Cyrus H. Gordon and Gary A. Rendsburg note that the Near Eastern motif of seven years of famine following the death of a hero is attested in the
Ugaritic myth of the death of
Aqhat and that the theme of someone predicting seven years of famine in advance and storing up supplies is also found in the Hebrew story of
Joseph from the
Book of Genesis, and in
verses 47-48 of
Surah Yusuf in the
Quran. According to the German classical scholar
Walter Burkert, the scene in which Ishtar comes before Anu to demand the Bull of Heaven after being rejected by Gilgamesh is directly paralleled by a scene from Book V of the
Iliad. In the
Epic of Gilgamesh, Ishtar complains to her mother
Antu, but is mildly rebuked by Anu. In the scene from the
Iliad,
Aphrodite, the later Greek development of Ishtar, is wounded by the Greek hero
Diomedes while trying to save her son
Aeneas. She flees to
Mount Olympus, where she cries to her mother
Dione, is mocked by her sister
Athena, and is mildly rebuked by her father
Zeus. Not only is the narrative parallel significant, but so is the fact that Dione's name is a feminization of Zeus's own, just as
Antu is a feminine form of
Anu. Dione does not appear throughout the rest of the
Iliad, in which Zeus's consort is instead the goddess
Hera. Burkert therefore concludes that
Dione is a
calque of Antu. British classical scholar Graham Anderson notes that, in the
Odyssey, Odysseus's men kill the sacred
cattle of Helios and are condemned to death by the gods for this reason, much like Enkidu in the
Epic of Gilgamesh.
M. L. West states that the similarities run deeper than the mere fact that, in both cases, the creatures slain are bovines exempt from natural death. In both cases, the person or persons condemned to die are companions of the hero, whose death or deaths force the hero to continue his journey alone. He also notes that, in both cases, the epic describes a discussion among the gods over whether or not the guilty party must die and that
Helios's threat to Zeus if he does not avenge the slaughter of his cattle in the
Odyssey is very similar to Ishtar's threat to Anu when she is demanding the Bull in the
Epic of Gilgamesh. Bruce Louden compares Enkidu's taunting of Ishtar immediately after slaying the Bull of Heaven to Odysseus's taunt of the giant
Polyphemus in Book IX of the
Odyssey. In both cases, the hero's own
hubris after an apparent victory leads a deity to curse him. ==References==