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George Smith's Discovery of the Epic of Gilgamish and the Story of the Deluge.
The mass of tablets which had been discovered by Layard and Rassam at Nineveh came to the British Museum in 1854–5, and their examination by Rawlinson and Norris began very soon after. Mr. Bowler, a skilful draughtsman and copyist
of tablets, whom Rawlinson employed in making transfers of copies of cuneiform texts for publication by lithography, rejoined
a considerable number of fragments of bilingual lists, syllabaries, etc., which were published in the second volume of the
Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western Asia, in 1866. In that year the Trustees of the British Museum employed George Smith to assist Rawlinson in sorting, classifying
and rejoining fragments, and a comprehensive examination of the collection by him began. His personal interest in Assyriology
was centred upon historical texts, especially those which threw any light on the Bible Narrative. But in the course of his
search for stories of the campaigns of Sargon II, Sennacherib, Esarhaddon and Ashur-bani-pal, he discovered among other important
documents (1) a series of portions of tablets which give the adventures of Gilgamish, an ancient king of Erech; (2) An account
of the Deluge, which is supplied by the Eleventh Tablet of the Legend of Gilgamish (in more than one version); (3) A detailed
description of the Creation; (4) the Legend of the Descent of Ishtar into Hades in quest of Tammuz. The general meaning of
the texts was quite clear, but there were many gaps in them, and it was not until December, 1872, that George Smith published
his description of the Legend of Gilgamish, and a translation of the "Chaldean Account of the Deluge." The interest which
his paper evoked was universal, and the proprietors of the "Daily Telegraph" advocated that Smith should be at once dispatched
to Nineveh to search for the missing fragments of tablets which would fill up the gaps in his texts, and generously offered
to contribute 1,000 guineas towards the cost of the excavations. The Trustees accepted the offer and gave six months' leave
of absence to Smith, who left London in January, and arrived in Môsul in March, 1873. In the following May he recovered from
Kuyûnjik a fragment that contained "the greater portion of seventeen lines of inscription belonging to the first column of
the Chaldean account of the Deluge, and fitting into the only place where there was a serious blank in the story."1 During the excavations which Smith carried out at Kuyûnjik in 1873 and 1874 he recovered many fragments of tablets, the texts of
which enabled him to complete his description of the contents of the Twelve Tablets of the Legend of Gilgamish which included
his translation of the story of the Deluge. Unfortunately Smith died of hunger and sickness near Aleppo in 1876, and he was
unable to revise his early work, and to supplement it with the information which he had acquired during his latest travels
in Assyria and Babylonia. Thanks to the excavations which were carried on at Kuyûnjik by the Trustees of the British Museum
after his untimely death, several hundreds of tablets and fragments have been recovered, and many of these have been rejoined
to the tablets of the older collection. By the careful study and investigation of the old and new material Assyriologists
have, during the last forty years, been enabled to restore and complete many passages in the Legends of Gilgamish and the
Flood. It is now clear that the Legend of the Flood had not originally any connection with the Legend of Gilgamish, and that
it was introduced into it by a late editor or redactor of the Legend, probably in order to complete the number of the Twelve
Tablets on which it was written in the time of Ashur-bani-pal.
1 Smith, Assyrian Discoveries, London, 1875, p. 97.
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