In the Epic of Gilgamesh, gates and doors serve not just as physical entrances to new spaces, but also as spiritual ones. Enkidu’s entrance into Uruk through the city’s gates symbolizes his complete transition to civilized life, and after chopping down the great cedar tree, Enkidu suggests that they build a door with its wood. Similarly, Gilgamesh encounters the Scorpion-Men guarding a great gate at the beginning of his most difficult quest. The Scorpion-Men are intimidating, and they warn Gilgamesh of what lies beyond—his subsequent passage through the gate then represents his willingness and desperation to carry on with his quest, regardless of the risks. The image then comes up again as Ishtar threatens to “break in the doors of hell and smash the bolts” when her father Anu refuses to send the Bull of Heaven to attack Gilgamesh. Throughout the story, spiritual divisions between places that are fundamentally different—Uruk and nature, wild nature and the area guarded by Humbaba, the wilderness Gilgamesh knows and the mountains along the Road of the Sun where no man has ever travelled—are made literal by the presence of a gate or door.
