chapter three, lecture one the development of classical myth
TRANSCRIPT
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Chapter Three, Lecture One
The Development of Classical Myth
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The Development of Classical Myth
• Features of Greek myth appear in primordial past.
• How did myth begin and develop in the historical periods?
• Where do we look for evidence of their earliest origins, and how do we assess it?
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The Beginnings of Greek Myth
• Neolithic fertility idols found throughout southeast Europe and Near East.– Fertility Idols from Thessaly– Cycladic Idols
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The Beginnings of Greek Myth
• Potnia Thērōn
• Is she Artemis? – Artemis as the Potnia Thērōn on the François
Vase
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The Beginnings of Greek Myth
• Indo-European myths
• Linguistic analysis– Zeus and Jupiter < Dy –– The Indo-Europeans worshipped a sky god?
• Comparative Analysis– “twin”– good versus evil? – social dichotomy?
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The Beginnings of Greek Myth
• Writing as a method of transmission
• Linear B tablets – Zeus, Hera, Poseidon, Athena, Artemis,
Hermes, Enyalius, Paean, Eileithyia, Dionysus, Potnia.
• Myths mostly transmitted orally by aoidoi
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The Beginnings of Greek Myth
• Songs performed for entertainment by bards– Homer’s Demodocus
• Dactylic hexameter
• Rhythmic patterns and stock phrases
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The Influence of Near Eastern Myth
• Non-Indo-European Mesopotamian sources of Greek myth– Mesopotamia Map
• Greek myths of cosmic origins come from Near Eastern sources
• Mesopotamian myths known only by report until recently
• Cuneiform script decoded in the 19th century
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Sumerian Myth
• Sumerians the earliest people in Mesopotamia (4000 B.C.)
• First full-fledged cities
• Each city had protective deity– “Lived” on the ziggurat
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Sumerian Myth
• Myths preserved on tablets and seals– cuneiform (wedge shaped)
• Seal Impressions– Gilgamesh/Enkidu cylinder seal
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Sumerian Myth
An Sky God | Supreme
Inanna Queen of Heaven | Sex and War
Enlil Lord of the Storm | Tablets of Destiny
Enki Lord of Earth | Sweet Ground Water | Trickster God
Ki One of Many Names for Mother Earth
Ereshkigal Queen of the Underworld
Utu Sun God
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Sumerian Myths
• Deities are anthropomorphic but indistinct– Hard to tell often who’s been represented
• Filled with human emotions and motivations
• Important in the Epic of Gilgamesh
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Semitic Myth
• Semites– Modern term < Biblical “Schem”– Arrive in Mesopotamia in 2000 BC– Designates linguistic group
• Sargon the Akkadian (2340 BC)
• Adopted Sumerian culture
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Semitic Myth
Sumerian Akkadian/Bablyonian
An Anu
Inanna Isthar
Enlil Enlil or Marduk
Enki Ea
Ki -----
Ereshkigal -----
Utu Shamash
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Semitic Myth
• Hammurabi (1750 BC)– Semitic Babylonians– Empire in Mesopotamia
• The Ennuma Elish– “When on high . . .”– Creation account– Cult hymn
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Semitic Myth
• Hebrews– Abraham (2000 BC?)
• Migrated to Canaan and then to Egypt
• Moses (1200 BC) – Monotheism (from Egyptian period of
Akhenaten 1400 BC?)– Yahweh– The Exodus and Ten Commandments
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Semitic Myth
• Invasion of Canaan– Battles with the Canaanites and the Philistines
• Kingdom of David and Solomon (1000 BC)
• Babylonian Exile (586–536)– Nebuchadnezzar
• Collected their written and oral traditions
• Completed around AD 90
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Semitic Myth
• Wrote with the “Phoenician alphabet”– syllabary of twenty-two signs without vowel
signs
• Easier than cuneiform but still difficult– Hence the prestige of readers (the rabbi)
• Adapted into Arabic script and ultimately into the Greek alphabet
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Other Sources
• Hittites (1600–1200 BC)– Central modern-day Turkey– Non-Semitic– Inherited and modified Babylonian myths
• Egypt– Had few myths– Mostly proverbs, hymns, and clever short stories– Connected narratives come from Greek sources
(Osiris and Isis)
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Next Lecture: Greek Origins