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3.4: Ziggurats and The Tower of Babel

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    275193
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    One of the more famous antediluvian structures, the Tower of Babel, finds its roots in the Etemenanki ziggurat built to honor the god Marduk. Ziggurats were pyramidal temples fashioned like man-made mountains and intended to provide a house for the gods and elevate priests in proximity to the gods they venerated. They featured stepped design and flat roofs, and served a different intention from the pyramids constructed by the Egyptians, which commemorated deceased pharaohs, rather than living gods. Built from mud-bricks, the structures were particularly sensitive to the elements. While several footprints of these structures remain, no fully-intact ziggurats exist currently.

    Constructed between the 14th and 9th centuries BCE, the great ziggurat of Babylon would later become associated with the Biblical Tower of Babel, found in Genesis. This connection is thought to have been made owing to a misinterpretation of the Akkadian bav-il (Gate of the Gods) for the Hebrew bavel (confusion).

    Diorama of the Tower of Babel, centered, surrounded by smaller clusters of primitive homes.
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Diorama of the Tower of Babel. (CC BY Public Domain on Wikimedia)

    In the Genesis story, the people hope to make a name for themselves to be remembered after death, and to gain access to God, and so begin to build a great tower to reach the heavens. God is angered by this hubris, feeling that if the people are allowed to reach their goal, they will then be empowered to attempt other goals and so disrupt the natural order. He therefore decrees they shall no longer speak the same language, confuses their tongues, and causes them to abandon their ziggurat as they can no longer understand each other.


    3.4: Ziggurats and The Tower of Babel is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.