Mesopotamia is known for its rivers Euphrates and Tigris Rivers which are divided into two. It also started out in approximately, 3500 B.C.E TO 1500 B.C.E. Its rivers are divided between the mountains of eastern Anatolia. This led an author by the name of Herbert Mason to write about the journey of Gilgamesh developing throughout Mesopotamia and how he survived without his friend Enkidu after he died. Gilgamesh is one of the oldest recorded stories in the world of an ancient king of Uruk. Gilgamesh is found on the Sumerian king list (Diane Thompson). Gilgamesh was originated in the third millennium B.C.E and was later written or interpreted in a standardized Akkadian in the seventh B.C.E. (B, p 31). The textbook states, “That Mesopotamia lies …show more content…
They arrived at a new city, Babylon, not far from Akkad. Trade began rapidly by boats across rivers trading wool, barley, and vegetable oil as exports in exchange for wood from cedar forests in Lebanon. However, Gilgamesh was seen as a hero with courage who can accomplish anything. At his time in history, Gilgamesh actually undertakes two unnerving journeys; in the first, accompanied by his friend Enkidu, he walks from his kingdom Uruk, in what is now southern Iraq, to northern Lebanon in six days. During the fourth millennium B.C.E, settlers underwent an unexpectedly rapid change from villages into developed cities with large populations, temples and palaces. During this period, “writing is invented, large buildings, temples and ziggurats, appear for the first time... it was the organization of the canal system, of irrigation, that made the further developments possible” (B, p …show more content…
Gilgamesh and Enkidu upset the world order by destroying sacred monsters of nature: Gilgamesh killed Humbaba and Enkidu killed the Bull of Heaven (G. p, 46). Therefore, this led to result that one of them must die. Enkidu, the more innocent, yet less important man, takes on the responsibility of dying for both of them. This shows their friendship and what each would do for each other. Also, by the death of his beloved Enkidu, Gilgamesh does something even more astonishing: he travels to the ends of the earth, braving all sorts of threats, in an effort to discover the secret of life trying to bring back is only friend. Similarly, in of Mice of Men by John Steinbeck two friends named George and Lennie are migrant farm workers, looking for employment near where Steinbeck grew up in Salinas, California. Lennie is huge, strong and mentally challenged. George is the brains of the pair as they travel from ranch to ranch. They also have a secret power -- their friendship: They do not have any family. So they decided to look out for each other (G. p, 22). George, however, often sees this friendship as difficult and thought-provoking, to say the least, largely because Lennie likes to pet soft objects with his large, strong hands. It is one thing when they are mice, which he often unknowingly crushes and kills. But when it is a woman 's soft dress, and he does not let go, George and Lennie can