Are the Anunnaki in the Epic of Gilgamesh the Nephilim mentioned in the Bible?
Ancient Sumer-Babylon, like many cultures of antiquity, produced
mythologies to explain the world around them. The Epic of Gilgamesh is
one such mythology. Several versions of the epic poem exist, but the
12-tablet Akkadian version is the best known. The story centers on the
friendship between the principal character, Gilgamesh, and Enkidu.
Gilgamesh, the king of Uruk, is two-thirds god and one-third man. He has
oppressed the people of Uruk, so the gods create Enkidu to distract
Gilgamesh. Their unlikely friendship results in a journey of fantastical
adventures resulting in the death of Enkidu.
An important feature of this epic is a “flood” story in which a
character named Utnapishtim and his wife survive a great flood and
obtain immortality. The existence of this flood story,
with its many similarities to the Genesis account, indicates a common
source. Rather than the Genesis flood account being copied from the Epic
of Gilgamesh, both accounts are entirely separate records of something
that actually occurred, namely, a global flood.
The gods who appear in the Epic of Gilgamesh are the Anunnaki, a name
that probably means “those of royal blood” or “princely offspring” in
the ancient Sumerian language. In contrast to this pagan mythology is
the biblical account of the Nephilim. Who were the Nephilim? Biblically speaking, the Nephilim were the descendants of the sons of God and daughters of men (Genesis 6:1-4).
While there are differing interpretations of this passage,
GotQuestions.org believes it involves the fallen angels (sons of God)
taking on human form and mating with the daughters of men (human
females), thereby producing a race of angelic-human half-breeds.
Is there a connection between the Anunnaki and the Nephilim?
Perhaps. It is definitely interesting to note that both the biblical flood account and the Epic of Gilgamesh mention supernatural, god-like beings interacting with humanity in connection with a global flood. So, it is possible that the myths regarding the Anunnaki originate in the reality that was the Nephilim.
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