List of flood myths

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The flood myths or deluge myths are, taken collectively, myths of a great flood. These accounts depict global flooding, usually sent by a deity or deities to destroy civilization as an act of divine retribution. Flood stories are common across a wide range of cultures, extending back into prehistory. Below is a list of some flood stories from around the world and is in no way exhaustive.

West Asia and Europe

Ancient Near East

Sumerian

Babylonian (Epic of Gilgamesh)

Abrahamic religions (Noah's flood)

The Deluge, c. 1896–1902, by James Jacques Joseph Tissot

Classical Antiquity

Medieval Europe

Irish

Welsh

Norse

Modern era folklore

Finnish

Africa

Many African cultures have an oral tradition of a flood myth including the Kwaya, Mbuti, Maasai, Mandin, and Yoruba peoples. The Maasai myth is as follows:

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Once upon a time the rivers began to flood. Then god told two people to get into a ship. He told them to take lots of seed and to take lots of animals. The water of the flood eventually covered the mountains. Finally the flood stopped. Then one of the men, wanting to know if the water had dried up let a dove loose. The dove returned. Later he let loose a hawk which did not return. Then the men left the boat and took the animals and the seeds with them.

[1]

Asia-Pacific

India

The Matsya avatar comes to the rescue of Manu
  • Manu and Matsya: The legend first appears in Shatapatha Brahmana (700–300 BC), and is further detailed in Matsya Purana (250–500 AD). Matsya (the incarnation of Lord Vishnu as a fish) forewarns Manu (a human) about an impending catastrophic flood and orders him to collect all the grains of the world in a boat; in some forms of the story, all living creatures are also to be preserved in the boat. When the flood destroys the world, Manu – in some versions accompanied by the seven great sages – survives by boarding the ark, which Matsya pulls to safety.
  • Puluga, the creator god in the religion of the indigenous inhabitants of the Andaman Islands, sends a devastating flood to punish people who have forgotten his commands. Only four people survive this flood: two men and two women.

Central Asia/Turkestan

China

Korea

  • Mokdoryung

Malaysia

Tai-Kadai people

There are stories spoken by Tai-Kadai people, included Zhuang, Thai, Shan and Lao, talking about the origin of them and the deluge from their Thean (แถน), supreme being object of faith.

  • Khun Borom
  • Poo-Sankhasa Ya-Sangkhasi or Grandfather Sangkhasa and Grandmother Sangkhasi, who make the human beings and the deluge.

Philippines

The Igorot tale:

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Once upon a time, when the world was flat and there were no mountains, there lived two brothers, sons of Lumawig, the Great Spirit. The brothers were fond of hunting, and since no mountains had formed there was no good place to catch wild pig and deer, and the older brother said: "Let us cause water to flow over all the world and cover it, and then mountains will rise up."

[2]

Oceania

Polynesia and Hawaii

Americas

North America

Mesoamerica

South America

Canari

Inca

Mapuche

Muisca

Tupi

References

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  2. sacred-texts.com
  3. SENĆOŦENStory – ȽÁUWELṈEW, FirstVoices.com
  4. [1], Grand Council Treaty #3, The Government of the Anishinaabe Nation in Treaty #3