| Suitable for: | Sixth Form General Studies, or perhaps as a general introduction to the role of archaeology in Biblical study, at Key Stage 4. |
| The
gripping story of Noah and his ark is well known world-wide. When
researchers began to bring to light a chain of clues that appeared to discover
the source of this epic event, the Ancient Voices television series became
interested.
The resulting film is an archaeological and geological detective story that follows a trail back many thousands of years, back through ancient Babylon to the end of the last ice-age and to a great flood of unimaginable swiftness and ferocity. The pair of researchers attempting to link the Noah story with a real event are an oceanographer, Dr Bill Ryan, and a geophysicist, Dr Walter Pitman - both from Colombia University. Dr Kate Spence, the programme's presenter, myself and a television crew joined them as they continued their researches in Turkey - uncovering evidence of a time when the entire oceans of the world broke into a lowland kingdom situated in an area now covered by the Black Sea. Ryan and Pitman's discovery of a great Black Sea Flood is now generally accepted by academics. Whilst the claims of the two authors to link this Black Sea flood to the story of Noah are by no means yet proven, their insights are now being taken as a leading hypothesis to explain the settlement changes in the areas around the Black Sea at the time of the flood and the origin of the story of Noah. I hope that as you share their path back through history you find it an interesting and stimulating journey. CHRISTOPHER MANN |
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Rescue from the flood! |
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The programme examines a hypothesis that a catastrophic flood occurred in ancient times when a massive volume of water broke through the Bosphorous, flooding lands on the shores of the Black Sea and causing whole tribes to flee or perish. Dr Bill Ryan and Dr Walter Pitman, geologists, believe they have found evidence to suggest that this could be the same Flood that has remained in religious tradition as the Flood recorded in the Book of Genesis. |
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| Hindu: | Yama,
ancestor of the human race, is said to have been saved in a ship
from a deluge which swept away all others; flood is said to be one of the
disasters, together with fire, that will destroy the present 'Kali' age. After
the flood creation will resume with the 'seed' of a good man rescued from the
inundation. |
| Ancient Peruvian: | A
flood was said to end the first stage of cosmic
life, making everything into a timeless ocean with no horizons. |
| Chinese: | In the Han Dynasty (CE25-220) one
school of thought had a world view in which the pole star was the hub of the
universe. As the pole star actually appeared off-centre, it was explained by the
myth of a monster who had broken through a mountain with his horn, tipping the
sky and earth out of line and causing a flood. |
| Greek: | Zeus was said to have sent a flood to punish wickedness. The grandson of Prometheus and his wife were the only survivors, so they were the start of new creation. |
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Suggestions for further reading Noah's Flood by Dr Bill Ryan and Dr Walter Pitman, pub. Simon & Schuster, 1st Feb. 1999 For more information on the origins, evolution and significance of the Noah story: Noah's Flood - The Genesis Story in Western Thought by Norman Cohn, pub. Yale University Press, 1996 To read the story of the flood in the ancient Mesopotamian Epic of Gilgamesh: The Epic of Gilgamesh The Penguin Classics. Also available as a Penguin audio book. Reader Richard Pasco (PEN 388) For a new children's illustrated version, see... The Hero King Gilgamesh by Irving Finkel, pub. The British Museum Press, 1998. |
