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Legend of Keret

The Legend of Keret, also known as the Epic of Kirta, is an ancient Ugaritic epic poem,[1][2] dated to Late Bronze Age, circa 1500 – 1200 BCE.[3] It recounts the myth of King Kirta of Hubur. It is one of the Ugaritic texts.

In the legend, Kirta is the son of the great god El but is considered unfortunate. He has been widowed seven times, and has no surviving children. He has survived all of his brothers, and he is the last surviving member of his family. He begs his father for an heir of his own, and El instructs him to wage war against another kingdom and to demand its princess as his wife. Kirta wins his war and has several children by his new wife. But he angers the goddess Athirat by reneging on a promise to her, and is cursed with an illness. El intervenes to heal his son. Kirta is then challenged for the throne by his oldest son, who wants him to abdicate in his favor. Kirta curses his son, but the ending of the story has been lost.

The story is thought to have similarities with the legend of Helen of Troy in the Iliad. It is also thought to be similar to the relationship between Yahweh/El and Abraham in the Book of Genesis. In particular, the blessing by the god himself, the promise of a son to a childless man, and the divine assistance in a military expedition.

History edit

The epic story of Keret is contained in three rectangular clay tablets, excavated by a team of French archaeologists in Ras Shamra, Syria in 1930–31.[4] The text is written in the Ugaritic alphabet, a cuneiform abjad. (While this script looks superficially similar to Mesopotamian cuneiform, there's no direct relationship between them.) Not all of the tablets recovered were well-preserved and some of the tablets, containing the ending of the story, appeared to be missing. The tablets were inscribed by Ilimilku, a high priest who was also the scribe for the Myth of Baal-Aliyan (a part of the Baal cycle) and the Tale of Aqhat, two other famous Ugaritic epic poems discovered at Ras Shamra.[5]

The initial French translation of the tablets was published by a French archaeologist Charles Virolleaud, in a 1936 monograph[6] and then in the journal Syria. A substantial number of other translations, in many languages, appeared afterwards. Among them the translations of Ginsberg (1946)[7] and Herdner (1963)[8] are widely used. Some of the more modern translations include Gordon (1977),[9] Gibson (1978),[10] Coogan (1978),[11] and Greenstein (1997).[12]

The Keret tablets are held at the Musée National d'Alep, Syria.[13]

Story of Kirta described in the tablets edit

King Kirta of Hubur, despite being reputed to be a son of the great god El himself, was struck with many misfortunes. Although Kirta had seven wives, they all either died in childbirth or of various diseases or deserted him, and Kirta had no surviving children. While his mother had eight sons, Kirta was the only one to survive and he had no family members to succeed him and saw his dynasty in ruin.

Kirta prayed and lamented his plight. In his sleep, the god El appeared to Kirta, who begged him for an heir. El told Kirta that he should make war against the kingdom of Udum and demand that the daughter of King Pubala of Udum be given to him as a wife, refusing offers of silver and gold as a price of peace.

Kirta followed El's advice and set out for Udum with a great army. Along the way he stopped at a shrine of Athirat, the goddess of the sea, and prayed to her, promising to give her a great tribute in gold and silver if his mission succeeded.

Kirta then lay siege to Udum and eventually prevailed and forced King Pubala to give his daughter (in some translations, granddaughter), Hariya, to him in marriage. Kirta and Hariya were married and had two sons and six daughters. However, Kirta reneged on his promise to the goddess Athirat to pay her a gold and silver tribute after his marriage.

(At this point there is a break in the story due to damage to the tablets. When the story resumes, Kirta's children are grown.)

Athirat grew angry at Kirta's broken promise and struck him with a deadly illness. Kirta's family wept and prayed for him. His youngest son, Elhu, complained that a man, who was said to be the son of the great god El himself, should not be allowed to die. Kirta asked for only his daughter, Tatmanat, whose passion was the strongest, to pray to the gods for him. As Tatmanat prayed and wailed, the land first grew dry and barren but eventually was watered by a great rain.

At the time the gods were debating Kirta's fate. Upon learning of Keret's broken promise to Athirat, El took Kirta's side and said that Kirta's vow was unreasonable and that Kirta should not be held to it. El then asked if any of the other gods could cure Kirta, but none were willing to do so. Then El performed some divine magic himself and created a winged woman, Shatiqatu, with the power to heal Kirta. Shatiqatu cooled Kirta's fever and cured him of his sickness. In two days, Kirta recovered and resumed his throne.

Then Yassub, Kirta's oldest son, approached Kirta and accused him of being lazy and unworthy of the throne and demanded that Kirta abdicate. Kirta grew angry and cast a terrible curse on Yassub, asking Horonu, the master of demons, to smash Yassub's skull.

At this point the story breaks and the ending of the text appears to be missing. While the end of the legend is unknown, many scholars assume that afterwards Kirta lost all of his children, except for one daughter, who became his sole heir.[14]

Study and interpretation edit

Since its discovery in early 1930s, the Legend of Keret has been the subject of active scholarly study and gave rise to a wide variety of (often conflicting) analogies and interpretations.[15] Most scholars agree that Keret is a purely mythical figure, although it is possible that some individual aspects of the myth do have historical basis.[16] Cyrus H. Gordon argued, "It anticipates the Helen-of-Troy motif in the Iliad and Genesis, thus bridging the gap between the two literatures."[17] Apart from the scholarly research in ancient literary traditions, the epic of Keret is frequently discussed in biblical studies and in the study of history of religion. Cross has drawn a parallel between this legend (and the Legend of Aqhat) and various incidents in the story of Abraham: like Keret, Abraham is blessed by Yahweh/El Genesis 12:1–3, receives a vision promising a son Genesis 15:1–5 and is assisted in a military expedition Genesis 14:13–29.[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ S. H. Hooke (1 January 2004). Middle Eastern Mythology. Courier Corporation. pp. 87–89. ISBN 978-0-486-43551-0. OCLC 1014895211.
  2. ^ Cyrus H. Gordon. Notes on the Legend of Keret. Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Vol. 11, No. 3 (Jul., 1952), pp. 212–213.
  3. ^ Wilfred G. E. Watson; Nicolas Wyatt, eds. (1 January 1999). Handbook of Ugaritic Studies. BRILL. pp. 203–. ISBN 978-90-04-10988-9. OCLC 1025426965. The poem of Keret is one of the three major literary works which gifted Canaanite poets of the Late Bronze Age (ca. 1500–1200 BCE) bequeathed serendipitously to 20th century civilization.
  4. ^ Wilfred G. E. Watson; Nicolas Wyatt, eds. (1 January 1999). Handbook of Ugaritic Studies. BRILL. pp. 203–233. ISBN 978-90-04-10988-9. OCLC 1025426965.
  5. ^ Johannes C. de Moor, ed. (1987). An Anthology of Religious Texts from Ugarit. Brill Archive. p. 224. ISBN 978-90-04-08330-1. OCLC 1014764426.
  6. ^ C. Virolleaud. La Ligende de Keret, roi des sidoniens. P. Geuthner. Paris, 1936; OCLC: 2760369.
  7. ^ Harold Louis Ginsberg. The legend of King Keret; a Canaanite epic of the bronze age. American Schools of Oriental Research, New Haven, Conn., 1946; OCLC: 757455
  8. ^ Andrée Herdner. Corpus des tablettes en cuneiformes alphabétiques découvertes à Ras Shamra-Ugarit de 1929 à 1939. P. Geuthner. Paris, 1963; OCLC: 1399372
  9. ^ Cyrus H. Gordon. "Poetic Legends and Myths from Ugarit." Berytus, vol. 25 (1977) pp. 5–133. [34–59]
  10. ^ J. C. L. Gibson, Canaanite Myths and Legends. 2d ed. T. & T. Clark, Edinburgh, 1978; ISBN 0-567-02351-6
  11. ^ Michael David Coogan, Stories from Ancient Canaan, Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1978; ISBN 0-664-24184-0
  12. ^ Edward L. Greenstein. "Kirta." In: Ugaritic Narrative Poetry, edited by S. B. Parker, pp. 9–48. Writings from the Ancient World 9. Atlanta: Scholars, 1997; ISBN 978-0-7885-0337-5
  13. ^ Manfried Dietrich, Oswald Loretz, Joaquín Sanmartín. The Cuneiform Alphabetic Texts: From Ugarit, Ras Ibn Hani and Other Places (KTU: second, enlarged edition). Ugarit-Verlag, Münster. 1995. ISBN 3-927120-24-3, ISBN 978-3-927120-24-2; pp. 36–46 (tablets KTU 1.14–1.16).
  14. ^ Johannes C. de Moor, ed. (1987). An Anthology of Religious Texts from Ugarit. Brill Archive. p. 191. ISBN 978-90-04-08330-1. OCLC 1014764426.
  15. ^ Baruch Margalit. The Legend of Keret. In: Wilfred G. E. Watson, and Nicolas Wyatt (editors). Handbook of Ugaritic Studies. Brill Academic Publishers. 1999. ISBN 978-90-04-10988-9; pages 204-218: Section 2.2: The history of (mis)interpretation.
  16. ^ Samuel Henry Hooke. Middle Eastern Mythology. Dover Publications, 2004. ISBN 978-0-486-43551-0; pages 87-89. Quote from page 89: "Some substratum of historical tradition may underlie this curious legend, but it is clear that it is mainly mythological, and some parts of it suggest connection with ritual.
  17. ^ Cyrus H. Gordon, The Common Background of Greek and Hebrew Civilizations (1965)
  18. ^ Cross, Frank Moore (1973). Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic: Essays in the History of the Religion of Israel. Harvard University Press. pp. 182–183. ISBN 0-674-09176-0.

External links edit

  • The Epic of Keret, at www.kchanson.com

legend, keret, also, known, epic, kirta, ancient, ugaritic, epic, poem, dated, late, bronze, circa, 1500, 1200, recounts, myth, king, kirta, hubur, ugaritic, texts, legend, kirta, great, considered, unfortunate, been, widowed, seven, times, surviving, children. The Legend of Keret also known as the Epic of Kirta is an ancient Ugaritic epic poem 1 2 dated to Late Bronze Age circa 1500 1200 BCE 3 It recounts the myth of King Kirta of Hubur It is one of the Ugaritic texts In the legend Kirta is the son of the great god El but is considered unfortunate He has been widowed seven times and has no surviving children He has survived all of his brothers and he is the last surviving member of his family He begs his father for an heir of his own and El instructs him to wage war against another kingdom and to demand its princess as his wife Kirta wins his war and has several children by his new wife But he angers the goddess Athirat by reneging on a promise to her and is cursed with an illness El intervenes to heal his son Kirta is then challenged for the throne by his oldest son who wants him to abdicate in his favor Kirta curses his son but the ending of the story has been lost The story is thought to have similarities with the legend of Helen of Troy in the Iliad It is also thought to be similar to the relationship between Yahweh El and Abraham in the Book of Genesis In particular the blessing by the god himself the promise of a son to a childless man and the divine assistance in a military expedition Contents 1 History 2 Story of Kirta described in the tablets 3 Study and interpretation 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThe epic story of Keret is contained in three rectangular clay tablets excavated by a team of French archaeologists in Ras Shamra Syria in 1930 31 4 The text is written in the Ugaritic alphabet a cuneiform abjad While this script looks superficially similar to Mesopotamian cuneiform there s no direct relationship between them Not all of the tablets recovered were well preserved and some of the tablets containing the ending of the story appeared to be missing The tablets were inscribed by Ilimilku a high priest who was also the scribe for the Myth of Baal Aliyan a part of the Baal cycle and the Tale of Aqhat two other famous Ugaritic epic poems discovered at Ras Shamra 5 The initial French translation of the tablets was published by a French archaeologist Charles Virolleaud in a 1936 monograph 6 and then in the journal Syria A substantial number of other translations in many languages appeared afterwards Among them the translations of Ginsberg 1946 7 and Herdner 1963 8 are widely used Some of the more modern translations include Gordon 1977 9 Gibson 1978 10 Coogan 1978 11 and Greenstein 1997 12 The Keret tablets are held at the Musee National d Alep Syria 13 Story of Kirta described in the tablets editKing Kirta of Hubur despite being reputed to be a son of the great god El himself was struck with many misfortunes Although Kirta had seven wives they all either died in childbirth or of various diseases or deserted him and Kirta had no surviving children While his mother had eight sons Kirta was the only one to survive and he had no family members to succeed him and saw his dynasty in ruin Kirta prayed and lamented his plight In his sleep the god El appeared to Kirta who begged him for an heir El told Kirta that he should make war against the kingdom of Udum and demand that the daughter of King Pubala of Udum be given to him as a wife refusing offers of silver and gold as a price of peace Kirta followed El s advice and set out for Udum with a great army Along the way he stopped at a shrine of Athirat the goddess of the sea and prayed to her promising to give her a great tribute in gold and silver if his mission succeeded Kirta then lay siege to Udum and eventually prevailed and forced King Pubala to give his daughter in some translations granddaughter Hariya to him in marriage Kirta and Hariya were married and had two sons and six daughters However Kirta reneged on his promise to the goddess Athirat to pay her a gold and silver tribute after his marriage At this point there is a break in the story due to damage to the tablets When the story resumes Kirta s children are grown Athirat grew angry at Kirta s broken promise and struck him with a deadly illness Kirta s family wept and prayed for him His youngest son Elhu complained that a man who was said to be the son of the great god El himself should not be allowed to die Kirta asked for only his daughter Tatmanat whose passion was the strongest to pray to the gods for him As Tatmanat prayed and wailed the land first grew dry and barren but eventually was watered by a great rain At the time the gods were debating Kirta s fate Upon learning of Keret s broken promise to Athirat El took Kirta s side and said that Kirta s vow was unreasonable and that Kirta should not be held to it El then asked if any of the other gods could cure Kirta but none were willing to do so Then El performed some divine magic himself and created a winged woman Shatiqatu with the power to heal Kirta Shatiqatu cooled Kirta s fever and cured him of his sickness In two days Kirta recovered and resumed his throne Then Yassub Kirta s oldest son approached Kirta and accused him of being lazy and unworthy of the throne and demanded that Kirta abdicate Kirta grew angry and cast a terrible curse on Yassub asking Horonu the master of demons to smash Yassub s skull At this point the story breaks and the ending of the text appears to be missing While the end of the legend is unknown many scholars assume that afterwards Kirta lost all of his children except for one daughter who became his sole heir 14 Study and interpretation editSince its discovery in early 1930s the Legend of Keret has been the subject of active scholarly study and gave rise to a wide variety of often conflicting analogies and interpretations 15 Most scholars agree that Keret is a purely mythical figure although it is possible that some individual aspects of the myth do have historical basis 16 Cyrus H Gordon argued It anticipates the Helen of Troy motif in the Iliad and Genesis thus bridging the gap between the two literatures 17 Apart from the scholarly research in ancient literary traditions the epic of Keret is frequently discussed in biblical studies and in the study of history of religion Cross has drawn a parallel between this legend and the Legend of Aqhat and various incidents in the story of Abraham like Keret Abraham is blessed by Yahweh El Genesis 12 1 3 receives a vision promising a son Genesis 15 1 5 and is assisted in a military expedition Genesis 14 13 29 18 See also edit nbsp Literature portal nbsp Asia portal nbsp Mythology portalUgarit Ancient Semitic religion Canaanite religion Translation Poetry KirtaReferences edit S H Hooke 1 January 2004 Middle Eastern Mythology Courier Corporation pp 87 89 ISBN 978 0 486 43551 0 OCLC 1014895211 Cyrus H Gordon Notes on the Legend of Keret Journal of Near Eastern Studies Vol 11 No 3 Jul 1952 pp 212 213 Wilfred G E Watson Nicolas Wyatt eds 1 January 1999 Handbook of Ugaritic Studies BRILL pp 203 ISBN 978 90 04 10988 9 OCLC 1025426965 The poem of Keret is one of the three major literary works which gifted Canaanite poets of the Late Bronze Age ca 1500 1200 BCE bequeathed serendipitously to 20th century civilization Wilfred G E Watson Nicolas Wyatt eds 1 January 1999 Handbook of Ugaritic Studies BRILL pp 203 233 ISBN 978 90 04 10988 9 OCLC 1025426965 Johannes C de Moor ed 1987 An Anthology of Religious Texts from Ugarit Brill Archive p 224 ISBN 978 90 04 08330 1 OCLC 1014764426 C Virolleaud La Ligende de Keret roi des sidoniens P Geuthner Paris 1936 OCLC 2760369 Harold Louis Ginsberg The legend of King Keret a Canaanite epic of the bronze age American Schools of Oriental Research New Haven Conn 1946 OCLC 757455 Andree Herdner Corpus des tablettes en cuneiformes alphabetiques decouvertes a Ras Shamra Ugarit de 1929 a 1939 P Geuthner Paris 1963 OCLC 1399372 Cyrus H Gordon Poetic Legends and Myths from Ugarit Berytus vol 25 1977 pp 5 133 34 59 J C L Gibson Canaanite Myths and Legends 2d ed T amp T Clark Edinburgh 1978 ISBN 0 567 02351 6 Michael David Coogan Stories from Ancient Canaan Philadelphia Westminster Press 1978 ISBN 0 664 24184 0 Edward L Greenstein Kirta In Ugaritic Narrative Poetry edited by S B Parker pp 9 48 Writings from the Ancient World 9 Atlanta Scholars 1997 ISBN 978 0 7885 0337 5 Manfried Dietrich Oswald Loretz Joaquin Sanmartin The Cuneiform Alphabetic Texts From Ugarit Ras Ibn Hani and Other Places KTU second enlarged edition Ugarit Verlag Munster 1995 ISBN 3 927120 24 3 ISBN 978 3 927120 24 2 pp 36 46 tablets KTU 1 14 1 16 Johannes C de Moor ed 1987 An Anthology of Religious Texts from Ugarit Brill Archive p 191 ISBN 978 90 04 08330 1 OCLC 1014764426 Baruch Margalit The Legend of Keret In Wilfred G E Watson and Nicolas Wyatt editors Handbook of Ugaritic Studies Brill Academic Publishers 1999 ISBN 978 90 04 10988 9 pages 204 218 Section 2 2 The history of mis interpretation Samuel Henry Hooke Middle Eastern Mythology Dover Publications 2004 ISBN 978 0 486 43551 0 pages 87 89 Quote from page 89 Some substratum of historical tradition may underlie this curious legend but it is clear that it is mainly mythological and some parts of it suggest connection with ritual Cyrus H Gordon The Common Background of Greek and Hebrew Civilizations 1965 Cross Frank Moore 1973 Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic Essays in the History of the Religion of Israel Harvard University Press pp 182 183 ISBN 0 674 09176 0 External links editThe Epic of Keret at www kchanson com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Legend of Keret amp oldid 1211016527, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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