---
title: "Sumerian Flood Event Recorded"
year: 2900
country: "Iraq"
canonical: "https://recap.at/2900/sumerian-flood-event"
slug: "sumerian-flood-event"
recapType: "global_event"
startDate: "2900-01-01"
---

# Sumerian Flood Event Recorded

> A catastrophic Mesopotamian inundation leaves archaeological evidence and shapes multiple ancient flood narratives across cultures.

Around 2900 BCE, Sumerian scribes recorded a catastrophic flood that inundated Mesopotamia, preserving the account in cuneiform texts like the Eridu Genesis. This narrative, among humanity's oldest written stories, blended mythological explanation with what may have been memories of actual environmental catastrophe, establishing a template for flood mythology that would echo through cultures for millennia.

## Summary

Eridu Genesis, also called the Sumerian Creation Myth or Sumerian Flood Myth, is a work of Sumerian religion offering a description of the story surrounding how humanity was created by the gods, the circumstances leading to the origins of the first cities in Mesopotamia, how the office of kingship appeared, and the global flood myth.

## Key facts

- **Approximate date**: 2900 BCE
- **Primary source**: Eridu Genesis cuneiform tablet
- **Location**: Ancient Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq)
- **Writing system**: Cuneiform
- **Narrative function**: Mythological explanation of origins and kingship
- **Known copies**: Multiple Sumerian and later Akkadian versions

## Timeline

- **1000-01-01** - Hebrew scripture incorporation
  Biblical flood account in Genesis exhibits structural and thematic similarities to Sumerian and Babylonian versions, suggesting cultural transmission through Mesopotamian contact.
- **1200-01-01** - Hittite versions appear
  Flood mythology spreads to Anatolia, with Hittite texts preserving variations of the Mesopotamian narrative.
- **1800-01-01** - Akkadian adaptation emerges
  Babylonian scribes incorporate flood narratives into the Epic of Gilgamesh, adapting Sumerian sources and spreading the archetype throughout Mesopotamian culture.
- **2900-01-01** - Eridu Genesis recorded
  Sumerian scribes document the flood narrative in cuneiform on clay tablets, blending creation mythology with accounts of divine judgment and catastrophic inundation.

## Impact

The Sumerian flood accounts represent some of the earliest written evidence that civilizations attempted to make sense of environmental disaster through narrative. The story's survival in cuneiform established a foundational archetype—the divine judgment flood—that would reshape how subsequent cultures, from Babylon to ancient Israel, understood catastrophe and human vulnerability.

## Sources

- [Sumerian flood](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eridu_Genesis) - Wikipedia

---
Canonical: https://recap.at/2900/sumerian-flood-event