero's journey. It'll basically show you where the
idea of the hero's journey comes from. And it is a real remarkable piece of literature. Or should I say
literature? Perhaps it is a true historical account of an ancient king. Probably not. But let's see.
Okay. Why is it so important? Why did it make such an impact when it was discovered? And what is
actually possessed on these tablets known as the epic of Gilgamesh.
Let's go all the way back to 1850, all right?
A couple guys were just kicking around in the desert in Iraq, in Nineveh.
These guys Hormuzed Rassam and W.K. Loftus.
In the 1850s, they're just kind of, you know, poking around in the sand,
looking at stuff.
And what do they find?
None other than 15,000 fragments of Assyrian Cuneiform tablets.
Now, Cuneiform is an interesting little way of writing.
Basically, you take these clay tablets and you press into it, like some little indents.
And based off the indents, you basically are able to spell out letters from these letters.
From these letters, are able to spell out an awesome story.
And what was on these tablets?
It was the epic of Killal Mesh.
And this is a 4,000-year-old piece of literature that basically rocked the world.
This was like the Game of Thrones of their time.
Everyone was going buck wild for this thing.
People were trying to read it nonstop.
They found many different versions.
from all different places, all in the same region.
And it had a real chokehold on the people.
And that's why you have so many different kind of like names and name translations.
And they're kind of written in subtly different languages.
Some of them are incomplete.
Like the old Babylonian versions, there's only certain fragments where they couldn't actually complete the whole story.
So the version we're going to be going through today is the standard Babylonian version.
This is like, I don't know.
The Bible, they got different versions of it.
So you got to make sure you got the right translation.
This one doesn't have all the yees and stuff.
This is just the standard Babylonian version.
This is basically an interpretation or translation from a good man named Andrew George.
Shall we begin?
The story begins by introducing Gilgamesh, the king of Uruk.
Gilgamesh is two-thirds god, one-third man.
It's a pretty solid little ratio there.
And he's being a dick.
He's oppressing the people of his kingdom, and they cry out to the gods for help.
This was Gilgamesh's little thing right here.
Again, this guy is a king of a rook, and the young woman of a rook, what Gilgamesh would do is he would sleep with the brides on their wedding night.
That was like his little kink.
That was his thing, right?
That was like you would go around and find people getting married, and if you saw Gilgamesh, bad news.
That's what it was, dude.
Gilgamesh was a real scumbag.
And so all the men of a rook, and it says in this part of the...
sort of in translation, the tablet is damaged at this point.
So we don't know what the young men were saying.
I'm assuming they're saying like, yo, stop smashing my girl.
That's probably more or less what the vibe was.
Hey, can you stop dogging out my sweet baby?
We don't have the exact translation, but that's Mark's translation.
It's conjectured that Gilgamesh exhaust the men through tests of strength,
forced labor or building projects.
These are all very different things.
I don't like that they just put them all in there.
Like, yeah, he would exhaust.
them through games, tests of strength, slavery.
Like, that's, all right, that's not at all.
Yeah, he would make him do like a Suduko
or they would be a slave for a long time.
All right, that's extremely different things.
But regardless, he would basically get the men out of the picture, okay?
And they would have his way with their sweet brides.
Propulsive.
So the gods responded to the people's pleas by creating an equal to Gilgamesh,
who would be able to stop his oppression.
This is how we get Anki-Doo.
Anki-Doo is a legend. He's an absolute wild man. He's invincibly strong, covered in hair, and lives in the wilderness with his herd of animal relatives.
So this is the first part where the sort of epic of Gilgamesh starts to have comparisons to the Abrahamic religions, as people would say.
As we know, if you're a muzzi, if you're a Jew, if you're a Christiani.
We believe that Adam was made from clay. That's how God formed him initially.
Anka-Doo in this very early story, ostensibly older than the original penning of the Old Testament, was also made from clay.
So people would point to that and be like, oh, that's an interesting similarity.
Who knows?
Maybe they just are all drawing from the same source material, you know what I mean?
Who's to say?
Here's a little sculpture of Anka-Doo.
This guy looks absolutely insane.
Diesel on all these pictures.
Why is old mythological arts so gay?
Like, all these guys are just jacked.
I mean, the crazy V-lines.
I mean, this would make me uncomfortable.
Now, Anka-Doo is a wild man.
He was out there.
He got made by the gods.
He got take down Gilgamesh.
That is his one job.
The gods literally say to him, hey, we're going to make you out of clay, put you with some animals in the wilderness.
Go, just F up Gilgamesh.
He goes, all right, bet.
No problem.
He is spotted by a trapper.
Not like a drug dealer, but like an actual guy that traps animals.
And his livelihood is being ruined because Anka-Doo is destroying all his traps.
The trapper tells the sun god Shamash about the man, and it is arranged that Ankidu will be seduced by Shamhot.
This is known as like a prostitute.
All right, she's a hooker.
It's basically the best way to put it.
And her job is to tame him.
That's how it's written in the text, to tame him, which is kind of wild.
Like, this is how crazy this guy is.
He's just got berries grown out of his beard, and they're like, all right, can you just
reel this guy in can you fix him this is your little project all right shamat you got to
you got to make this guy not be such a degenerate this is like when a cute girl like starts
staying like just a just a frat guy like look he is just beer boxes on his walls like can you
just make him a civilized tune being so after six days and seven nights of lovemaking and he could
do is weakened that's what it says this is all this was buried with the kings of the time this
in their actual
burial chambers
they were like this story is awesome
six days
and seven nights of banging it out
Anka-do is weakened
his herd flees and horror
and Anka-Doo is shocked
by his loneliness
but Shamat tries to comfort him
she says do not grieve
you now have knowledge
like the gods
then she takes him to the shepherds camp
teaches him to be civilized because his hair
This is basically like Princess Bride.
I don't know, Princess Diaries.
Yeah, Princess Diaries.
This is where they take the girl with the fuzzy hair and they make her not ugly anymore.
Which is like such the, it's the best.
They just like take a girl with glasses.
Like, you're so ugly.
Take a glass off.
He's like, you're a princess?
So that's basically what they do with Hank can do.
He's just wearing glasses and they take him off.
They're like, wow, I guess you're just like a jacked handsome guy.
They cut his hair.
He learns to eat human food and drink beer.
This guy's so chill.
I mean, what a week for him, right?
hanging with all his animals in the woods
gets just like
I guess he's getting assaulted
for seven nights I don't know it seems like
no he gets weakened I don't know if he even likes it
he's just getting absolutely just rowed to smithereens
just getting absolutely grinded up by a sham hat
and it doesn't seem like he's stoked on it
loses all his friends and then learns about beer
I mean this is just a
freshman dude I don't know
a guy a college freshman a guy freshman a guy freshman
All right, don't make it weird.
So imagine this.
All of a sudden, we're seeing Anka-Doo's whole side.
He's having this insane day.
He's getting dogged out, bent over, tied up, drinking beer.
Gilgamesh, meanwhile, is having dreams about a brand-new friend, a new buddy that he's
going to kick it with from all time.
Seems kind of weird.
We know Anka-Doo is trying to kill Gilgamesh.
That's the whole story.
Fast forward.
Tablet 2.
The Shepherds camp.
To those who have been accustomed, Anka-Doo is appointed night watchman, learning from a passing
stranger about Gilgamesh's treatment of the brides.
He's incensed and travels to Uruk.
to intervene at a wedding.
This is where these two guys finally face off.
Gilgamesh attempts to visit the wedding chamber.
We don't like that.
Anka-Doo blocks his way, and they fight.
This guy is a real, a proper white knight.
He's like, yo, you're not going to dog out this guy's wife, all right?
You got to stop it.
And Gilgamesh is like, I'll do whatever I want, dude.
I'm two-thirds of a god.
And Anka-Doo is like, no, no.
After a fierce battle, Anke-Du loses.
Like, he's sent by the gods.
You go just F up Gilgamesh and you can't do it.
Literally, he's like, stop.
And then Gilgamesh is like, no.
And this is the part that's crazy to me.
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Gilgamesh just beats him up, crushes him, not even that hard.
It doesn't really say exactly how.
But you've got to imagine Gilgamesh is like pretty horn.
He's walking up to the room, probably rock hard, and then has to fight a guy, just bricked up.
And then the craziest part, they become friends.
I don't know if you ever got in your ass beat, right?
like a guy with a rock hard boners fucking you up and all of a sudden he's like yo we're good
and you're like yeah we're good that's crazy like i don't this is i think this is obviously fiction
at this point um and they become friends and then gilgamesh i don't know where goes hey remember
when i just beat you up my dick out you want to go to the forest and kill a demon and ianke do's like
yeah let's do it what's what's good with this demon he's like it's humbaba he's living out in the woods
in the Cedar Forest, and if we can kill this guy, we're going to get unknown, unknown praise.
We'll be world-renowned, the guys that kill demons, I guess.
That's like their whole vibe.
So fast forward, these two guys, all right, are now besties after fighting.
This is basically broke back Mesopotamia.
The two basically go out in the woods, and Gilgamesh visits his mother, Ninsan,
and seeks the support and protection of the sun god Shemash for their adventure.
Nin's son adopts Anka-Doo as her son,
and Gilgamesh leaves instructions for the governance of Oruk in his absence.
Now again, you've got to wonder, Gilgamesh, he's an actual bad guy.
This is not a good human being, right?
And meanwhile, his mom is just watching all this happen, like, that's my boy.
Just banging all the new brides.
Like, this is, like, insane.
Like where is shit?
Like, what a...
It's because he doesn't have a dad, probably.
I don't know.
I don't want to speculate.
If you don't have a dad, it's not your fault.
All right.
I'm not going to judge you.
But it's like, where is his...
Where's this whole family unit?
This whole thing just seems unstable.
Right?
Like, the mom is just letting this happen.
She has no words.
Like, by the way, can you not do that?
I don't know.
This just makes me uncomfortable.
You don't like to see that bad parenting.
Where they enable their kid.
Anyway, this is the side part.
Gilgamesh and Nank could do Journey into the Cedar
forest. Every few days, they're camping on the mountains, they're performing a dream ritual. Gilgamesh's
five terrifying dreams about thunderstorms, wild bulls, falling mountains, and a thunderbird that
breathes fire. Apparently, he knows that there are major similarities between all of these dreams
and the earlier descriptions of Humbaba, this demon that they're trying to kill. He tells Angadu,
he's like, bro, I had these insane dreams. And Angadu's like, dude, these dreams are actually good.
but just like an absolute ride or die kind of home he's like dude that terrible stuff you're thinking
it's actually sick as hell so they say like the dreams are fine and then they deny that the
frightening images represent the forest guardian humbaba as they approach the cedar mountain
they hear humbaba bellowing and have to encourage each other not to be afraid all of a sudden
he's a little scared this guy that just takes everyone's girl all of a sudden he's a little
fuck gilgamesh bro i'm over with this guy it's an annoying
The epic of Gilgamesh.
Whatever.
The heroes enter the Cedar Forest.
Humbaba, the guardian of the Cedar Forest.
He insults them and threatens them.
It's funny that they put both things because they did not have to put the insult part, right?
Like if you're getting attacked by a demon, you're not going to be like, dude, he was scratching me and also just call me a bitch.
Like, you'd just be like, no, I was getting attacked by a demon.
But they include that.
Just that way you know that things got personal with the demon.
I don't want you to be reading this and be like, oh, Gilgamesh really went off the
rails that. No, no, no. They pulled up on Humbaba for no reason. Remember this. They showed up to
his house and then Humbaba was starting to throw insults and then they're like, whoa.
Trying to diss us right now? You're calling his pussy right now? This whole thing's crazy.
Anyway, he accuses Anka-Doo of betrayal and vows to disembowel Gilgamesh and feed his flesh to the
birds. Gilgamesh is afraid, but with some encouraging words from Anka-Du, the battle commences,
The mountains quake, the sky turns black, the god Shamash sends 13 winds to bind Humbaba, and he's captured.
See, Gilgamesh couldn't even take Humbaba by himself.
Also, that's an insane name, Humbaba.
It's been awesome now.
It's going to be a middle name for one of my little daughters, probably.
Humbabah pleads for his life, and Gilgamesh pities him.
He offers to make Gilgamesh the king of the forest.
He'll cut down trees for him.
He'll be a slave.
Ankidu is like, no, no, no, no.
Gilgamesh, let's kill Humbabah.
let's kill him
and we're going to establish
our reputation forever
Ababa curses them both
and Gilgames dispatches
I'd like it that says dispatches him
he kills him, he rocks him in the head
below the neck and basically just kills
him right away as well as his
seven sons seems completely
unnecessary like this whole thing
also for the record I'm pretty sure
in like some of the original translations
Hombaba's not really doing anything
like sometimes they don't really even describe them as like
demons sometimes describe him as like a demigod that he's just like a powerful guy in the cedar
forest like kind of is a guardian of the forest so gilgamesh and his homie pull up looking for trouble
out of nowhere shows up kills him kills his seven sons and we're like dude gilgamesh is a hero
i know we're getting to the part where things actually make more sense but it's just crazy so
far this guy is just a thug he's just a bad dude the two heroes then cut down many cedars in
the forest, including a gigantic tree that Anka-do plants to fashion into a gate for the temple
of Enlil. They build a raft, return home to the Euphrates with a giant tree, and potentially,
depending on how you interpret the text, the head of Humbaba. So far, this whole thing is insane.
Right, like, these two guys, they're like homies, major bromance, they fight, like, they're beating
up guys that they don't like that seem kind of like unnecessary, you know?
but we move on to Tablet 6.
Gilgamesh rejects the advances of the goddess Ishtar.
Kind of out of nowhere, okay?
We go right into Tablet 6,
and Gilgamesh, he's the homie,
he just beat up this guy,
he's just like chilling, like just in the cut.
All of a sudden, the goddess Ishtar is like,
yo, give me that.
Let me hop on.
And she's kind of a piece.
You look at these old sketches, you're like, all right.
Sometimes she's known as Inana,
depending on the translation.
but in the Assyrian,
Assyrian translations, no is Ishtar.
You start looking at Ishtar, you're like, dude,
potentially could get it.
I don't know if this is, like,
I don't know if anyone still believes this.
If this is your religion, like, if you're like,
I'm a Gilgamesian,
so I want to apologize ahead of time.
I feel like I'm being disrespectful so far.
I don't think anyone believes it, so I think we're fine.
But if you're in the comments,
if there's any Sumerians listening,
just, you know, my bad.
Ishtar gets pissed off.
Ishtar is like, yo, why can't, why can't I hop on it one time on a Thursday?
And Gilgamesh is like, yo, you mistreated other people like Dumuzi.
He was like just a shepherd that got like disrespected by Ishtar.
And Gilgamesh is like, I'm not playing with that.
Go away.
Ishtar becomes angry and denies Gilgamesh entry into Iyana, interfering with his business.
Ishtar asks her father
Anu to send Gulana the bull of heaven
This is an important note
The bull of heaven to avenger
When Anu rejects her complaints
Ishtar threatens to raise the dead
Who quote will outnumber the living
And devour them
Seems like this is a lot
For just getting turned down one time
Right?
Like
I don't know
I get, yeah, women are emotional
I get it
This is like the first instance
cell. You know what I mean? Like this girl gets
turned down and she's like
oh you're going to turn me down? What if
I raise all the dead and devour everyone
that's alive? It's like all right this is
you're crossing the line here.
Apparently the dead will
scream so loud that it'll be heard by
the heavens and the earth.
Her dad hears this and he's like all right
just stop. And who states that he gives her
if he gives her the bull of heaven
Uruk will face seven years
of famine. So this is like
insane checks and balances.
She's like, I'm going to raise the dead.
He's like, look, I want to give you the bull,
but all of a sudden all the people of this kingdom
are going to starve for seven years.
What do we do?
So Ishtar provides him with provisions for seven years
in exchange for the bull.
Ishtar is like, all right, fine,
leads the bull of heaven to Uruk
and causes widespread devastation.
This bull is just going wild.
All right?
Let's try to get a picture of this bull right here.
Yeah, it's a bull.
I don't know.
I was expecting something a little scary.
I guess it's like giant.
or something. This bull of heaven comes down. He's pissed off and he's insatiably thirsty.
That's right. The bull comes down and causes widespread devastation, lowers the level of the
Euphrates River, dries up the marshes and opens up huge pits that swallow 300 men. Without
divine assistance, Ankhadu and Gilgamesh kill him and offer up his heart to Shemash.
Ishtar at this point, as you can imagine, is fucking pissed. She's like, you turn to you.
me down, I get my dad to send the bull of heaven, you kill the bowl of heaven, which I was like,
Ishtar, what did you want to happen? Oh, just destroy the whole time? Like, you get turned down,
you get rejected, that's on you, shave or something. I don't know, like, it's, and then you get
mad when, like, your revenge plot doesn't work. Fuck out of here. The city of Rook celebrates, but
Ancu-do has an ominous dream about his future failure. It's kind of ominous, right?
And Anakadoo's dream that God's decide that one of the heroes must die because they killed Humbaba for no reason, in my opinion.
I'm a Humbaba, like loyalist.
Like, yeah, that was say his name, Humbaba, that's what I believe.
And the Bull of Heaven, both those.
The Bull of Heaven, that one, he's like a hired gun.
I don't really care as much about the Bull of Heaven.
But regardless, because they both die, Ancadu has this dream that one of the heroes must be killed.
despite the protesting of Shamash, Anka-Doo is marked for death.
That's right.
The gods get together.
They're like, Anka-Doo, you got to die.
Anka-du curses the great door.
He has fashioned for in Lil's temple.
He also curses the trapper and Shamhat for removing him from the wild.
Shamash reminds Anka-Doo of how Shamhat fed and clothed him and introduced him to Gilgamesh.
Shamash tells him that Gilgamesh will bestow great honors upon him at his funeral.
and will wander into the wild consumed with grief.
Anka-Doo, like, basically just spiraling.
He's just like, yo, fuck this, fuck you.
Fuck that guy.
You're cool.
Like, he's just, like, pissed off.
And he's just going off on everybody.
And then he's like, all right, all right, my bad.
I got a little, I got a little overboard there.
Ancadu regrets his curses.
And then he blesses sham hat instead.
And then he's a second dream where he's taken captive to the netherworld,
a house of dust and darkness,
whose inhabitants eat clay
on our clothed and bird feathers
supervised by terrifying beings.
For 12 days, Ankaidu's condition worsens.
Finally, after a lament
that he could not meet a heroic death in battle,
Ankaidu dies.
Now it's kind of interesting,
because on the one hand, you're like,
oh, why would they punish Anka do?
Right?
He's not really the aggressor in this whole situation.
You know, it seems like Gilgamesh is the one
that's kind of ruining everything.
He's banging out the brides.
He's not banging Ishtar.
Right?
It's like, dude, you're banging everyone's wife.
And then the one woman that's like, hey, I'll have sex to you.
He's like, whoa, I'm not just a slut.
He's like, I'm not just giving it out to anybody.
Like, if I'm Ishtar, I actually would complete, this makes, she's kind of an insult.
But on the other hand, I see her point because she's like, you're literally giving out to everyone.
You're putting out to everyone else.
And not me.
I, yeah, I'd be pissed.
I don't know.
I see Ishtar's point. On the other hand, you're not entitled to anyone. You know, you're not entitled to sexual favors, even if someone is promiscous. So, Ishtar's got to eat that, but on the same time, if I'm Ishtar's friend, I'm like, yeah, fuck that guy. Gilgamesh. Wack-ass name, anyway. But people are like, okay, why would Anka-Du die? Because it seems like he's not causing all the stir. He's not causing all the problems. So why is he the one that gets taken out? It's interesting. I didn't really think about it this way until it was pointed out to me.
Anka-Doo's death
is not necessarily a punishment to Ankidu, right?
It's more of a punishment to Gilgamesh
because that is his closest friend.
They say in some of the translations
that Gilgamesh loved him like a woman.
Look it up.
And that's what it says.
This shit is gay, dude.
Straight up, these two guys were dogging each other out.
It's tales all his time, just two bros
meeting the final end of brodom, of bromance.
So just being like,
yo, I just love you, dude.
Just getting drunk with your homie at the bar.
Yo, I love you.
You're my brother.
I would kill a demigod in the woods for you.
You know what I mean?
Like that type of vibe?
They just get on it immediately and they become absolute homies.
So by killing his homie, you're really punishing Gilgamesh.
And on top of that, I don't think the gods can kill Gilgamesh because he's like two
thirds of a god and I think Enkidu is like not.
I think he's a different, he's a different sort of, you know, calculation of God to human
ratio. I don't know the exact details. I could look it up, but I don't really care.
Anyway, just a good point that this is really a punishment to Gilgamesh. In a famous line from
the epic, Gilgamesh clings to Anka-Doo's body. He holds on to him and denies that he has died
until a maggot drops from the nose of a corpse. I'll be honest, the death of Anka-Doo is actually
beautiful. Again, this is actually where it gets interesting because you're reading, like, I don't
of a 4,000-year-old piece of literature,
and the emotions and sort of Gilgamesh's realization of death
and his own mortality
and what it really means to mourn someone that you love
is actually beautiful.
You could cry reading this entire passage.
I'll share you just a couple lines that I thought were amazing.
The very end of this sort of moment
where he's like holding his dead friend
and doesn't want to believe that he's dead,
he says this,
all the people of Eridu
weep for you enkidu those who brought grain for eating mourned for you now who rubbed oil on your back mourn for you
now who poured beer for your drinking mourn for you now pouring out for the homies respect the harlot who
anointed you with fragrant ointment lament for you now the woman of the palace who brought you a wife the chosen ring of advice
lament for you now and the young men your brothers as though they were woman go long hair and mourning
what is the sleep which holds you now you were lost in the dark
and cannot hear me.
I mean, it's actually beautiful.
Like, it's written in, like, an amazing, like, it's,
and apparently, like, rhymed.
It had, like, a certain specific type of, like, A, B, B, B, A rhyme scheme in the
original Acadian.
It's just beautiful.
You're actually reading it.
You're like, oh, wow.
And this is a turning point in the story.
This is the moment that Gilgamesh fully realizes that he's a human being,
that he can die, that he's not purely a God,
that he's not destined to, you know, Rome and the heavens forever,
that his time will come.
And this has a major effect on Gilgamesh.
And as he's delivering his laments for Ankhadu,
he calls upon everyone in the universe and all the plants and trees to mourn his friend.
He recalls her adventures together.
He tears his hair and his clothes and grief.
He gets a statue built for him.
He gives gifts to his treasury to ensure Ankidu has a favorable reception of the realm of the dead.
A great banquet is held where treasures are offered to the...
the gods in another world, like this is taking a toll. And if you've ever lost someone in your life,
even if it's a friend, family member, you know, that feeling of loss, the pain that you feel
is maybe the most human feeling you could ever feel, as it's written in the literally
oldest piece of literature ever found. So what happens to our hero Gilgamesh? He's had this moment
where he's changed forever. Tablet 9 opens with Gilgamesh roaming, wearing wild skins, grieving for
He could do. Now, afraid of his own death, Gilgamesh decides to speak with Utnapitim and learn the secrets
of eternal life. Why does he go to Utnabitim? Well, Utenh Pishdom and his wife are the only couple of humans
artificially created by the gods who were allowed to survive the great floods. So, this is again
where people draw some parallels with the Bible and the Abrahamic religions. Gilgamesh crosses a mountain
pass at night and encounters a pride of lions. Before sleeping, he prays for protection
to the moon god then waking from an encouraging dream he kills the lions and uses their skins for clothing
after a long and perilous journey gilgamesh arrives at the twin peaks of mount mashu and the western end of the earth
he comes across a tunnel of the sun god shemash which no man has ever entered guarded by two scorpion
monsters who appear to be a married couple that's a detail that i don't i don't know even really what that
How do you know these scorpions are married?
Why can't they just be two regular, different-gendered scorpions?
I need to figure out why they're like, no, no, they're obviously, they're married.
They were just arguing the whole time.
He was like, where do you want to eat?
She was like, I don't know.
They're just standing at the gates.
The husband tries to dissuade Gilgamesh from passing, but the wife intervenes,
expresses empathy for Gilgamesh, and allows his passage.
entering the tunnel's gates, he follows the path of Shamash in total darkness and manages to reach the eastern exit within 12 double hours.
So 24 hours.
Just before he would have been caught up by the sun god burning him alive.
Astonished, he enters the marvelous garden of the gods, a paradise in which trees full of delicious jewels grow.
Gilgamesh goes and meets with an alewife, a barkeeper, the wife, the wife of a barkeeper.
of a brewer, her name's Siduri.
And she's in her pub, just hanging out, doing her thing.
And at first, she assumes that he would be a murderer
or a thief because of his disheveled appearance.
But Gilgamesh tells her the purpose of his journey.
I'm looking for immortality.
She attempts to dissuade him just to say, hey, be happy,
but sends him to Ursanabi,
the ferryman who will help him cross the sea
to see you at impishdom, to gain immortality.
Gilgamesh, out of a rage,
destroys the stone charms that Urshanabi keeps with him.
Gilgamesh tells his story, but when he asks for help, Urshinabe informs him that he's just destroyed the objects to help them cross the waters of death.
Gilgamesh, you absolute idiot.
He destroyed the thing that's going to get you across.
He's sabotaging his own self because he can't control his emotions over and over again.
Gilgamesh, you absolute moron.
So maybe the best quote from the entire epic of Gilgamesh comes from Siduria.
She's standing there and she tries to explain to Gilgamesh that he should stop on his quest to find Udgamesh.
and Episholm and, you know, gain immortality and live forever and be sort of, you know, known as a
god across the lands. This is what she says. Now, Gilgamesh, let your belly be full, be happy,
day and night. Of each day, make a party, dance in circles, day and night, let your clothes be
sparkling clean, let your head be clean, wash yourself with water, attend to the little ones
who hold your hand, let a wife delight in your embrace. This is the true task of mankind.
there you have it four thousand year old wisdom basically to say hey tend to your garden dance drink a little
take care of kids they say the true delight of your embrace with your wife is a you know a little
little romance cracking open your wife every now and again that's basically what's saying and uh it's
it's interesting even just saying wife is like yo like take care your wife tend to your wife not to say
you know go go mesh find a girl and have sex with like it's it's
It's about the divine bond between two people that have devoted their lives to each other.
It's kind of interesting, right?
Like as human beings change, time goes by, like all of this advice would still hold up, right?
Like you'd be some dude trying to, you know, raise a billion dollars for some tech startup and you go to like some old wise dude.
And you're like, what do I do?
And they'd be like, hey, just be happy day and night, you know, party, dance in circles at nighttime.
clean yourself, wash yourself, like take care of your body, take care of kids, hold on to the,
you know, little ones who hold your hand and just be good to your wife, enjoy time with her.
This is really what it's all about. It's like super profound. You read this and you're like, this is
amazing. Like, yeah, that's exactly what we all should be doing. And even then they had this
concept of like, yeah, this is what, you know, life is all about. So Gilgamesh hears this.
And he goes, all right, I'm still going to go see Utnapishdom and gain immortality.
Because he doesn't want to die. He's terrified. He just saw his friend, Anki Duh
die. He's like, I don't want that. All right, I'm going to live forever. Don't even worry about it.
Urshinawai basically says, all right, cut down 120 trees, fashioned them into punting poles.
When they reached the island where Nipishishish recounts the story asking him for help.
Ushnipitnam repriments him, declaring that fighting the common fate of human is futile and diminishes
life's joy. Again, just a beautiful kind of look at the ancient view of mortality. Like, hey,
you're not going to live forever. Trying to fight this is at absolute fool's errand. Just accept it.
Especially now, you see a lot of people like the transhumanist movement that are all about, like,
hey, let's just live forever. And even 4,000 years, they're like, hey, this is, you get one
shot, you get one go around. And who knows how long it is? 40 years, 50 years, maybe 100 if you're
feeling nice. Just enjoy it. Take care of your kids. Live. Gilgamesh observes that Uttu Bishdam seems no different
from himself and ask him how he obtained his immortality. This is what Utenutna Pishdom shares with him
and tell me what you notice. Uttnipishdom explains that the gods decided to send a flood.
To save Uttnipishdom, the god Anki told him to build a boat. He gave him precise dimensions and it was
sealed with pitch and butemann.
His entire family went aboard together
with the craftsmen and all
the animals of the field.
A violent storm then arose, which caused
the terrified gods to retreat
to the heavens. Ishtar lamented
the wholesale destruction of humanity
and the other gods wept
beside her. Ishtar would.
It's a horny broad. Trying to get
absolutely piped.
Oh no, look at all these hot guys dying.
I don't trust Ishtar.
The storm lasted six days and nights,
after which all the human beings turn to clay.
Utnipishdom weeps when he sees the destruction.
His boat lodges in Mountain Amush,
and he releases a dove, a swallow, and a raven.
When the raven fails to return,
he opens the ark and frees its inhabitants.
Utnipishdom offers a sacrifice to the gods
who smell the sweet savor and gather around.
Ishtar vows that just as she will never forget
the brilliant necklace that hangs around her neck, she will always remember this time.
When Inlil arrives angry that there are survivors, she condemns him for instigating the flood.
Anki also castigates him for sending a disproportionate punishment.
And Lil blesses Udna Pishdom and his wife and rewards them with eternal life.
The main point of this section is just to illustrate that Anil
wanted to grant Utenepishdom with eternal life.
that was sort of his gift. As if to demonstrate this point, Uttinipishhtim
challenges Gilgamesh to stay awake for six days and seven nights, Gilgamesh falls asleep,
and Utenhampishd instructs his wife to bake a loaf of bread on each of the days that he is
asleep so that he cannot deny his failure to keep awake. Gilgamesh, who was seeking to overcome
death, cannot even conquer sleep. Those seem like different things, but whatever.
After instructing Urshanabe, the ferryman to watch Gilgamesh,
clothe him in royal robes. They depart for Uruk. As they are leaving, Uttinipisham's wife
asked her husband to offer a parting gift. Uttinopish tells Gilgamesh that at the bottom of the sea
lives a boxthorn-like plant that will make him young again. Imagine this. Right at the very end,
Gilgamesh, despite learning everything and understanding what immortality really brings, how to get it,
what it means to the people that have it, that he doesn't actually really need it.
He finds out that there's a plant that will make him young again.
Gilgamesh, by binding stones to his feet so he can walk in the bottom, manages to obtain the plant.
Gilgamesh proposes to investigate if the plant has the hypothesized rejuvenation ability
by testing it on an old man once he returns to Uruk.
When Gilgamesh stops to bathe, the plant is stolen by a serpent who sheds its skin.
as it departs. Gilgamesh weeps
at the futility of his effort
because he has now lost
all chance of immortality.
He returns to Uruk
where the sight of its massive walls
prompts him to praise this enduring work
to Urshanabe. Those are the
original 11 tablets
of the epic of Gilgamesh.
Now, there is a 12th tablet
that many people believe
is a translation
of an earlier Sumerian
poem and is kind of like an addendum to it, but they also believe that it's like a prequel.
So here's basically what's on the 12th tablet that is commonly sort of known in the library
of the Epic of Gogal mesh, but is not necessarily known as a linear continuation of the story.
The last tablet say that Ancadu is actually still alive despite having died earlier, right?
That's like the whole point of the story.
Because of this, it's lack of integration with the other tablets and the fact that it's almost a copy
of an earlier version. It's been known as this inorganic appendage, right? Gilgamesh complains to
Anka-Doo that various of his possessions, the tablet is unclear exactly what, and different translations
include a drum and a ball, have fallen into the underworld. Ancadu offers to bring them back. Delighted
Gilgamesh tells Ancadu what he must do and what he must not do in the underworld if he is to
return. Ankidu does everything which he is told not to do. The underworld keeps him. Gilgamesh prays to
the gods give him back, and Lil and Suen do not reply, but Enki and Shamash decide to help.
Shamash makes a crack in the earth, and Anka-Doo's ghost jumps out of it.
The tablet ends with Gilgamesh questioning Ankidu about what he has seen in the underworld.
I don't know.
I kind of like the little side story.
It seems like between a tablet three and four kind of vibe.
You can throw it in there just be like, hey, here are some of the wacky adventures of these two gay guys.
I don't know.
All that to say, this 11th tablet, the one that shows the flood, is very, very interesting.
again, this has a lot of similarities to the Abrahamic story of Noah and his arc, the animals
two by two, the dove that's released and shown is sort of the symbol of peace that the earth
will never flood in this way ever again. But there are some differences, right? Raining for 40 days,
40 nights, this was only seven days, you know, the nature of the gods and how they sort of, you know,
deal with this. Obviously, in the Abrahamic faiths, you know, Hashem or Yahweh is very, very different
than, you know, the various gods and Lil and Shamash that appear in this story.
So there are certain details that are very similar.
Some people might even say that they're drawing in the same source material,
that maybe there is, you know, perhaps some original account that, you know,
details this great flood that maybe both of these are drawing from this version in the Epic of Gilgamesh
is distorting and twisting and paganizing it, whereas the, you know, Bible in the Book of Genesis
is keeping the true and authentic version in accordance with the word of God,
this perhaps might be of Christians would say.
Other people might say, oh, this was obviously a much earlier version,
and the Abrahamic religions copied this,
that they were familiar with this,
that the Jews of the time would have been very familiar with the Epic of Gilgamesh.
I believe that there were versions of the Epic of Gilgamesh
that were found even in the Dead Sea Scrolls that were put there
by the Essian sort of ascetic Jewish travelers
that didn't, you know, try to interact with the Romans at all.
By pulling it out of the Library of Jerusalem before the invasion, they put it in these, you know, sort of caves.
And that's, you know, the Dead Sea Scrolls as we know them today.
Who's to say?
I don't know.
I don't know if they were copied.
Again, there's pretty interesting things that seem to be similarities.
But there's also a lot of differences in you're like, you know, every culture on Earth basically has a flood myth.
Whether you're in, you know, Iraq, you're in Nineveh, you're in, you know, Central America, Native Americans.
in the United States and Cherokee, they all have different flooding myths.
Some of them flood the known world.
Some of them flood the entire world.
It rains for disparate periods of time.
Obviously, how are you going to survive a flood?
You build a boat.
These people obviously have experience with seafaring.
So it follows to reason that you would build a thing that floats and you need animals as well,
so you would include the animals on the boat.
So it follows to reason that if you experience a flood or you're going to write about some type of
great cataclysm that wipes out the entirety of humanity, a flood.
a flood would be a logical, you know, place to go. And then, of course, all of the ways to survive a flood would then follow to reason. The dove example is interesting. And then again, people also point out the serpent. They say like, oh, you know, obviously in the Bible, you have the Garden of Eden and the serpent comes in Temps Eve. And then here the serpent comes and is not necessarily being evil, right? Like the serpent is just doing what serpents do. Like it's in the nature of the serpent to sort of steal and be. And then here the serpent comes and is not necessarily being evil, right? Like, the serpent is just doing what serpents do. Like, like it's in the nature of the serpent to sort of steal and be. And,
be mischievous, but it's not necessarily known to be satanic. I think if this was going to
draw a direct parallel with the Garden of Eden, and here you would expect the serpent to, you know,
go get the plant for him and then give him the plant. And he's young forever and he's miserable and
actually hates it and he wishes that he could die, but he can't. And he's sort of, you know, trapped in
this vessel, this hell of immortality. I think that would be, you know, more akin to the serpent that
we see in the book of Genesis. But again, who knows? I'm not a, I'm not a scholar here. This is sort of my
conjecture on the epic of Gilgamesh. Now, it is a beautiful, it is a beautiful story. It has made an
absolute, yeah, it's made a huge impact on the way people have looked at mythology and
literature ever since. It had a major impact on Homer and a lot of the, you know, sort of the Greek
stories and the Greek tragedies and the epics that Homer would write. He was very familiar with this text.
Even in the Iliad, there's stories of adventure and flooding and all sorts of things that you would
find in the epic of Gilgamesh. So another really, really interesting thing that we get from
the epic of Gilgamesh is the idea of the Anunaki. Now, people kind of know the Anunaki is sort of these
gods that exist in heaven that watch down. It's kind of been sort of tied into the book of Enoch in a lot of
ways. But the Anunnaki, as we see, are, you know, exactly how the story is described. It is this,
you know, group of gods that live in heaven that sort of have like this hierarchy. And they, you know,
as a group sort of dictate the governance of what happens to human beings on earth. So, you know,
here's sort of like the hierarchy as we've sort of described it. You have Anu, who is the chief deity
of the Anuraki, you know, the father of many gods. And Lil, this.
This is the person that try to destroy, you know, earth with the flood, but also grants Uttnipishdom the immortality for, you know, as a reward.
Then you have Anki.
This is the god of the underground ocean, magic, wisdom, and creation.
This is a benevolent god who helps humanity and warns Uttinipishdom that there's going to be a flood coming and to build a boat.
And you have Ishtar.
You know, this is a complex deity, love, war, fertility, political power.
This is the one that was trying to bang out Gilgamesh.
And he said no, and then had a whole battle with the bull of the heavens.
Shamash is the god of the sun and justice associated with truth.
Law, order, Shamash is like the homie, always trying to help everyone out.
And there's other ones.
But again, all of these gods create was known as the Anunnaki.
And yeah, it just creates an interesting precedent in history, how the Anunaki comes from the Epic of Guglemish.
And then how it sort of has transformed.
You sort of see these quarrelsome gods that sort of exhibit human characteristics where they're angry.
Sometimes they disagree.
they go back and forth, and they don't ascertain sort of the Abrahamic idea of omnipotence,
you know, or, you know, omnipresence.
They don't possess necessarily like the all-consuming power of the biblical God,
which is interesting.
And there you have it, folks.
That is the book of Gilgamesh.
That is where it was discovered.
That is where it was found and who found it and why it mattered so much to the people
and why it matters so much now, right?
this has been lost a time for thousands of years discovered within the last 150 and has made a major
impact to how biblical scholars look at their own faith, how they understand where these stories of
their faith may or may not come from, and how it's possible that a lot of different stories
are drawing on similar themes. You know, maybe it's intrinsic to who human beings are. Maybe it's,
fundamental to an event that happened in history that everyone's drawing on. Who's to say, who will
ever know, all that I do know is that sort of the things that make human beings humans
and the things that we care about don't really seem to change that much. That is the most profound
part. I mean, the world today and the world four thousand years ago could not be more different.
Like, there's almost nothing that we do now that we would do then, right? It just seems like,
can't even fathom. Some people believe that, you know, Gilgamesh was a real king that lived
roughly around the time of the creation of the pyramids. Like, just to give you an idea of scope,
in time. So, so long ago, right? And then you start to think like, oh, wow, Gilgamesh this whole time is so
worried about immortality, you know, trying to have some great legacy, trying to be famous, trying
to be rich. He just wants to matter and exist in the world. And ultimately the thing that he wants is
going to kill him. It is going to be his, you know, a quest that he goes on forever and, you know,
never really achieves this idea of just being immortalized. But what, what?
What he needs is his family and a wife and to be a good ruler and to help the people of his kingdom.
And that is actually what matters, is tending to his garden and fulfilling his purpose as a human being on earth.
But we're still talking about the epic of Gilgamesh all these years later.
So maybe he did get ultimately what he wanted to be immortalized into the fabric of history.
Congrats, Kilgamesh.
Anyway, this has been another episode of Camp.
Thank you guys so much for listening.
I appreciate everyone tuning into Religion Camp.
This has been very, very fun for me.
We got merch also that's going to be dropping very soon.
You guys can check that out if it's already out, get it in the description.
And we will see you guys next week.
Peace with you.
