Noah's Ark (Hebrew: תיבת נח; Biblical Hebrew: Tevat Noaḥ) is the ship in the Genesis flood narrative through which God spares Noah, his family, and examples of all the world's animals from a global deluge. The story in Genesis is based on earlier flood myths originating in Mesopotamia, and is repeated, with variations, in the Quran, where the Ark appears as Safinat Nūḥ (Arabic: سَفِينَةُ نُوحٍ "Noah's ship") and al-fulk (Arabic: الفُلْك). The myth of the global flood that destroys all life begins to appear in the Old Babylonian Empire period (20th–16th centuries BCE). The version closest to the biblical story of Noah, as well as its most likely source, is that of Utnapishtim in the Epic of Gilgamesh.
Early Christian and Jewish writers such as Flavius Josephus
believed that Noah's Ark existed. Unsuccessful searches for Noah's Ark have
been made from at least the time of Eusebius (c. 275–339 CE). Believers in the
Ark continue to search for it in modern times, but no scientific evidence that
the Ark existed has ever been found, nor is there scientific evidence for a
global flood. The ship and the natural disaster as described in the Bible would
have been contingent upon physical impossibilities and extraordinary
anachronisms. Some researchers believe that a real (though localized) flood
event in the Middle East could potentially have inspired the oral and later
written narratives; a Persian Gulf flood, or a Black Sea Deluge 7,500 years ago
has been proposed as such a historical candidate.
Description
The structure of the Ark (and the chronology of the flood)
is homologous with the Jewish Temple and with Temple worship. Accordingly,
Noah's instructions are given to him by God (Genesis 6:14–16): the ark is to be
300 cubits long, 50 cubits wide, and 30 cubits high (approximately 134×22×13 m
or 440×72×43 ft). These dimensions are based on a numerological preoccupation
with the number 60, the same number characterizing the vessel of the Babylonian
flood hero.
Its three internal divisions reflect the three-part universe
imagined by the ancient Israelites: heaven, the earth, and the underworld. Each
deck is the same height as the Temple in Jerusalem, itself a microcosmic model
of the universe, and each is three times the area of the court of the
tabernacle, leading to the suggestion that the author saw both Ark and
tabernacle as serving for the preservation of human life. It has a door in the
side, and a tsohar, which may be either a roof or a skylight. It is to be made
of gopher wood, a word which appears nowhere else in the Bible – and divided
into qinnim, a word which always refers to birds' nests elsewhere in the Bible,
leading some scholars to emend this to qanim, reeds. The finished vessel is to
be smeared with koper, meaning pitch or bitumen; in Hebrew the two words are
closely related, kaparta ("smeared")
... bakopper.
Origins
Mesopotamian
precursors
For well over a century, scholars have recognized that the
Bible's story of Noah's Ark is based on older Mesopotamian models. Because all
these flood stories deal with events that allegedly happened at the dawn of
history, they give the impression that the myths themselves must come from very
primitive origins, but the myth of the global flood that destroys all life only
begins to appear in the Old Babylonian period (20th–16th centuries BCE). The
reasons for this emergence of the typical Mesopotamian flood myth may have been
bound up with the specific circumstances of the end of the Third Dynasty of Ur
around 2004 BCE and the restoration of order by the First Dynasty of Isin.
Nine versions of the Mesopotamian flood story are known,
each more or less adapted from an earlier version. In the oldest version,
inscribed in the Sumerian city of Nippur around 1600 BCE, the hero is King
Ziusudra. This story, the Sumerian flood myth, probably derives from an earlier
version. The Ziusudra version tells how he builds a boat and rescues life when
the gods decide to destroy it. This basic plot is common in several subsequent
flood stories and heroes, including Noah. Ziusudra's Sumerian name means "He of long life." In
Babylonian versions, his name is Atrahasis, but the meaning is the same. In the
Atrahasis version, the flood is a river flood.
The version closest to the biblical story of Noah, as well
as its most likely source, is that of Utnapishtim in the Epic of Gilgamesh. A
complete text of Utnapishtim's story is a clay tablet dating from the seventh
century BCE, but fragments of the story have been found from as far back as the
19th-century BCE. The last known version of the Mesopotamian flood story was
written in Greek in the third century BCE by a Babylonian priest named
Berossus. From the fragments that survive, it seems little changed from the versions
of 2,000 years before.
The parallels between Noah's Ark and the arks of Babylonian
flood heroes Atrahasis and Utnapishtim have often been noted. Atrahasis' Ark
was circular, resembling an enormous quffa, with one or two decks.
Utnapishtim's ark was a cube with six decks of seven compartments, each divided
into nine subcompartments (63 subcompartments per deck, 378 total). Noah's Ark
was rectangular with three decks. A progression is believed to exist from a
circular to a cubic or square to rectangular. The most striking similarity is
the near-identical deck areas of the three arks: 14,400 cubits2, 14,400
cubits2, and 15,000 cubits2 for Atrahasis, Utnapishtim, and Noah, only 4%
different. Irving Finkel concluded,
"the iconic story of the Flood, Noah, and the Ark as we know it today
certainly originated in the landscape of ancient Mesopotamia, modern
Iraq."
Linguistic parallels between Noah's and Atrahasis' arks have
also been noted. The word used for "pitch"
(sealing tar or resin) in Genesis is not the normal Hebrew word, but is closely
related to the word used in the Babylonian story. Likewise, the Hebrew word for
"ark" (tevah) is nearly
identical to the Babylonian word for an oblong boat (ṭubbû), especially given
that "v" and "b" are the same letter in
Hebrew: bet (ב).
However, the causes for God or the gods sending the flood
differ in the various stories. In the Hebrew myth, the flood inflicts God's
judgment on wicked humanity. The Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh gives no reasons,
and the flood appears the result of divine caprice. In the Babylonian Atrahasis
version, the flood is sent to reduce human overpopulation, and after the flood,
other measures were introduced to limit humanity.
Composition
A consensus among scholars indicates that the Torah (the
first five books of the Bible, beginning with Genesis) was the product of a
long and complicated process that was not completed until after the Babylonian
exile. Since the 18th century, the flood narrative has been analyzed as a
paradigm example of the combination of two different versions of a story into a
single text, with one marker for the different versions being a consistent
preference for different names "Elohim"
and "Yahweh" to denote
God.
Religious views
Rabbinic Judaism
The Talmudic tractates Sanhedrin, Avodah Zarah, and Zevahim
relate that, while Noah was building the Ark, he attempted to warn his
neighbors of the coming deluge, but was ignored or mocked. God placed lions and
other ferocious animals to protect Noah and his family from the wicked who
tried to keep them from the Ark. According to one Midrash, it was God, or the
angels, who gathered the animals and their food to the Ark. As no need existed
to distinguish between clean and unclean animals before this time, the clean
animals made themselves known by kneeling before Noah as they entered the Ark.
A differing opinion is that the Ark itself distinguished clean animals from
unclean, admitting seven pairs each of the former and one pair each of the latter.
According to Sanhedrin 108b, Noah was engaged both day and
night in feeding and caring for the animals, and did not sleep for the entire
year aboard the Ark. The animals were the best of their kind and behaved with
utmost goodness. They did not procreate, so the number of creatures that
disembarked was exactly equal to the number that embarked. The raven created
problems, refusing to leave the Ark when Noah sent it forth, and accusing the
patriarch of wishing to destroy its race, but as the commentators pointed out,
God wished to save the raven, for its descendants were destined to feed the
prophet Elijah.
According to one tradition, refuse was stored on the lowest
of the Ark's three decks, humans and clean beasts on the second, and the
unclean animals and birds on the top. A differing interpretation described the
refuse as being stored on the topmost deck, from where it was shoveled into the
sea through a trapdoor. Precious stones, as bright as the noon sun, provided
light, and God ensured the food remained fresh. In an unorthodox
interpretation, the 12th-century Jewish commentator Abraham ibn Ezra
interpreted the ark as a vessel that remained under water for 40 days, after
which it floated to the surface.
Christianity
The First Epistle of Peter (composed around the end of the
first century AD) compared Noah's salvation through water to Christian salvation
through baptism. Hippolytus of Rome (died 235) sought to demonstrate that "the Ark was a symbol of the Christ who
was expected", stating that the vessel had its door on the east
side—the direction from which Christ would appear at the Second Coming—and that
the bones of Adam were brought aboard, together with gold, frankincense, and
myrrh (the symbols of the Nativity of Christ). Hippolytus furthermore stated
that the Ark floated to and fro in the four directions on the waters, making
the sign of the cross, before eventually landing on Mount Kardu "in the east, in the land of the sons
of Raban, and the Orientals call it Mount Godash; the Armenians call it
Ararat". On a more practical plane, Hippolytus explained that the
lowest of the three decks was for wild beasts, the middle for birds and
domestic animals, and the top for humans. He says male animals were separated
from females by sharp stakes to prevent breeding.
The early Church Father and theologian Origen (circa
182–251), in response to a critic who doubted that the Ark could contain all
the animals in the world, argued that Moses, the traditional author of the book
of Genesis, had been brought up in Egypt and would therefore have used the
larger Egyptian cubit. He also fixed the shape of the Ark as a truncated
pyramid, square at its base, and tapering to a square peak one cubit on a side;
only in the 12th century did it come to be thought of as a rectangular box with
a sloping roof.
Early Christian artists depicted Noah standing in a small
box on the waves, symbolizing God saving the Christian Church in its turbulent
early years. Augustine of Hippo (354–430), in his work City of God,
demonstrated that the dimensions of the Ark corresponded to the dimensions of
the human body, which according to Christian doctrine is the body of Christ and
in turn the body of the Church. Jerome (circa 347–420) identified the raven,
which was sent forth and did not return, as the "foul bird of wickedness" expelled by baptism; more
enduringly, the dove and olive branch came to symbolize the Holy Spirit and the
hope of salvation and eventually, peace. The olive branch remains a secular and
religious symbol of peace today.
Gnosticism
According to the Hypostasis of the Archons, a 3rd-century
Gnostic text, Noah is chosen to be spared by the evil Archons when they try to
destroy the other inhabitants of the Earth with the great flood. He is told to
create the ark then board it at a location called Mount Sir, but when his wife
Norea wants to board it as well, Noah attempts to not let her. So she decides
to use her divine power to blow upon the ark and set it ablaze, therefore Noah
is forced to rebuild it.
Mandaeism
In Book 18 of the Right Ginza, a Mandaean text, Noah and his
family are saved from the Great Flood because they were able to build an ark or
kawila (or kauila, a Mandaic term; it is cognate with Syriac kēʾwilā, which is
attested in the Peshitta New Testament, such as Matthew 24:38 and Luke 17:27).
Islam
Persian Miniature from Hafiz-i Abru's Majma al-tawarikh.
Noah's Ark Iran (Afghanistan), Herat; Timur's son Shah Rukh (1405–1447) ordered
the historian Hafiz-i Abru to write a continuation of Rashid al-Din's famous
history of the world, Jami al-tawarikh. Like the Il-Khanids, the Timurids were
concerned with legitimizing their right to rule, and Hafiz-i Abru's A
Collection of Histories covers a period that included the time of Shah Rukh
himself.
Noah's Ark and the
deluge from Zubdat-al Tawarikh
In contrast to the Jewish tradition, which uses a term that
can be translated as a "box" or
"chest" to describe the
Ark, surah 29:15 of the Quran refers to it as a safina, an ordinary ship; surah
7:64 uses fulk, and surah 54:13 describes the Ark as "a thing of boards and nails". Abd Allah ibn Abbas, a
contemporary of Muhammad, wrote that Noah was in doubt as to what shape to make
the Ark and that Allah revealed to him that it was to be shaped like a bird's
belly and fashioned of teak wood.
The medieval scholar Abu al-Hasan Ali ibn al-Husayn Masudi
(died 956) wrote that Allah commanded the Earth to absorb the water, and
certain portions which were slow in obeying received salt water in punishment
and so became dry and arid. The water which was not absorbed formed the seas,
so that the waters of the flood still exist. Masudi says the ark began its
voyage at Kufa in central Iraq and sailed to Mecca, circling the Kaaba before
finally traveling to Mount Judi, which surah 11:44 gives as its final resting
place. This mountain is identified by tradition with a hill near the town of
Jazirat ibn Umar on the east bank of the Tigris in the province of Mosul in
northern Iraq, and Masudi says that the spot could be seen in his time.
Baháʼí Faith
The Baháʼí Faith regards the Ark and the Flood as symbolic.
In Baháʼí belief, only Noah's followers were spiritually alive, preserved in
the "ark" of his teachings,
as others were spiritually dead. The Baháʼí scripture Kitáb-i-Íqán endorses the
Islamic belief that Noah had numerous companions on the ark, either 40 or 72,
as well as his family and that he taught for 950 (symbolic) years before the
flood. The Baháʼí Faith was founded in 19th century Persia, and it recognizes
divine messengers from both the Abrahamic and the Indian traditions.
Ancient accounts
Multiple Jewish and Christian writers in the ancient world
wrote about the ark. The first-century historian Josephus reports that the
Armenians believed that the remains of the Ark lay "in Armenia, at the mountain of the Cordyaeans", in a
location they called the Place of Descent (Ancient Greek: αποβατηριον). He goes
on to say that many other writers of "barbarian
histories", including Nicolaus of Damascus, Berossus, and Mnaseas mention
the flood and the Ark.
In the fourth century, Epiphanius of Salamis wrote about
Noah's Ark in his Panarion, saying "Thus
even today the remains of Noah's ark are still shown in Cardyaei." Other
translations render "Cardyaei"
as "the country of the Kurds".
John Chrysostom mentioned Noah's Ark in one of his sermons
in the fourth century, saying “Do not the
mountains of Armenia testify to it, where the Ark rested? And are not the
remains of the Ark preserved there to this very day for our admonition?”
Historicity
The first edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica from 1771
describes the Ark as factual. It also attempts to explain how the Ark could
house all living animal types: "...
Buteo and Kircher have proved geometrically, that, taking the common cubit as a
foot and a half, the ark was abundantly sufficient for all the animals supposed
to be lodged in it ... the number of species of animals will be found much less
than is generally imagined, not amounting to a hundred species of
quadrupeds." It also endorses a supernatural explanation for the
flood, stating that "many attempts
have been made to account for the deluge by means of natural causes: but these
attempts have only tended to discredit philosophy and to render their authors
ridiculous".
The 1860 edition attempts to solve the problem of the Ark
being unable to house all animal types by suggesting a local flood, which is
described in the 1910 edition as part of a "gradual
surrender of attempts to square scientific facts with a literal interpretation
of the Bible" that resulted in "the
'higher criticism' and the rise of the modern scientific views as to the origin
of species" leading to "scientific
comparative mythology" as the frame in which Noah's Ark was
interpreted by 1875.
Ark's geometry
In Europe, the Renaissance saw much speculation on the
nature of the Ark that might have seemed familiar to early theologians such as
Origen and Augustine. At the same time, however, a new class of scholarship
arose, one which, while never questioning the literal truth of the ark story,
began to speculate on the practical workings of Noah's vessel from within a
purely naturalistic framework. In the 15th century, Alfonso Tostada gave a
detailed account of the logistics of the Ark, down to arrangements for the
disposal of dung and the circulation of fresh air. The 16th-century geometer
Johannes Buteo calculated the ship's internal dimensions, allowing room for
Noah's grinding mills and smokeless ovens, a model widely adopted by other
commentators.
Irving Finkel, a curator at the British Museum, came into
the possession of a cuneiform tablet. He translated it and discovered a
hitherto unknown Babylonian version of the story of the great flood. This
version gave specific measurements for an unusually large coracle (a type of
rounded boat). His discovery leads to the production of a television
documentary and a book summarizing the finding. A scale replica of the boat
described by the tablet was built and floated in Kerala, India.
Searches for Noah's
Ark
Searches for Noah's Ark have been made from at least the
time of Eusebius (c.275–339 CE) to the present day. In the 1st century, Jewish
historian Flavius Josephus claimed the remaining pieces of Noah's Ark had been
found in Armenia, at the mountain of the Cordyaeans, which is nowadays Mount Ararat
in Turkey. Today, the practice is widely regarded as pseudoarchaeology. Various
locations for the ark have been suggested but have never been confirmed. Search
sites have included Durupınar site, a site on Mount Tendürek in eastern Turkey
and Mount Ararat, but geological investigation of possible remains of the ark
has only shown natural sedimentary formations. While biblical literalists often
maintain the Ark's existence in archaeological history, much of its scientific
feasibility along with that of the deluge has been contested.
Cultural legacy:
Noah's Ark replicas
In the modern era, individuals and organizations have sought
to reconstruct Noah's ark using the dimensions specified in the Bible, Noah's Ark
replicas and derivatives Johan's Ark was completed in 2012 to this end, while
the Ark Encounter was finished in 2016.
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