Although not all agree on the reliability of [[Old Testament]] accounts of [[Abraham]], most scholars who use the term "Abrahamic Mythology" believe these belief systems originated four to five thousand years ago under the influence of earlier traditions — primarily [[Mesopotamian mythology|Chaldean mythology]] — and subsequently developed through interaction with contemporaneous religions such as [[Zoroastrianism]]. Many historians, comparative mythologists and archeologists came to hold this view towards the end of the 19th Century, as academia became increasingly secularized and non-Abrahamic analogues of the central stories came to light. | Although not all agree on the reliability of [[Old Testament]] accounts of [[Abraham]], most scholars who use the term "Abrahamic Mythology" believe these belief systems originated four to five thousand years ago under the influence of earlier traditions — primarily [[Mesopotamian mythology|Chaldean mythology]] — and subsequently developed through interaction with contemporaneous religions such as [[Zoroastrianism]]. Many historians, comparative mythologists and archeologists came to hold this view towards the end of the 19th Century, as academia became increasingly secularized and non-Abrahamic analogues of the central stories came to light. |