
audiobook
by L. W. (Leonard William) King
These lectures offer a thoughtful journey into the ancient mythic landscapes of Babylon and Egypt, showing how their legendary traditions intersect with the Hebrew narrative. Drawing on newly published American discoveries and fresh archaeological finds—such as early Sumerian texts and a fragment of the Palermo Stele—the author re‑examines long‑standing assumptions about the cradle of civilization. The result is a clear, evidence‑based portrait of how these cultures recorded creation, early history, and the great flood.
By comparing poetic Sumerian accounts with Hebrew scriptures and Egyptian chronicles, the work reveals striking structural parallels while highlighting distinct cultural twists. Listeners will discover how early dynastic lists, genealogies, and mythic ages echo across regions, suggesting a shared pool of ideas that ancient peoples adapted to their own worlds. The study invites a deeper appreciation of how myth and history intertwined long before modern scholarship began to untangle them.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (384K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by John Bickers, Dagny and David Widger
Release date
2006-03-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1869–1919
An early explorer of the ancient Near East, this British Assyriologist helped bring Babylonian myths, cuneiform texts, and Mesopotamian history to a wider English-speaking audience. His books blend close scholarship with a real sense of discovery.
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