Deluge
In
biblical history, flood of waters, described in
Genesis 6-9, that inundated the entire earth or
a large part of it.
The
only survivors were the occupants of the ark, a
vessel with a beam of 26.7 m (87.5 ft) and a length
of 160 m (525 ft), built by Noah
at God's command. On the ark, besides Noah, were
his wife, his three sons and their wives, and mated
pairs of every species of animal.
The
narrative of the deluge in Genesis consists of two
interwoven versions, the Yahwist and Elohist. Except
on the reason for the flood, attributed in both
to God's anger at humankind's wickedness, the two
versions are frequently contradictory or divergent.
According
to the Yahwist sections of the narrative, for example,
the flood is caused by a rain lasting 40 days. Noah
sends out a raven at the end of this period, but
it fails to return. He then releases a dove, which
returns with an olive leaf. Sent out again seven
days later, the dove does not return. Noah disembarks
after another seven-day interval, builds an altar,
and offers a sacrifice. God smells the "sweet savour"
and promises not to destroy the world again.
In the Elohist sections, the flood is accompanied
by an upsurge of subterranean waters. It increases
in intensity for 150 days, or five months of a solar
year, and begins to recede in the seventh month.
The ark then grounds "upon the mountains of Ararat."
On the first day of the next solar year, Noah leaves
the ark and is blessed by God, who causes a rainbow
as a sign of his covenant that such a flood will
not occur again.
A
number of ancient nations had folklore that predated
the Bible and also made reference to the great flood.
An
example is the Gilgamesh
Epic, an ancient Babylonian
story dating from 2000BC and written on 12 cuneiform
tablets. It concerns a ruler (Gilgamesh) who, after
losing his dearest friend to a mysterious death,
seeks out a wise man (Utnapishtim) who is a survivor
of the great flood and knows the secret of immortality.
Accounts such as this have intrigued biblical scholars
because they lend further credence to the later
biblical version. Although a number of these scholars
have concluded that the biblical narrative is derived
from the Babylonian story, it is possible that each
was taken from a common earlier source, now lost.
Events
similar to those described in the biblical story occur also
in Greek mythology. Among other peoples whose folklore and
legends contain accounts of a devastating deluge are those
of southern Asia, the aborigines of North, Central, and South
America, and the natives of Polynesia. The Chinese and Japanese
have stories of floods, but these do not, as a rule, destroy
the entire earth. Curiously, flood legends do not occur among
the ancient inhabitants of the Nile Valley and are not common
anywhere else in Africa or in Europe.
"Deluge"
Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001 http://encarta.msn.com
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