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Author | Topic: Commonalities Of Accounts Of A Universal Flood? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dr Adequate Member (Idle past 313 days) Posts: 16113 Joined: |
It has been claimed on another thread:
Actually, the amazing fact that there are so many ancient stories of a gigantic flood is unbelievably strong corroboration. The attempts to reduce them all to local floods, as if they all just happened to experience these memorable local floods about the same time that made this huge impact on their consciousness, apart from all the OTHER big floods they must also have experienced over the millennia, is really laughable. This raises a number of interesting questions. How widespread are stories of a universal flood? What do they have in common besides a big flood? Do they occur only in areas where local flooding is known to have taken place, or are they present elsewhere? My thanks to anyone who cares to inform me.
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AdminPD Inactive Administrator |
Thread moved here from the Proposed New Topics forum.
Please pay very close attention to the questions asked and keep on topic. AdminPD Edited by AdminPD, : Warning
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kuresu Member (Idle past 2541 days) Posts: 2544 From: boulder, colorado Joined: |
off of the top of my head, I know that in the southwest US, many of the origin stories do not involve a flood. The one I'm thinking of (though I can't remember the tribe) is where they used up each world, until they got to ours on the very top level.
The flood myths I am familiar with are from Sumer and the OT. I would imagine that the egyptian origin myth would involve water--particularly floods, seeing as how the nile floods were the source of life for them. I would wager that of all the myth stories, wherever the first of those people came from, if there was flooding, and if it was agricultural, there will be a flood involved. Where no flooding required, but agriculture is, then there will be water involved, but probably no flood. If there is no flooding, and not even agriculture, there will be no flood, no water. Just my gueses, mind you. Want to help give back to the world community? Did you know that your computer can help? Join the newest TeamEvC Climate Modelling to help improve climate predictions for a better tomorrow.
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Coragyps Member (Idle past 763 days) Posts: 5553 From: Snyder, Texas, USA Joined: |
The one I'm thinking of (though I can't remember the tribe) is where they used up each world, until they got to ours on the very top level.
That sounds like the Navaho story. Before anyone says, "Wait! The Navaho live in the desert!" please note that the Navajo language is a member of the Athabaskan language family, otherwise found on the notrhwest US/canadian coast - wet country.
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kuresu Member (Idle past 2541 days) Posts: 2544 From: boulder, colorado Joined: |
I was actually thinking it was Hopi, let me check real quick like
checking . . .checking . . .checking . . . okay, not Hopi, but it is similar to the Zuni, and defintely is navajo. I don't know their language group though (Zuni). In the Zuni version, there is a hell of a lot of water, the purpose being to find the "middle place", which is where they would live, which just so happens to be the southwest US. Also, they don't go through multiple worlds, but come out from under the world--or rather, if I've it right, their creators. It's looking that my "guess" is at best, way off. Want to help give back to the world community? Did you know that your computer can help? Join the newest TeamEvC Climate Modelling to help improve climate predictions for a better tomorrow.
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Faith  Suspended Member (Idle past 1473 days) Posts: 35298 From: Nevada, USA Joined: |
How widespread are stories of a universal flood? What do they have in common besides a big flood? Do they occur only in areas where local flooding is known to have taken place, or are they present elsewhere? My thanks to anyone who cares to inform me. This is a good idea for a thread and maybe we'll all learn something. All I really know is that there are quite a few, and others at EvC have supported this. I think I should just hit and run here as my computer has been freezing up more than usual today. So here is one site that looks pretty comprehensive: Flood Legends From Around the World
Native global flood stories are documented as history or legend in almost every region on earth. Old world missionaries reported their amazement at finding remote tribes already possessing legends with tremendous similarities to the Bible's accounts of the worldwide flood. H.S. Bellamy in Moons, Myths and Men estimates that altogether there are over 500 Flood legends worldwide. Ancient civilizations such as (China, Babylonia, Wales, Russia, India, America, Hawaii, Scandinavia, Sumatra, Peru, and Polynesia) all have their own versions of a giant flood.
These flood tales are frequently linked by common elements that parallel the Biblical account including the warning of the coming flood, the construction of a boat in advance, the storage of animals, the inclusion of family, and the release of birds to determine if the water level had subsided. The overwhelming consistency among flood legends found in distant parts of the globe indicates they were derived from the same origin (the Bible's record), but oral transcription has changed the details through time. Perhaps the second most important historical account of a global flood can be found in a Babylonian flood story in the Epic of Gilgamesh. When the Biblical and Babylonian accounts are compared, a number of outstanding similarities are found that leave no doubt these stories are rooted in the same event or oral tradition.
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PaulK Member Posts: 17828 Joined: Member Rating: 2.3 |
Well there's no doubt that the Bible story is a version of the same story found in the Epic of Gilgamesh. However, floods are common enough in many places of the world, and so are boats. Without a warning it would be difficult for there to be survivors, if you use a boat - an obvious idea - it needs to be ready, Animal survival needs to be explained and what more natural than to include animals on the boat ?
Bellamy, by the way was a populariser of Hoerbiger's Welteislehre ("Universal Ice Theory") pseudoscience, so I would be very wary of trusting him as a source.
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Heathen Member (Idle past 1312 days) Posts: 1067 From: Brizzle Joined: |
The overwhelming consistency among flood legends found in distant parts of the globe indicates they were derived from the same origin (the Bible's record), or.. presumably, equally likely that the bible's record was derived from some other or some conglomeration of the other flood legends. A local flood at these times may well have given the impression that the whole world was flooded. It would be interesting to look at the geographical locations of all these flood originators and see if they are flood prone areas.
but oral transcription has changed the details through time.
but wait! isn't the god inspired truth meant to be infallible? other wise what other 'details' have changed through time and transcription?
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jar Member (Idle past 423 days) Posts: 34026 From: Texas!! Joined: |
There are flood stories from many parts of the world, but I know of no commonality across them. The Biblical story is certainly a retelling or variation of the Gilgamesh Saga, but even there only the idea that there was a big flood and a boat is common.
The important point is that there are place that do not have a world-wide flood myth, an annomaly that refutes any world-wide flood. In addition, areas such as Egypt that depended on annual floods and that had a high level of civilization at the supposed time of the Biblical Flood just plain didn't notice it. Aslan is not a Tame Lion
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melatonin Member (Idle past 6237 days) Posts: 126 From: Cymru Joined: |
The welsh legend revolves around Dwyfan and his partner, a dragon-like monster was angered, thrashed around and flooded Briton. Only Dwyfan and his partner survived becoming the Adam and Eve (I think Dafydd is our version of Steve - you'd have to know Little Britain to get that one).
A lake near to were I live is named after the beasty, Lyn yr Afanc, claiming this to be the lake of the legend. Although there are many lakes in Wales named after it. Apparently the original celtic legend was bastardised by a particular group to conform closer to the bible myth. ABE: here's an outline...
(Welsh) Also Dwyfan. Dwyvan and his wife, Swyfach, are the heroes of the Welsh flood myth. Together they built an ark, filled it with animals, and survived the great flood caused by Addanc, a lake God/dragon/faery. Though later versions of this myth are distorted in order to make it conform to the Biblical version, the old story shines through and we see that Dwyvan was the personification of the male creative principle which has taken over for the older sacrificed God. The Welsh deluge legend says that he and his wife were each part of one river which flowed into Bala Lake which was at one time called Lake Dyfrdwy, from the term dyfr-dwyf meaning "water of the divinity". Edited by melatonin, : No reason given. Edited by melatonin, : Added stuff and corrected error
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Faith  Suspended Member (Idle past 1473 days) Posts: 35298 From: Nevada, USA Joined: |
The universality of flood stories, were they all merely local events, should be matched by a universality of all kinds of disaster stories, it seems to me. Where are the universal earthquake stories, the universal forest fire stories? If the area is flood-prone, yearly subjected to flooding as the Nile area is, the people wouldn't single out just one event of flooding to make a big deal out of it -- or if there was an unusually big flood they'd still mention it in the context of the yearly pattern -- they lived by it after all.
The fact that such stories exist in such numbers is very likely an indication of a universal memory. The fact that many of them are distorted and embellished with local gods just reflects the imperfection of memory and reason, plus a dollop of local pride. The Bible account is remarkable for its LACK of embellishment. In fact this is true of the entire Bible, which adds to its credibility in my mind. It's a straightforward account of facts and pertinent details. There's no fat on it, no fairy tale or myth or legend feeling at all. In my humble opinion of course. Edited by Faith, : No reason given.
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kuresu Member (Idle past 2541 days) Posts: 2544 From: boulder, colorado Joined: |
well, I'd say that the noah flood definetly has a myth feeling to it--especially the longetivity of live part (people several hundreds of years old!)(covering the water all the way up to the tops of the mountains!) however . . .
as to the universality, why should the others be equally represented if they are merely local events (the floods, that is). Maybe because along with death, the floods represent life. Out of the death and destruction of life, new life arises. Fires do not do this, earthquakes do not do this. In every flood story, there is always (as far as I know) a new beginning, a new life. Plus, there is the association of water with life. Fire has nothing linking it with life, nor do earhtquakes, volcanic explosions. We need water. More than any other thing, we need water to live (case in point--man can live no more than a week, if that, without water. he can live almost a month without food). As to the egyptians, why would they make a big deal out of one flood? Well, perhaps there was a really big flood in their mythical past, and they needed to explain that if you don't worship your gods, they won't send this highly benefical floods, but a massive one to wipe us out. just my conjecture, mind you. Want to help give back to the world community? Did you know that your computer can help? Join the newest TeamEvC Climate Modelling to help improve climate predictions for a better tomorrow.
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AnswersInGenitals Member (Idle past 179 days) Posts: 673 Joined: |
I'm curious as to why these long lists of flood myths leave out the flood myth of the Neworleanian tribe (2005), or that of the Aceh peoples (2004), or that of the Mississippian culture (1993). Civilization has almost always developed along major rivers (Tigris/Euphrates, Nile, Indus, Yangze, Mississippi, etc., etc.,), or their deltas. These rivers were constantly flooding and still are flood prone. Can you find one week where the newspapers are not carrying a story about a major flood somewhere in the world? To the ancient people, these floods were universal. To them, the universe was the distance you could travel in one day. The difficult thing to explain is any culture that does not have a universal or giant flood story. It is the great diversity in these stories that places the biblical flood as just another local myth (and a borrowed myth at that!) What is most amusing is the desperate attempts by bible apologists to insist that all these ancient floods occurred at the same time. The myths themselves place the flood (along with many other founding legends) in 'the time of the ancients', or in 'time out of mind', or 'before men walked the earth'. Yes, I can see where that narrows it down to Tuesday, June 6, 2865bce.
By the by, I just noticed that I am no longer listed as a 'Junior Member'. How did that happen? The only reason I write these stupid posts that no one pays any attention to is to see myself identified as a 'Junior'. Now my last visage of youthful exuberance has been denied me. What can I do to get it back? Edited by AnswersInGenitals, : Because the voices told me to!
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Dr Adequate Member (Idle past 313 days) Posts: 16113 Joined: |
The universality of flood stories, were they all merely local events, should be matched by a universality of all kinds of disaster stories, it seems to me. Where are the universal earthquake stories... An excellent question!
this website lists earthquake legends from India, Assam, Mexico, Siberia, Mozambique, Tennessee, West Africa, Mongolia, Latvia, Romania, and West Africa.
This website has a similar list, but adds in Japan, Greece, Belgium, Columbia, and East Africa. Not only do many of these myths have common elements, but some also have elements in common with flood myths; e.g. in the Belgian earthquake myth, earthquakes are sent by the gods to punish men's wickedness (as in the Bible); in one Central American myth, the gods send earthquakes to deal with human overpopulation (as in the Babylonian story of Atrahasis' ark).
The fact that such stories exist in such numbers is very likely an indication of a universal memory. The fact that many of them are distorted and embellished with local gods just reflects the imperfection of memory and reason, plus a dollop of local pride. The Bible account is remarkable for its LACK of embellishment. It mentions what was at that time a purely local god. If that is a feature of embellishment, then why should we not suppose the Hebrew version to have been embellished? I'm not sure about "forest fire stories". People don't usually live in forests, and surely those that did would have a fairly good idea of what started forest fires (i.e. the thunder god hurling his lightning hammer).
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kuresu Member (Idle past 2541 days) Posts: 2544 From: boulder, colorado Joined: |
more often than not we live in forests (at least ver early on in our history (pre written era). Granted, it's those that live in flood plains and other very fertile areas that developed civilization first.
cool list, though Want to help give back to the world community? Did you know that your computer can help? Join the newest TeamEvC Climate Modelling to help improve climate predictions for a better tomorrow.
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