Eve is characterized as a "chaos" agent because she was the first to disobey the authority of god. Ishtar in her anger threatens vengeance in the form of chaos by overturning the boundaries between the dead and the living. Then unleashes the bull of heaven which Gilgamesh and Enkidu kill with their swords. Ishtar sends Shamhat to tempt Enkidu who taught him to become man-like from his original innocence and well-being by giving him sexual experience, which makes him god-like, but which sets him on the course that leads inevitably to his death. Eve tempting Adam with the forbidden fruit and the god-like knowledge leading to their expulsion out of the Garden of Eden which leads to mortality because of the lost access to the Tree of Life. Ishtar is the goddess of love and fertility as well as the goddess of war and Eve is seen as the mother of all humanity.
Pharaohs wore the bull's tail to symbolize that they had the powers of nature and were as strong as a bull.
The minotaur was a man with the head of a bull. Poseidon gave a white bull to king Minos, who was supposed to sacrifice it to the god. Instead, Minos kept it, and so Poseidon caused Minos' wife Pasiphae to fall in love with the bull. Daedalus helped her build a wooden cow and she hid inside it in order to mate with the bull. The resulting child was the minotaur, or "Minos's bull".
Hercules.
Bull
Ishtar sent the Bull of Heaven to defeat Gilgamesh as revenge for his rejection of her romantic advances. However, with the help of his friend Enkidu, Gilgamesh was able to kill the Bull of Heaven. This act angered Ishtar but ultimately did not result in Gilgamesh's defeat.
Gilgamesh and Enkidu killed the Bull of Heaven, which belonged to Ishtar. This action angered Ishtar, who sought revenge by causing Enkidu's death.
Ishtar sends down the Bull of Heaven to punish Gilgamesh for rejecting her advance. The bull wreaks havoc in Uruk, causing destruction and chaos. It takes the combined efforts of Gilgamesh and Enkidu to defeat the Bull of Heaven.
Utnapishtim
In the Epic of Gilgamesh, Gilgamesh disobeys the gods by killing the Bull of Heaven, which was a divine beast sent by the goddess Ishtar to punish him for rejecting her advances. This act angered the gods and led to consequences for Gilgamesh and his friend Enkidu.
Enkidu and Gilgamesh kill the Bull of Heaven as vengeance for Ishtar's rejection and to establish their own power and defiance against the gods. Additionally, they see the bull as a direct threat to their kingdom and people, and by defeating it, they prove their strength and heroism.
In the Epic of Gilgamesh, Gilgamesh refused to make love to the goddess Ishtar. In her fury, she told her father, Anu, to make the bull of heaven so that she could smite Gilgamesh. Anu said that if he did this, there would be seven years of barren husks. He asked if she had gathered grain for the people and grown grass for the beasts. She said she had done so.
Yes, Gilgamesh killed Humbaba, the guardian of the Cedar Forest, and the Bull of Heaven in the Epic of Gilgamesh.
Gilgamesh attempted to save his people from danger by seeking out and battling monsters that threatened them, such as Humbaba the giant guardian of the Cedar Forest and the Bull of Heaven sent by the goddess Ishtar. He also embarked on quests for immortality to protect his people from the fear of death.
An example of a metaphor in the Epic of Gilgamesh is when the goddess Ishtar refers to the hero Enkidu as a "wild bull" representing his strength and wild nature. This metaphor helps to emphasize Enkidu's powerful and untamed character throughout the epic.
Ishtar wanted Enkidu to die because he insulted her by rejecting her advances and calling her cruel and unfaithful. As the goddess of love and war, Ishtar was angered and sought revenge for being scorned.
In the Epic of Gilgamesh, Gilgamesh and Enkidu destroy the Cedar Forest, which is protected by the gods. They kill the guardian of the forest, Humbaba, which ultimately leads to consequences for both of them.