Middle Eastern mythology

by S. H. (Samuel Henry) Hooke, 1874-1968.

Book, 1963

Status

Available

Call number

BL311.H6

Publication

Publisher Unknown

Description

The role of mythology in ritual and its place in the origins of customs, cults, and hero worship are the fascinating subjects of this comparative survey. Based on firsthand sources, it recounts legends of the Egyptians, Babylonians, Assyrians, Hittites, and Canaanites, in addition to discussing the mythological elements of Jewish apocalyptic literature and the New Testament.S. H. Hooke, a distinguished scholar who taught at the University of London and served as Speaker's Lecturer at Oxford University, presents a well-documented commentary. Accessible and informative, his text highlights the similarities between a variety of Middle Eastern legends and offers revealing citations from documents, tablets, and inscriptions recovered by archaeological excavations. Familiar stories such as the events described in Genesis and those surrounding Noah's flood and Christ's nativity and resurrection -- whatever their basis in fact -- have parallels in other cultures. Professor Hooke provides a broad perspective on these and other tales, encompassing the roots of Greek, Roman, and even Celtic mythology.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Jollybook
A learned, erudite, compact account of the mythologies of a number of civilizations in the ancient Middle East. The final chapter impinges on Christian ritual, by relating mythic elements in sich narratives as the Last Supper and the Eucharist. I have found it helpful in my investigations into the
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relationship between early Christian thought and that of its mythical, intellectual and spiritual context.
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LibraryThing member Lukerik
An excellent introduction to the subject. More than an introduction really, due to the detail. He covers Mesopotamia and Egypt as well as the more obscure Hittite and Ugaritic mythologies. He follows the texts closely, either quoting or summarising, and keeps his commentary to a minimum allowing
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you to draw you own conclusions about the common fertility myths of these similar religions. The flower of the book is his treatment of Hebrew mythology. This is the area of Hooke's expertise and a lot of what he has to say is gob-smacking. Much of this part is either quoted or closely adapted from his earlier book In the Beginning. He closes the book with a brief discussion of Christian myth. He is very careful what he says here because it would be very easy to draw the conclusion that Christianity was another local agrarian religion founded entirely on myth. Hooke of course cannot say this, not only because of his own beliefs but because, while this is not a religious book, due to his fame as a Protestant OT scholar, much of his readership will be Christian and he doesn't want to become a pariah.
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Original publication date

1963

Barcode

34662000595964
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