Who Was Nimrod?

Episode 2 Extras: Who Was Nimrod? Was Nimrod based on a historical individual? Does the brief story of Nimrod in Genesis 10 provide enough clues to figure out who he was? See how the Bible and history connect in this follow-up to my video on the Tower of Babel. Hashtags: #Nimrod #Babel #Assyria Contents 0:00 Logo 0:05 Prologue: Can Nimrod be identified? 0:52 The Puzzling Nimrod Passage 1:52 Nimrod: God or Man? 2:40 Nimrod: Son of Cush? 3:50 The Legend of Nimrod 6:02 King of Kish, King of the World 8:15 The King as Hunter 8:57 Biblical Parallels with Mesopotamian Myths 10:06 End card and Easter egg Work cited: ⦾ Burkitt, F. C. “Note on the Table of Nations (Genesis X)”.The Journal of Theological Studies, old series, 21/2 (1920). ⦾ Knohl, Israel. “Nimrod Son of Cush, King of Mesopotamia, and the Dates of P and J”, in V. A. Hurowitz (ed.) Birkat Shalom, S. Paul Jubilee Volume. Eisenbrauns, Winona Lake, Indiana, 2008. ⦾ Levin, Yigal, “Nimrod the Mighty, King of Kish, King of Sumer and Akkad”, Vetus Testamentum 52/3, 2002. ⦾ van der Toorn, K. and P. W. van der Horst. “Nimrod Before and After the Bible”. Harvard Theological Review 83/01 (Jan 1990). Additional reading: ⦾ van der Kooij, Arie. “The City of Babel and Assyrian Imperialism: Genesis 11:1–9 Interpreted in the Light of Mesopotamian Sources”. Congress Volume Leiden 2004, 2006 ⦾ Steinkeller, Piotr. “Early Political Development in Mesopotamia and the Origins of the Sargonic Empire”, in Akkad: The First World Empire : Structure, Ideology, Traditions, 1993. ⦾ Maeda, Tohru. “‘King of Kish’ in Pre-Sargonic Sumer”. Orient 17 (1981). Production credits: Written, animated, edited, and narrated by Paul Davidson. Music by Scott Buckley (www.scottbuckley.com.au). All photographs, art, and film footage are public domain or are used in accordance with Fair Use provisions.