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== Archetypes in Gilgamesh ==
== Archetypes in Gilgamesh ==
An archetype in Gilgamesh was the number seven.  The author used this archetype, very deliberately.  After taking a closer look at this literary work it was discovered the number seven was used thirty-seven times. (''Norton Anthology'', 18-47)  By taking a collaborative view of literary works throughout history it is revealed the continued use of the number seven.  The number seven was used 700 times in ''The Bible'' (Harris) and twenty-five times in ''The Qu’ran'' (Sahibzada).  There is no mistake about the author’s reference to this particular number based upon its cultural and religious significance.  It has become evident the number seven held a sacred or significant meaning.  But to better understand the significance of the continued reference to a particular number, one would have to take a closer look at the historical implications. 
“Most cultures of the world hold certain numbers to be especially significant, even symbolic, and this is reflected in their religions. In the Abrahamic traditions, which originate in the Middle East, the number seven is of particular importance. Some of its significance stems from the ancient Sumerian and Babylonian civilizations, which identified seven planets and framed seven days of the week around them. Very early among Middle Eastern peoples, seven became known as a "perfect" number, symbolic of completeness and goodness.” (Sahibzada).
It is believed the origin of the number seven was established by the planets that were transformed into deities.  The ancient Egyptians had seven original gods; the Phoenicians seven Kabiris; the Persians seven sacred horses of Mithra with seven gates, seven alters, and seven mysteries; the Parsees seven angels opposed by seven demons, seven celestial abodes paralleled by seven lower regions.  The seven gods were often represented as one seven-headed deity.  The whole heaven was subjected to seven planets; hence, in nearly all the religious systems we find seven heavens. The number seven was also used in demonical religions as well.  A contract with the devil had to contain seven paragraphs, was concluded for seven years and signed by the person seven times.  (Blavatsky)
Religious peoples were not the only ones to reference this number.  There were cultural, architectural, and ceremonial implications as well.  The Cherokee Indians regard the number seven as sacred.  The ceremonial significance in their culture is captured in their seven ancient ceremonies with the seventh ceremony celebrated every seven years. (Lewis & Kneberg, 175)  A few of the ceremonies focus on the number seven.  The first moon of spring ceremony is seven days long.  The Green Corn ceremony began on the seventh of August.  During this ceremony the Chief and his seven councilors fasted while the tribe gathered seven ears of corn, each from a different clan’s field.  (Lewis & Kneberg, 176-177)  The Cherokee’s also have purification ceremonies in which a person is immersed seven times.  (Mooney, 230).
Architecture has also been influenced by the number seven. The famous pagoda of Churingham is surrounded by seven square walls, painted in seven different colors, and in the middle of each wall is a seven storied pyramid.  The Buddhist use seven-tier pagoda’s to signify the seven treasures that are the blessings from the seven northern stars. (Blavatsky) Along with the most impressive monuments known to exist, The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World (http://ce.eng.usf.edu/pharos/wonders/map.html)
The military’s 21-gun salute is centered on the number seven.  The use of this symbol is traced to early warriors demonstrating peaceful intentions and was used universally.  The act varied with time, place, and the weapon being used.  Originally warships fired a seven-gun salute.  The number seven was probably used because of astrological and Biblical importance.  There were seven planets identified and the moon changed phases every seven days. ''The Bible'' states that God rested on the seventh day after Creation, every seventh year was sabbatical and that the seven times seventh year ushered in the Jubilee year.  (Headquarters, Military District of Washington)
Works Cited:
Blavatsky, H. P. “The Number Seven.” ''Theosophist'', (June, 1880.) 12 Feb. 2005 http://theosophy.org/tlodocs/hpb/NumberSeven.htm
Harris, Andrew. “Seven.” (6 July 1999). 12 Feb.2005 http://www.vic.australis.com.au/hazz/number007.html
Headquarters, Military District of Washington, ''Fact Sheet: Gun Salutes'', May 1969.
Lewis, Thomas M. N. and Madeline Kneberg. “Tribes that Slumber Indians of the Tennessee Region.” Knoxville, Tennessee: The University of Tennessee Press,tenth printing (1994).
Mooney, James. ''History, Myths, and Sacred Formulas of the Cherokees''. Asheville, North Carolina, 1992.
Sahibzada, Mehnaz. “The Symbolism of the Number Seven in Islamic Culture and Rituals.”  15 Feb. 2005 http://www.wadsworth.com/religion_d/special_features/symbols/islamic.html
''The Norton Anthology of World Masterpieces''. 7th ed., New York:  W. W. Norton & Company, 1998.


== Gilgamesh Variations ==
== Gilgamesh Variations ==
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