Bitches love me for my ancient literature memes
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Bitches love me for my ancient literature memes
This visual collection explores five different interpretations of the ancient flood myth from cultures around the world. Each image highlights unique artistic styles, cultural symbols, and divine interventions, showing how the same core story—catastrophic deluge, survival, and rebirth—was imagined differently across civilizations. From Mesopotamian ziggurats sinking beneath the waves to Hopi people ascending a giant reed, these scenes reveal humanity’s shared fascination with destruction and renewal.
The Hermit. Art by Rubi Do Trinh, from the Star of Inanna Tarot.
𒑆 The Hermit 𒍪 The stories reflected in these cards are some of the oldest stories ever told. The story behind this card might sound familiar. In this card, we see Utnapishtim, a character from the Mesopotamian Epic of Gilgamesh. He was a mortal who has been granted immortality by the Gods because he saved animals and humanity when he built a large boat in order to save them from a devastating global flood sent by the Gods. He was then taken by the Gods to live alone at Dilmun, a remote and solitary place where the sun rises and creation occurs. In the Epic, Gilgamesh is seeking the secret to eternal life. In his quest, he is told of Utnapishtim, who has learned that wisdom, because it was given to him by the Gods. Gilgamesh’s quest for wisdom from Utnapishtim reflects the archetype of the wise Hermit figure. We see Gilgamesh approaching on the boat in the card. There is also an older Sumerian version of this tale that exists. In that one, Utnapishtim is called Ziusudra. There, he also builds a boat and saves the “seed of humanity”. He is then granted immortality and is taken to live solitarily in a land called Dilmun. Here we see the value placed on the concept of the “seed” by mesopotamians. To tie this story and characters to the deck, it’s important to point out that in both accounts, Inanna laments for the destruction of humans by the flood. The stories we share in this deck often tie together aspects from the different cultures within the Mesopotamian timeline. The Cuneiform is: 𒍪 dili - “alone, unique”
Fallen London’s True Identities
Ut-napishtim as the Capering Relicker
Random Fact #6,574
The Biblical story of Noah's Ark is a retelling of an older Babylonian story about a guy named Utnapishtim.
The story of Utnapishtim can be found in the Epic of Gilgamesh, which is hands down the oldest story ever written down (that we know of).
The tale is told in two parts (it would seem story arcs were as popular 4,100 years ago as they are today). The first part is wonderfully bizarre and tells the story of Enkidu (a hairy wild gazelle man), his unlikely bromance (and possibly outright romance) with King Gilgamesh of Uruk, and Enkidu’s eventual demise.
The second part centers on Gilgamesh, who’s distraught over the death of his friend and sets out on a perilous journey in search of the secret to eternal life.
You can read two translations of the story here and here.
If you prefer listening to stories rather than reading or aren’t a fan of the way old-timey text is written, I would highly recommend the three-part episode of the podcast Myths & Legends.
Most fuckable sumerian hero
Gilgamesh, king of Uruk
Enkidu, wild man
Shamhat, sacred prostitute
Umbaba, forest demon
Utnapishtim, inmortal old man