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There Were Jaredites, Part IV: Epic Milieu in the Old Testament

TitleThere Were Jaredites, Part IV: Epic Milieu in the Old Testament
Publication TypeMagazine Article
Year of Publication1956
AuthorsNibley, Hugh W.
MagazineImprovement Era
Volume59
Issue Number10
Pagination710–712, 745–751
Date PublishedOctober 1951
KeywordsAncient Egypt; Ancient Near East; Ether (Book); India; Jaredites; Old Testament
Abstract

This wide-ranging series discusses the “epic milieu” of the second millennium B.C. and places the Jaredites in their historical context alongside the Babylonians, Egyptians, early Greeks and others. It makes a comparison between the Book of Ether and ancient writings of Babylon, Egypt, Sumer, and others. The description of the Jaredite boats seem to resemble the boat of Ut-Napitshtim who was the Sumerian counter-part of Noah. Old Jewish and even older Indian sources record the use of shining stones that protect the owner beneath the water. These have been traced back to Babylonian tales of the deluge. Since the Jaredite record reports that their boats were patterned after Noah’s ark, ancient myths that surely have their foundation in real events help to provide greater understanding of the book of Ether. The book of Ether meets all the criteria of epic traditions of heroic societies. The remains of heroic societies are difficult to identify. The fourth part discusses the "epic milieu" of the Old Testament and the Jaredites.