Title: 2. History: Mesopotamia 3000-1600
12. History Mesopotamia 3000-1600
- BOT612 Old Testament Backgrounds
2'Ubaid Period 5000- 4000 BCE
- 'Ubaid Period 5000- 4000 BCE
- Site located near Ur, however the distinctive
elements found in north Iraq, Syria, Iran and in
many sites in Saudi Arabia. - Agriculture Wheat, barley, millet, and other
cereals (irrigation systems) - Graves cemeteries
- Temple in Eridu (level VII) a high temple built
on a terrace.
3Uruk Period 4000-2900 BCE
- Uruk Period 4000-2900 BCE
- Pottery Changes
- Temple Warka 1) Celestial god Anu 2) Inanna
(Ishtar) These were proto-types for the
ziggurats. - Writing
- Cylinder Seals (Vol. 2 PDF OT/Lectures/)
- The Problem of the Origins of the Sumerians.
- View ANE Art Sumer . . . Pdf
- Innin-Dumuzi stories begin to develop.
4Early Dynastic Period 2900-2300
- Early Dynastic Period
- The Golden Age ED (Early Dynastic) I ca.
2900-2700 BCE - The Heroic Age ED II ca. 2700-2500 BCE
- The Dynastic Age ED III 2500-2300 BCE
- Political Social Organizations
- ". . . There is the pattern of urban settlements,
which increase in density and size from the late
Uruk into the ED III period, so that by 2500 it
looks as though 80 per cent of the population
resided in substantial cities of more than 100
acres." (Kuhrt, 31)
5Early Dynastic Period 2900-2300
- Kings city officials exist
- Popular wisdom
- Shuruppak gave instructions to his son
- 'My son, let me give you instructions,
- May you pay attention to them! (next line frag.)
- Do not buy a prostitute, it is horrible,
- Do not make a well in a field, the water will do
damage to you - Do not give evidence against a man, the city will
. . . . - Do not guarantee (for someone), that man will
have a hold on you'
6Early Dynastic Period 2900-2300
- Kings Cities
- City-state in the South, but not in the North
- Land owned by King, temple private ownership.
- Ruler were protectors of the city
- Most inhabitants of the city played a role in the
cult. - Royal Courts
- War King played a prominent role
7Early Dynastic Period 2900-2300
- King Lists
- "Several king lists are known from Mesopotamia,
some of which try to bridge the obscure,
prehistoric times with legendary dynasties. One
of these is the Sumerian King list composed in
the Isin-Larsa period, c. 1900 B.C. It begins
with eight kings who ruled 241,000 years before
the Flood. This is followed by a succession of
dynasties First that of Kish credited with over
24,510 years second, Uruk - twelve kings ruling
ruling 2,310 years Third Ur four rulers for
177 years, and so down to the Isin-Larsa period.
Beginning with First dynasty of Ur it becomes a
reliable historical record." Schwantes, A Short
History of the Ancient Near East, 24
8Early Dynastic Period 2900-2300
- Society
- "It has been demonstrated that slavery never
played a major role in Mesopotamia, probably
because it was economically unfeasible,
especially for industrial purposes, before
Greco-Roman times slaves were confined largely
to domestic duties and represented a luxury in
any household." Hallo Simpson, The Ancient
Near East A History, 49-50 - The "Uruinimgina reform" "Uruinimgina solemnly
promised Ningirsu that he would never subject the
waif and the widow to the powerful." (Kuhrt, The
Ancient Near East, 39
9Early Dynastic Period 2900-2300
- First Dynasty of Ur (c. 2500 BCE)
- "The Sumerian king list mentions as first ruler
of this dynasty Meshannipadda, supposed to have
ruled eighty years. Excavations in Ur have
brought to light his name, as well as that of his
wife Nintur, and his son Aannipadda, who built
the temple in Al-)Ubaid . . . ." Schwantes, A
Short History of the Ancient Near East, 24 - Royal Tomb . . . N.B. Queen Shubad's gold jewery.
10Standard of Ur Sumerian, 3000-2340 B.C.E.
11Ur-Nina Family 3000-2180
12Harp of Shabad 3500-3000
13Goat in Thicket 3000 BCE
14Sumerian Literature
- "Sumerian literature is comparable in sheer size
to biblical literature. A recent survey estimates
the number of lines so far recovered at
approximately 40,000 bearing in mind that most
Sumerian literature is poetic in form and that
the typical Sumerian verse may be somewhat
shorter than the typical biblical verse, this
already compares favorably with the total of
biblical verses in the Masoretic count, recently
calculated at 23,097 (Hallo 1988). Much of
Sumerian literature still remains to be
recovered." W. W. Hallo, "Sumerian Literature,"
ABD CD-Rom
15Sumerian Literature
- Genre in the Early Period (2500-2300)
- Incantations already from Shuruppak Ebla, later
used to ward off evil spirits. There is no
parallel literature in the Bible - "Hymns to deities and their temples are also
attested from a very early date. Some of the
finest are attributed to Enheduanna, daughter of
Sargon of Akkad and the first non-anonymous
author in history." W. W. Hallo, "Sumerian
Literature," ABD CD-Rom
16Sumerian Literature
- "Sumerian myths and epics are generically also
hymns, but confine praise of their divine or
royal protagonist to their concluding doxology,
while the body of the poem is narrative in
character." W. W. Hallo, "Sumerian Literature,"
ABD CD-Rom - "The common man is notably the focus of wisdom
literature, so called in imitation of the
biblical category though wisdom itself is not
prominently mentioned, as it often is in
Proverbs, Job, and Ecclesiastes. The earliest
attested wisdom genres are instructions and
proverbs." W. W. Hallo, "Sumerian Literature,"
ABD CD-Rom
17Sumerian Literature
- Neo-Sumerian Period 2200-1900
- "The deification of the Sumerian king during this
phase led to a certain commingling of sacred and
royal literature and to the emergence of several
new genres responding to the new ideology. The
king was regarded at once as of divine and human
parentage, the product of a physical union in
which the royal partners represented deities,
most often Dumuzi and Inanna or their Akkadian
equivalents Tammuz (cf. Ezek 814) and Ishtar. An
extensive body of poetry celebrated these sacred
marriage rites and, together with more strictly
secular love poetry addressed to the king or
recited antiphonally by him and his bride,
anticipated the Song of Songs in its explicit
eroticism."
18Sumerian Religion
- "Each city housed a temple that was the seat of a
major god in the Sumerian pantheon, as the gods
controlled the powerful forces which often
dictated a human's fate. The city leaders had a
duty to please the town's patron deity, not only
for the good will of that god or goddess, but
also for the good will of the other deities in
the council of gods. The priesthood initially
held this role, and even after secular kings
ascended to power, the clergy still held great
authority through the interpretation of omens and
dreams. Many of the secular kings claimed divine
right Sargon of Agade, for example claimed to
have been chosen by Ishtar/Inanna."
http//pubpages.unh.edu/cbsiren/sumer-faq.html
98/09/20
19Sumerian Religion
- "The rectangular central shrine of the temple,
known as a 'cella,' had a brick altar or offering
table in front of a statue of the temple's deity.
The cella was lined on its long ends by many
rooms for priests and priestesses. These
mud-brick buildings were decorated with cone
geometrical mosaics, and the occasional fresco
with human and animal figures. These temple
complexes eventually evolved into towering
ziggurats." http//pubpages.unh.edu/cbsiren/sume
r-faq.html 98/09/20
20Sumerian Religion
- "The temple was staffed by priests, priestesses,
musicians, singers, castrates and hierodules.
Various public rituals, food sacrifices, and
libations took place there on a daily basis.
There were monthly feasts and annual, New Year
celebrations. During the later, the king would be
married to Inanna as the resurrected fertility
god Dumuzi, whose exploits are dealt with below."
http//pubpages.unh.edu/cbsiren/sumer-faq.html
98/09/20
21Sumerian Religion
- "When it came to more private matters, a Sumerian
remained devout. Although the gods preferred
justice and mercy, they had also created evil and
misfortune. A Sumerian had little that he could
do about it. Judging from Lamentation records,
the best one could do in times of duress would be
to "plead, lament and wail, tearfully confessing
his sins and failings." Their family god or city
god might intervene on their behalf, but that
would not necessarily happen. After all, man was
created as a broken, labor saving, tool for the
use of the gods and at the end of everyone's
life, lay the underworld, a generally dreary
place." http//pubpages.unh.edu/cbsiren/sumer-fa
q.html 98/09/20
22Sumerian Cosmology
- "From verses scattered throughout hymns and
myths, one can compile a picture of the
universe's (anki) creation according to the
Sumerians. The primeval sea (abzu) existed before
anything else and within that, the heaven (an)
and the earth (ki) were formed. The boundary
between heaven and earth was a solid (perhaps
tin) vault, and the earth was a flat disk. Within
the vault lay the gas-like 'lil', or atmosphere,
the brighter portions therein formed the stars,
planets, sun, and moon. (Kramer, The Sumerians
1963 pp. 112-113) Each of the four major Sumerian
23Sumerian Cosmology
- deities is associated with one of these regions.
An, god of heaven, may have been the main god of
the pantheon prior to 2500 BC., although his
importance gradually waned. Ki is likely to be
the original name of the earth goddess, whose
name more often appears as Ninhursag (queen of
the mountains), Ninmah (the exalted lady), or
Nintu (the lady who gave birth). It seems likely
that these two were the progenitors of most of
the gods." http//pubpages.unh.edu/cbsiren/sumer
-faq.html 98/09/20
24The Akkad Empire
- Lugalzagesi of Uruk
- "Stemming, apparently, from Umma, Lugal-zagesi
succeeded, either by force or through a dynastic
arrangement, in establishing himself at Uruk and
Ur (Cooper 1983b 3336). He then added Lagash to
his possessions and, by securing for himself the
recognition of the Nippur priesthood, became the
first S ruler to achieve an effective hegemony
over the whole S."
25The Akkad Empire
- Period Names Agade Empire Old Akkadian
Empire/period Akkadian Period Sargonic Period. - Sargon the Great
- "Sargon's origins and rise to power are totally
obscured by the various romances associated with
him later . . . . a 'rag to riches' story. . . ."
Kuhrt, 48
26The Akkad Empire
- Sargon, mighty king, king of Agade, am I
- My mother was an e4ntum, my father I knew not
- My father's brother(s) dwell in the mountain
- My city is Azupiranu, situated on the banks of
the Euphrates - My mother, the e4ntum, conceived me, in secret
she bore me - She placed me in a basket of rushes, she sealed
'my door' with bitumen - She cast me into the river which did not rise
over me
27The Akkad Empire
- The river bore me up and carried me to Aqqi, the
water-drawer. - Aqqi, the water-drawer, lifted me out as he
dipped his ewer - Aqqi, the water-drawer, adopted me, brought me
up - Aqqi, the water-drawer, set me up as his
gardener. - As a gardener, Ishtar loved me
- For 55 years I exercised kingship.
28The Akkad Empire
- "Sargon seems to have been of humble birth."
Hallo Simpson, 55 - Becomes the cup-bearer to Ur-Zababa of Kish.
- Makes Agade his capital boasts of feeding 5400
daily. - Troops used bow and spears and move with more
freedom than Uruk Ur . . . . - Rule extents into Anatolia, down to the Persian
Gulf. - Makes Akkadian the universal language.
29The Akkad Empire
- Makes his daughter Enheduanna a priestess. (See
CD-Rom Vol. 1 D\Enheduanna\index.html) - Rimush
- Subdued several revolts
- Assassinated after 9 years
- Manishtushu
- Ruled for 15 years
- Naram-Sin
- Rules for 56 years
30The Akkad Empire
- ". . . The royal titulary, which hitherto had
been content to specify the political or cultic
relationship between the ruler and his
geographical domain that is, "lord/high priest
of Sumer, king of the nation" or "lord/high
priest of the territory of Uruk, king of the
territory of Ur." On what appears to be his
earliest inscription, Naram-Sin claims, or was
accorded, the modest title of king of the Akkad.
But about halfway through his reign he introduced
the title "king of the four quarters of the
world" which was assumed after him by all those
kings who
31The Akkad Empire
- proudly aspired to universal dominion from a
Mesopotamian base. Not content with earthly
honors, Naram-Sin presently also allowed himself
to be entitled "god of Akkad," which at first may
have implied only that he was the guiding
"genius" or good fortune of his country. The
concept of a "divine Naram-Sin" quickly evolved,
however, and with it a cult of the living ruler
and his deceased predecessors that was, for
practical purposes, indistinguishable from the
cult of the 'real' gods and, like theirs,
centered around the king's statue." Hallo
Simpson, 60-1
32The Akkad Empire
- A Period of great battles won by Naram-Sin (N.B.
Victory Stela) - Period of great Art
- Shar-kali-sharri
- The End of Akkad Empire
- Gutians from Zagros
- Amorites from Syria
- Hurrians from Anatolia
- Lullubi
- Elamites
33The Akkad Empire
- Major Significance
- "Sumerian language, culture and military art were
superseded by that of the Akkadian." - "The state socialism of the Sumerian cities gave
place to a centralized government, operated by a
bureaucracy under the surveillance of the crown." - "Trade caravans follow everywhere in the wake of
the army."
34The Akkad Empire
- "The tension between the classes is forgotten in
the splendor of world dominion." - "The political ascendancy of Akkad is accompanied
by the rising prestige of the Akkadian god
Shamash, the sun-god of Sippar, son of the
moon-god Sin. Together Shamash, Sin, and the
Venus-goddess Ishtar Anunitu build the core of an
Akkadian religion of astral character which
contrasts with the agrarian religion of the
Sumerians." - Schwantes, A Short History of the Ancient Near
East, 29
35Enheduanna Sargon the Great's Daughter
36Ur III Period (2100-2000)
- From the End of Akkad to the rise of Ur
- "The picture of south Mesopotamia under the last
Agade rulers and for a generation beyond is
reminiscent of the political pattern of the ED
III period, when power was divided among several
different local rulers the main centres now were
Uruk, Lagash, Kish, Agade and Gutians in the
Diyala." Kuhrt, 56
37Ur III Period (2100-2000)
- Utuhegal of Uruk
- "The expulsion of the Gutians was achieved by
Utuhegal of Uruk. But Utuhegal did not enjoy his
victory long. His vassal, Urnammu of Ur, revolts
against him and makes himself "king of Sumer and
Akkad." He thus inaugurates the Third Dynasty of
Ur which is able to hold the rule for about a
century." Schwantes, 29
38Ur III Period (2100-2000)
- Urnammu of Ur
- Non-expansionist policy
- Collected a law code that was found in Nippur
- Nabonidus (7th century BCE) identifies Urnammu
and his son Shulgi as those who built the
ziggurat at Ur. - The population of Ur at this time was about
25,000 according to Frankfort
39Ur III Period (2100-2000)
- Shulgi
- Rules for 50 years after his father.
- "The orphan I certainly did not consign to the
rich man, the widow I certainly did not consign
to the powerful man, the 'man of 1 sheqel' I
certainly did not consign to the 'man of 1 mina',
the 'man of 1 sheep' I certainly did not consign
to the 'man of 1 ox' . . . Hostility, violence,
(and) lamentation to Utu (sungod, and god of
justice) I caused to disappear definitively I
set justice in the land of Sumer." - Succeeded by Amarsin, Shusin, Ibbisin.
40Ur III Period (2100-2000)
- Gudea, ensi in Lagash
- "He left so may sculpture of himself, and so many
inscriptions, that no other Sumerian character is
so well known as he." Schwantes, 31
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43Mesopotamia 2000-1600 BCE
- Background
- Ibbisin of Ur defeated by the Elamites.
- Kudur-Mabug takes the mountain area of West Iran,
Yamutbal - Waradsin . . . . Younger brother, Rimsin. Takes
Uruk, Isin and Larsa. - The Amorites move into Western Mesopotamia
- Mari dominated by Amorites
- Ishbi-irra takes over Isin . . . . The last in
this line is the famous Lipit-ishtar - Naplanum is over Larsa
44Elamite Rule 2100-2000 BCE
45Mesopotamia 2000-1600 BCE
- Babylon
- Amorite Sumu-abum
- Sumulailu (36 years) collects a law code.
- Assyria
- Take Ilishuma and Irishum
- The only kings without foreign blood
46Mesopotamia 2000-1600 BCE
- Hammurapi
- "The sixth and best attested of 11 kings in the
so-called First Dynasty of Babylon (also known as
Hammurabi), whose extensive collection of laws
provides numerous correspondences with biblical
law. During his 43-year reign the city of Babylon
for the first time rose to prominence as the hub
of a short-lived but extensive empire, which
declined after his death. Although each of the 42
years following his accession year is identified
sequentially with an event considered significant
(building projects, pious royal donations to
temples, wars), like other events in the early 2d
millennium b.c. the absolute dates of Hammurapi
47Mesopotamia 2000-1600 BCE
- remain uncertain. Astronomical data narrow the
likely date for Hammurapis first year to the
years 1848 or 1792 or 1736 (the so-called high,
middle, and low chronology respectively)."
Samuel A. Meier, "Hammurapi," ABD CD-Rom - Amorite descent
- "There is no king mighty by himself."
- ". . . five primary coalitions 10 to 15 kings
follow Hammurapi of Babylon, a like number of
kings each following Rim-Sin of Larsa, Ibal-pi-el
of Eshnunna, and Amut-pi-el of Qatana, while
Yarim-Lim of Yamhad stands out with 20 kings
following him."
48Mesopotamia 2000-1600 BCE
- "This balance began to shift when, according to
Hammurapis 30th-year date formula, he fought and
protected his borders against Elam, Assyria,
Gutium, Eshnunna, and Malgium the following year
he defeated Rim-Sin of Larsa. In order to defeat
Rim-Sin, Hammurapi exploited the combined power
of the above-noted royal coalitions by soliciting
military support from the kings of Mari and
Eshnunna (ARM 2. 33). Kings with foresight
advised, Dont provide the man of Babylon with
auxiliary troops! (ARM 6. 27) for Hammurapi
eventually turned against even those to whom he
once turned for help, a notable case being the
king of Mari, who had commemorated
49Mesopotamia 2000-1600 BCE
- his assistance in his own year date formula
The year Zimri-Lim went to the aid of Babylon. - "The year following Rim-Sins defeat began an
eight-year period of persistent attacks by
Hammurapi to the N, beginning with his defeat of
the armies of Eshnunna, Assyria, and Gutium. This
N campaign was repeated in the following year
when he this time defeated Mari and Malgu,
returning two years later to demolish their
walls. The 37th-, 38th-, and 39th-year date
formulas record Hammurapis victories against his
foes to the N."
50Mesopotamia 2000-1600 BCE
- Prologue to Law Code
- "The Shepherd . . . who gathers the scattered
people of Isin . . . who causes justice to appear
. . . who causes the light to shine for the land
of Sumer and Akkad, . . . I uprooted the enemies
above and below, I extinguished strife, I
promoted the welfare of the land, . . . I
tolerated no trouble-makers . . . that the strong
might not oppress the weak, to guide properly the
orphan and the widow."
51Mesopotamia 2000-1600 BCE
- ". . . when Amorite messengers from the N once
received an audience with Hammurapi, an
inequality in gifts of garments on this occasion
was perceived as an insult. Hammurapi was
reported to have replied curtly to the messengers
as he insisted on his absolute sovereignty You
always cause trouble for me. Now you are
harassing my palace about garments. I clothe
those whom I wish and if I dont wish, I dont
provide garments! (ARM 2. 76)." - "Hammurapi is heard elsewhere imperiously
insulting visiting dignitaries Ill return the
Elamite messengers to their lord without escort!
(ARM 2. 73)."
52Mesopotamia 2000-1600 BCE
- "On the other hand, Hammurapis vassal rulers of
what is now Tell-Rimah received a report from
their son, who notes I reached Babylon safely
and have seen the king Hammurapi in a good mood
(Dalley et al. 1976 135)." - "The reign of Hammurapi, with its expanding
horizons for Babylon, facilitated the enhancement
of enriched cultural and cosmopolitan dimensions
in Babylonian society. The flourishing of scribal
activity is evident not only in the numerous
administrative documents from this period, but
also in the quantity of OB literary texts
(themselves already heirs to a long tradition),
which were to set the standard for future
literary activity into the 1st millennium b.c."
53Mesopotamia 2000-1600 BCE
- Successors
- "Under the successors of Hammurabi, Babylon
gradually loses its power. Shamshuiluna his son
must fight internal revolts and repel an invasion
of the Kassites which poured in from the
mountains of Luristan. In the south, Ilumailu a
descendant of the last ruler of the dynasty of
Isin succeeds in breaking away from Babylon,
founding by the Persian Gulf the Sea-land
dynasty, which remains independent for several
centuries . . . . Things go from bad to worse
until under Shamshuditana, the last king of the
dynasty, the Hittite Mursilis I conquers Babylon
in 1531 BC and carries a heavy booty away."
Schwantes, 40
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