ABSTRACT

Examining the evolution of kingship in the Ancient Near East from the time of the Sumerians to the rise of the Seleucids in Babylon, this book argues that the Sumerian emphasis on the divine favour that the fertility goddess and the Sun god bestowed upon the king should be understood metaphorically from the start and that these metaphors survived in later historical periods, through popular literature including the Epic of Gilgameš and the Enuma Eliš. The author’s research shows that from the earliest times Near Eastern kings and their scribes adapted these metaphors to promote royal legitimacy in accordance with legendary exempla that highlighted the role of the king as the establisher of order and civilization. As another Gilgameš and, later, as a pious servant of Marduk, the king renewed divine favour for his subjects, enabling them to share the 'Garden of the Gods'. Seleucus and Antiochus found these cultural ideas, as they had evolved in the first millennium BCE, extremely useful in their efforts to establish their dynasty at Babylon. Far from playing down cultural differences, the book considers the ideological agendas of ancient Near Eastern empires as having been shaped mainly by class — rather than race-minded elites.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

Laying the groundwork

chapter 1|40 pages

Dying kings in the ANE

Gilgameš and his travels in the garden of power

chapter 2|39 pages

Sacred marriage in the ANE

The collapse of the garden and its aftermath

chapter 3|44 pages

Renewing the cosmos

Garden and goddess in first-millennium ideology

chapter 4|50 pages

The Seleucids at Babylon

Flexing traditions and reclaiming the garden

chapter |8 pages

Synthesis

Cultivating community memory