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Nimrod Before and After the Bible

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 June 2011

K. van der Toorn
Affiliation:
Rijksuniversiteit Utrecht
P. W. van der Horst
Affiliation:
Rijksuniversiteit Utrecht

Extract

The biblical information concerning the figure of Nimrod is scarce. Post-biblical tradition has added supplementary details that cannot be found in the biblical text, however much they may be presented as results of exegesis of this text. This article first examines the biblical data about Nimrod and sees whether he can be identified with an extra-biblical, a pre-biblical, prototype. Second, it investigates the ways in which the few biblical data have given rise to post-biblical haggadic developments. K. van der Toorn has written the first part of this essay, P. W. van der Horst the second.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © President and Fellows of Harvard College 1990

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References

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24 Rawlinson, Henry C. and Smith, George, The Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western Asia (4 vols.; London: Bowler, 1870) 3Google Scholar. no. 14:9. For a transcription and translation of the pertinent text, see Luckenbill, Daniel D., The Annals of Sennacherib (Oriental Institute Publications 2; Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1924) 79:9Google Scholar.

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30 Oded, B., “The Table of Nations (Genesis 10)—A Socio-Cultural Approach,” ZAW 98 (1986) 1431, esp. 28Google Scholar.

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34 Such is also the opinion of Westermann, Claus, Genesis (BKAT 1/1; Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener, 1974) 687Google Scholar.

35 Grivel, J., “Nemrod et les Ventures cungiformes,” Transactions of the Society of Biblical Archaeology 3 (1874) 136–44Google Scholar. On p. 136 Grivel refers to the appendix of an article entitled “Le plus ancien Dictionnaire” that he wrote for the Revue de la Suisse catholique (08 1871)Google Scholar in which he first made his suggestion.

36 See the second part of this paper and n. 70.

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38 The provisional cuneiform edition of this text has been published by Lambert, W. G. and Parker, Simon B., Enuma elis. The Babylonian Epic of Creation: The Cuneiform Text (Oxford: Clarendon, 1966)Google Scholar. The widely used translation by Heidel, Alexander (The Babylonian Genesis [Chicago/London: The University of Chicago Press, 1942Google Scholar; reprinted Phoenix Edition, 1963]) has to be corrected and supplemented by the aforementioned cuneiform edition.

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41 See Lambert, W. G., “Ninurta Mythology in the Babylonian Epic of Creation,” in Hecker, K. and Sommerfeld, W., eds., Keilschriftliche Literaturen. Ausgewdhlte Vortrage der 32. Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale (Berlin: Dietrich Reimer, 1986) 5561Google Scholar.

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43 For the Myth of Anzu see Vogelzang, M. E., Bin Sar dadme. Edition and Analysis of the Akkadian Anzu Poem (Groningen: Styx, 1988)Google Scholar and Saggs, H. W. F., “Additions to Anzu,” AfO 33 (1986 [1988]) 129Google Scholar. For a discussion of the appearance of Anzu see Hallo, William W. and Moran, W. L., “The First Tablet of the SB Recension of the Anzu-Myth,” JCS 31 (1979) 70Google Scholar.

44 For a survey, see Cooper, Jerrold S., The Return of Ninurta to Nippur (AnOr 52; Rome: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum, 1978) 141–54Google Scholar.

45 Dijk, Van, LUGAL UD ME-LAM-bi N1R-GAL, 1718Google Scholar.

46 Budge, Ernest Alfred Wallis and King, Leonard W., Annals of the Kings of Assyria (London: Luzac, 1902) 84:vi 61–87:vi 84Google Scholar.

47 See King, Leonard W., Babylonian Magic and Sorcery (London: Luzac, 1896) no. 50:29Google Scholar [“you are Sirius, (that is) Ninurta, the first among the great gods”]; Burrows, E., “Hymn to Ninurta as Sirius (K128),” Centenary Supplement to the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (London, 1924) PI. II, vss 8 and 12Google Scholar [”(Ninurta) indefatigable arrow that [slays?] all the enemies... whose name in heaven is Arrow”]; Ebeling, Erich, Keilschrifttexte aus Assur religidsen Inhatts, vol. 1 (Wissenschaftliche Veroffentlichungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft 28; Leipzig: Hinrichs, 1919) no 76:14Google Scholar [//Gurney, O. R., The Sultantepe Tablets II (London: The British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara, 1964) nos. 214–17 i 65], no. 83 i 4Google Scholar.

48 See Jacob, B., Das erste Buch der Tora: Genesis (Berlin: Schocken, 1934) 283Google Scholar. See also n. 96.

49 Livingstone, Alasdair, Mystical and Mythological Explanatory Works of Assyrian and Babylonian Scholars (Oxford: Clarendon, 1986) 154Google Scholar.

50 LUGAL-E, 11. 353–65. For the last lines I have followed the translation of Jacobsen, (The Harps That Once…, 253)Google Scholar.

51 See Wilcke, Claus, “Philologische Bemerkungen zum Rat des Suruppag und Versuch einer neuen Ubersetzung,” ZA 68 (1978) 231–32CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For Ninurta as a god of agriculture, see also Falkenstein, Adam, Sumerische Gotterlieder (Heidelberg: Winter, 1959) 1. 83:iii 22Google Scholar.

52 Seidl, U., “Die babylonischen Kudurru-Reliefs,” Baghdader Mitteilungen 4 (1968) 125–28Google Scholar.

53 Reisman, D., “Ninurta's Journey to Eridu,” JCS 24 (1973) 310Google Scholar. See also Falkenstein, , Sumerische Gotterlieder, 84Google Scholar; Sjoberg, Ake W. et al., The Collection of the Sumerian Temple Hymns (Texts from Cuneiform Sources 3; Locust Valley: Augustin, 1969) 136:463Google Scholar; Cooper, , The Return of Ninurta, 58:914Google Scholar.

54 The text has been edited by Cooper, The Return of Ninurta.

55 Saggs, H. W. F., “Additions to Anzu,” AfO 33 (1986 [1988]) 25:120–24Google Scholar.

56 Livingstone, , Mystical and Mythological Explanatory Works 124Google Scholar: VAT 8917; cf. Livingstone's commentary on p. 146.

57 See Hallo, William W., “Review of ‘The Return of Ninurta to Nippur’ by Jerrold S. Cooper,” JAOS 101 (1981) 253–55Google Scholar.

58 See E. Unger, “Babylon,” in Ebeling, Erich and Meissner, B., eds., Reallexikon der Assyriologie (7 vols. to date.; Berlin/Leipzig: de Gruyter, 1932—) 1. 361–62: § 120Google Scholar.

59 See Menzel, Brigitte, Assyrische Tempel (2 vols.; Studia Pohl Series Maior 10/1; Rome: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum, 1981) 1. 94Google Scholar.

60 Menzel, , Assyrische Tempel, 1. 83Google Scholar.

61 See, e.g., Lambert, W. G., “A New Look at the Babylonian Background of Genesis,” JTS 16 (1965) 298–99 n. 2Google Scholar.

62 See Sjoberg, A˚ke W., “Miscellaneous Sumerian Texts, III,” JCS 34 (1982) 6280Google Scholar, esp. 71 ad 1.18.

63 Greenfield, Jonas C., “Three Notes on the Sefire Inscription,” JSS 11 (1966) 100103Google Scholar; Zadok, R., “Babylonian Notes,” BO 38 (1981) 548Google Scholar.

64 Zadok, , “Babylonian Notes,” 548Google Scholar.

65 See Lambert, , “New Look at the Babylonian Background of Genesis,” 285300Google Scholar; Kramer, Samuel N., “The ‘Babel of Tongues’: A Sumerian Version,” JAOS 88 (1968) 108–11Google Scholar; Borger, Rykle, “Die Beschworungsserie Bit Meseri und der Himmelfahrt Henochs,” JNES 33 (1974) 183–96Google Scholar; Oden, R. A. Jr, “Divine Aspirations in Atrahasis and in Genesis 1–11,” ZAW 93 (1981) 197216Google Scholar. These studies are but a small sample of the available literature.

66 Alster, B., ‘“Ninurta and the Turtle,’ UET 6/1 2,” JCS 24 (1972) 120–25Google Scholar; Kramer, Samuel N., “Ninurta's Pride and Punishment,” Aula Orientalis 2 (1984) 231–37Google Scholar.

67 The Greek story of Orion's defeat by a scorpion could perhaps be adduced as a distant parallel of the Sumerian composition. Orion, though not a god, is a giant and a hunter. In response to his threat that he would exterminate all the living animals on earth, Gaia sent the scorpion to kill the arrogant hero. See Wehrli, P., “Orion,” PW. Neue Bearbeitung 18/1 (Stuttgart: Metzler, 1939) 1073–74Google Scholar.

68 See on this matter Holladay, Carl R., Fragments from Hellenistic Jewish Authors I: Historians (Chico, CA: Scholars Press, 1983) 158–59Google Scholar.

69 Translation by Holladay, , Fragments, 177Google Scholar.

70 Judaism and Hellenism (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1981) 2.60 n. 244Google Scholar. There Hengel polemicizes with Ben Wacholder, Zion, “Pseudo-Eupolemos’ Two Greek Fragments on the Life of Abraham,” HUCA 34 (1963) 94Google Scholar. Freudenthal, J., Alexander Polyhistor und die von ihm erhaltenen Reste juddischer und samaritanischer Geschichtswerke (Hellenistische Studien, I+II; Breslau: Skutsch, 1875) 94Google Scholar, quotes a remark from the “History of Armenia” by the early medieval Armenian Christian scholar Moses of Chorene to the effect that Belus and Nimrod are to be identified. Hengel is followed by Holladay, Fragments, 187 n. 46, and by P. W. van der Horst, “The Interpretation of the Bible by the Minor Hellenistic Jewish Authors,” in Mulder, Martin Jan, ed., Mikra: Text, Translation, Reading and Interpretation of the Hebrew Bible in Ancient Judaism and Early Christianity (CRINT 2.1; Assen: Van Gorcum; Philadelphia: Fortress, 1988) 541Google Scholar.

71 See IQapGen 2. 16 and / Enoch 106. 8 and cf. Lewis, Jack Pearl, A Study of the Interpretation of Noah and the Flood in Jewish and Christian Literature (Leiden: Brill, 1968) 14Google Scholar; see also the pertinent remarks in Schürer, Emil, The History of the Jewish People in the Age of Jesus Christ (rev. ed. by Vermes, G., Millar, F., Goodman, M.; Edinburgh: Clark, 1986) 3.1. 332–33Google Scholar.

72 Thus R. Doran in OTP 2.878.

73 The Greek text probably also had enantion, but the Armenian version, which is our only textual witness here, has a different word than the one used in the phrase “a giant before God.”

74 See also the useful comments in Winston, David and Dillon, John, Two Treatises of Philo of Alexandria: A Commentary on De gigantibus and Quod deus sit immutabilis (Chico, CA: Scholars Press, 1983) 69–71, 272Google Scholar.

75 See Grabbe, Lester L., Etymology in Early Jewish Interpretation. The Hebrew Names in Philo (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1988) 191Google Scholar.

76 On the evaluation of blacks in antiquity, see Snowden, Frank M., Blacks in Antiquity: Ethiopians in the Greco-Roman Experience (Cambridge, MA/London: Belknap, 1970)Google Scholar.

77 I used the edition by Harrington, Daniel J. et al., Pseudo-Philon: Les antiquites bibliques (2 vols; Paris: Cerf, 1976)Google Scholar and Harrington's translation in OTP vol. 2.

78 On the role of Daniel 3 in this story, see also Vermes, Geza, “The Life of Abraham,” in his Scripture and Tradition in Judaism (Leiden: Brill, 1973) 88Google Scholar, and Beer, B., “Zur jüdischen Sagengeschichte,” MGWJ 4 (1855) 5965Google Scholar.

79 See e.g. Strack, Hermann L. and Billerbeck, Paul N., Kommentar zum Neuen Testament aus Talmud undMidrasch (Munich: Beck, 1928) 4. 1. 454Google Scholar n. 4, and Bowker, John, The Targums and Rabbinic Literature (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press) 187–88Google Scholar.

80 Also in the second century BCE we find Philo Epicus stating that Abraham “left the splendid enclosure of the giants” (frg. 1, 4–5). This seems to imply that Babel was built by the giants, but the poet does not name Nimrod as one of them. Nevertheless it was clear that the haggadic process was fully on its way already in the middle of the second century BCE, which can also be seen in Jdt 5:5-8.

81 On Nimrod's role in Josephus’ rendering of Genesis, see the extensive and excellent discussion by Franxman, Thomas W., Genesis and the “Jewish Antiquities” ofFlavius Josephus (Rome: Biblical Institute Press, 1979) 93121Google Scholar, esp. 96–98.

82 Levine, Etan, The Aramaic Version of the Bible (Berlin: de Gruyter, 1988) 35CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Levine cites this instance as one of the many cases where in the very same targum one finds midrashic elements that are mutually contradictory. “This reflects the eclectic use of sources, the variant purposes to which midrash was put, and the latitudinarian approach to targum itself” (ibid.).

83 Levene, A., The Early Syrian Fathers on Genesis (London: Taylor's Foreign Press, 1951) esp. 123ffGoogle Scholar.

84 See the translation in Tonneau, R.-M., Sancti Ephraem Syri in Genesin et in Exodum commentarü (CSCO 153; Louvain: Durbecq, 1955) 5253Google Scholar.

85 See the translation in Eynde, C. van den, Commenlaire d'Hodad de Merv sur iAncien Testament, vol. 1 Genese (CSCO 156; Louvain: Durbecq, 1955) 143–46Google Scholar. On the matter of Hebrew in the Nimrod haggada, see also Ginzberg, Louis, “Die Haggada bei den Kirchenvatern und in der apokryphischen Literatur,” MGWJ 43 (1899) 468–70Google Scholar, 485. The following two works do not yield anything for our subject : Devreesse, Robert, Les anciens commentateurs grecs de I'Octateuque et des Rois (Vatican City: Bibliotheca Apostolica, 1959)Google Scholar, and Petit, Franchise, Catenae graecae in Genesin et Exodum, vol. I (CChr Series Graeca 2.15; Turnhout: Brepols, 1977)Google Scholar.

86 Levene (Early Syrian Fathers, 85) quotes from a Syriac MS on the Pentateuch in the Mingana collection the following section: “Of Nimrod, Scripture says, ‘He was a mighty hunter before the Lord.’ It was according to the will of God that he should be renowned; and he made war on those who built the tower and he first captured Babylon. Therefore it is said, ‘Be like unto Nimrod’ as when one blesses his neighbour with any kind of blessing.” Levene also makes the interesting observation that Ibn Ezra in his commentary discards the unfavorable traditions regarding Nimrod and does not deduce any “rebelliousness” from the name Nimrod, but explains that Nimrod was the first man to show the prowess of man over beast and that he built altars on which he offered burnt offerings to God. Ibn Ezra was censured for that by Nachmanides (ibid., 201–2).

87 Translation and discussion of this passage in Bowker, , Targums, 183, 187–88Google Scholar.

88 Thus Grossfeld, Bernard, The Targum Onqelos to Genesis (Edinburgh: Clark, 1988) 61Google Scholar. Cf. also Aberbach, Moshe and Grossfeld, Bernard, Targum Onkelos to Genesis (New York: Ktav, 1982) 6970Google Scholar.

89 See Klein, Michael L., The Fragment-Targums of the Pentateuch (2 vols.; Rome: Biblical Institute Press, 1980) 1Google Scholar. 49 and 2. 11. Ddaut, Roger le, Targum du Pentateuque 1 (Paris: Cerf, 1978) 136–39Google Scholar. Klein's, Michael L.Genizah Manuscripts of Palestinian Targum to the Pentateuch (2 vols.; Cincinnati: Hebrew Union College Press, 1986)Google Scholar has no material on Nimrod.

90 Dlaut, Roger le and Robert, Jean, Targum des Chroniques (AnBib 51; 2 vols.; Rome: Biblical Institute Press, 1971) 1. 40, 156Google Scholar; 2. 9, 142.

91 Levine, Etan, The Aramaic Version of Qohelet (New York: Sepher Hermon, 1978) 34Google Scholar. Cf. Levine's, Aramaic Version of the Bible, 184–85 n. 13Google Scholar.

92 Older surveys can be found in Beer, B., Leben Abraham's nach Auffassung derjüdischen Sage (Leipzig: Leiner, 1859) 719Google Scholar with notes on pp. 105–16. Seligmann, M., “Nimrod,” Jewish Encyclopedia 9 (1905) 309Google Scholar. Gorion, M. J. bin, Die Sagen der Juden (4 vols.; Frankfurt: Ritter und Loening, 1913-1927) 2. 1725Google Scholar, 56–59, 73–74, 103–24, 160–61. Ginzberg, Louis, The Legends of the Jews (Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society, 1909) 1. 174217Google Scholar with notes in vol. 5 (1925) 198–218. Rappoport, A. S., Ancient Israel: Myths and Legends I (reprinted London: Mystic, 1987) 226–53Google Scholar. See also the short notice by the editor in the EncJud 12 (1972) 1167Google Scholar.

93 The etymological play with mrd is also found in connection with 1 Chr 4:18, “the daughter of Pharaoh, whom Mered took,” about which it is remarked in b. Meg 13a: “Was Mered his name? Was not Caleb his name [cf. 1 Chr 4:15]? The Holy One, blessed be He, said: ‘Let Caleb, who rebelled (maraa”) against the plan of the spies, come and take the daughter of Pharaoh, who rebelled against the idols of her father's house. “There can be little doubt that Jerome goes back to Jewish etymological speculations when, in his Liber interpretationis hebraicorum nominum, he quotes as meanings of the name Nimrod: tyrannus, profugus, transgressor, apostata [Lagarde, P. de, ed., Onomastica Sacra (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck, 1870) 9, 52Google Scholar; also (CCSL 72; Turnhout: Brepols, 1959) 69, 124].

94 The elaboration of this theme can best be studied in the extensive Nimrod haggada in the Sefer ha-Yashar, which we leave out of account here since we want to limit the discussion to ancient sources. For the late date of Sefer ha-Yashar see Strack, Hermann L. and Stemberger, Günter, Einleitung in Talmud und Midrasch (Munich: Beck, 1982) 300Google Scholar.

95 See Bousset, Wilhelm, Hauptprobleme der Gnosis (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1907, repr. 1973) 144ff. esp. 369–78Google Scholar. Bidez, Joseph and Cumont, Franz, Les mages hellenises: Zoroastre, Ostanes et Hystape d'apres la tradition grecque (2 vols.; Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1938) 1. 4244Google Scholar; 2. 50–55, 60–61, 120–25. Preisendanz, Karl, “Nimrod (1),” PW 17 (1936) 624–27Google Scholar. Schoeps, Hans J., Aus frühchristlicher Zeit (Tubingen: Mohr/Siebeck, 1950) 1924Google Scholar. On the early medieval traditions about Nimrod as astrologer, see Haskins, C. H., Studies in the History of Mediaeval Science (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1924) 336–45Google Scholar. Bidez and Cumont (Mages, 2. 60–61) and Preisendanz, (“Nimrod,” 625Google Scholar) also discuss the identification of Nimrod with Orion, a giant and hunter (!) from Greek mythology, in some late sources; I leave this out of account for reasons of space and because this identification probably does not have a Jewish origin.

96 Cf. also the following remark by Epiphanius, , Panarion 1.3, 23Google Scholar: “Nimrod, the son of Cush the Ethiopian, the father of Asshur, ruled as a king. (…) The Greeks say that he is Zoroaster and that he went on further east and became the pioneer settler of Bactria. (3) Every transgression in the world was disseminated at this time, for Nimrod was an originator of wrong teaching, astrology and magic, which is what some say of Zoroaster. But in actual fact this was the time of Nimrod the giant; the two, Nimrod and Zoroaster, are far apart in time” ( Williams, F., trans., The Panarion of Epiphanius of Salamis, Book 1 [Leiden: Brill, 1987] 1617)Google Scholar.

97 Bousset, , Hauptprobleme, 377Google Scholar. Cf. Schoeps's careful remark (Aus frühchristlicher Zeit, 32): “Die Identifikation Nimrod-Zoroaster konnte bereits rabbinisch sein.”

98 More passages on Nimrod in the haggadic midrashim can be found in the Index Volume to the Soncino translation of the Midrash Rabba. See Shir ha-Shirim Rab. 8.8.2; Vayyiqra Rab. 27.5, 28.4, 36.4; Midrash Tehillim 24.8; Pesiqta Rabbati 18.3, 33.4; Pesiqta de Rav Kahana 8.2; Tanhuma, Lekh lekha 2; etc.

99 See besides the surveys mentioned in n. 23, esp. the dissertation by Schützinger, H., Ursprung und Entwicklung der arabischen Abraham-Nimrod-Legende (Ph.D. diss., Bonn, 1962)Google Scholar.

100 See Jellinek, Adolf, Beth ha-Midrasch, 1. 2534Google Scholar(Ma'aseh ‘Avraham ‘Avinu = August Wünsche.Ans Israels Lehrhallen 1. 14–34), 2. 188–19 (Ma'aseh ‘Avraham ‘Avinu = Wünsche 1. 42–45), 5. 40–41 (Midrash de ‘Avraham ‘Avinu = Wünsche 1. 46–47). References to other medieval sources can be found in Gaster, Moses, The Exempla of the Rabbis (1924; reprinted New York: Ktav, 1968) 185Google Scholar. For a discussion of medieval manuscript illustrations to Nimrod haggada see Appel, K., “Abraham als dreijahriger Knabe im Feuerofen des Nimrod,” Kairos 25 (1983) 3640Google Scholar.