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The Origin of Death in some Ancient Near Eastern Religions1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 October 2008
Extract
The Irish poet W. B. Yeats once wrote, with great sapience and perception:
Nor dread, nor hope attend
A dying animal;
A man awaits his end
Dreading and hoping all.
That death has ever been a problem to man is attested as far back as we can trace our species in the archaeological record—indeed, it seems to have been a problem even for that immediate precursor of homo sapiens, the so-called Neanderthal Man; for he buried his dead.
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References
Page 217 note 2 Cf. Brandon, S. G. F., Man and his Destiny in the Great Religions (Manchester University Press, 1962), pp. 8–9.Google Scholar This work, often to be cited, contains full documentation.
Page 217 note 3 Cf. op. cit., pp. 8–13.
Page 218 note 1 Manchester University Press, 1965.
Page 218 note 2 Pyr. 366c, 367b.
Page 219 note 1 Cf. Sander-Hansen, C. E., Der Begriff des Todes bei den Aegyptern (Copenhagen, 1942), pp. 18–20;Google ScholarBrandon, , Man and his Destiny, p. 35.Google Scholar
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Page 219 note 3 Cf. Creation Legends, chapter 11.
Page 219 note 4 Cf. Man and his Destiny, pp. 63, 66–7.
Page 220 note 1 Cf. Man and his Destiny, pp. 35 ff., where full documentation is given.
Page 220 note 2 Pyr. 1255.
Page 220 note 3 Cf. Bonnet, H., Reallexikon der ägyptischen Religionsgeschichte (Berlin, 1952), pp. 707, 711b–715;Google ScholarBrandon, , ‘The Personification of Death in some Ancient Religions’ (Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, 43, 1961), p. 322;CrossRefGoogle ScholarZandee, J., Death as an Enemy (Leiden, 1960), pp. 85–7, 184–6.Google Scholar
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Page 222 note 1 Cf. Creation Legends, pp. 77–8.
Page 222 note 2 Cf. Creation Legends, chapter 111.
Page 223 note 1 Tab. X, col. ii, 1–11; trans. Heidel, A., The Gilgamesh Epic (Chicago University Press, 1949), pp. 69–70.Google Scholar Cf. Man and his Destiny, pp. 91–3.
Page 224 note 1 Tab. VII, col. iv, 31–41; trans. Heidel, p. 36.
Page 224 note 2 Cf. Ebeling, E., Tod und Leben nach den Vorstellungen des Babylonier (Berlin/Leipzig, 1931), vol. 1, (5) 3;Google Scholar Brandon in B.J.R.L., vol. 43 (1961), p. 324.
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Page 226 note 3 Gen. ii. 9.
Page 226 note 4 Cf. Creation Legends, pp. 126, 132–5.
Page 226 note 5 Cf. Creation Legends, pp. 127–32, where documentation is given.
Page 227 note 1 Gen. iii. 6–7.
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Page 228 note 4 Cf. History, Time and Deity, pp. 61–3.
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