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Mesopotamia:
A bit of ancient history
As you will see
in the little map to the right, Mesopotamia, the land so familiar to
us from the Bible's Old Testament, is almost entirely within the
borders of Iraq. Without taking political sides, may we ask that you
pray for this country which has a deep meaning in our ancient
cultures.
Mesopotamia was
an ancient civilization that lasted from 3500 to 500 B.C., when it
was conquered by Persia and is the name for a region in the Middle
East.
Civilization
began in a region known as Mesopotamia, which is Greek for "land
between the rivers." The "rivers" are the Tigris and Euphrates,
located in Western Asia, in fertile areas of Iraq northeast of the
desert. This region is known as part of the "Fertile Crescent" that
extends along the coast of the Mediterranean Sea (including modern
Israel, Lebanon and Syria) and the fertile valleys of the Tigris and
Euphrates rivers that run southeast into the Persian Gulf. These
rivers deposited silt in the surrounding land, creating rich
alluvial soil. Today the Tigris and Euphrates rivers are not far
from the location of our soldiers in Iraq. However, our soldiers are
mostly pictured in sandy areas, while the ancient people would have
stayed close to the water. Moreover, ancient floods would have
changed the landscape over time.
Genesis 2:8-17
(RSV) describes the beginning in Mesopotamia as follows: "And the
LORD God planted a garden in Eden, in the east; and there he put the
man whom he had formed. And out of the ground the LORD God made to
grow every tree that is pleasant to the sight and good for food, the
tree of life also in the midst of the garden, and the tree of the
knowledge of good and evil. A river flowed out of Eden to water the
garden, and there it divided and became four rivers. The name of the
first is Pishon; it is the one which flows around the whole land of
Havilah, where there is gold; and the gold of that land is good;
bdellium and onyx stone are there. The name of the second river is
Gihon; it is the one which flows around the whole land of Cush. And
the name of the third river is Tigris, which flows east of Assyria.
And the fourth river is the Euphrates. The LORD God took the man and
put him in the garden of Eden to till it and keep it. And the LORD
God commanded the man, saying, "You may freely eat of every tree of
the garden; but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you
shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall die."
Using the ages mentioned in the Bible and counting backwards,
biblical scholars have dated this as about 6000 years ago, or about
4000 B.C. This is about 500 years before our earliest record of
ancient writings.
In the fourth
millennium before Christ, between about 3500 and 3000 B.C., two
things happened: writing was invented and cities began to sprout up
with their own political and economic systems. Both of these
developments occurred in southern Mesopotamia. This was known as
Sumer, and the occupants were the Sumerians.
We owe a great
deal to the work of the Sumerians. They developed the first system
of writing (the cuneiform), the first codes of law and the first
"city-state" (essentially a nation consisting only of a large city).
Their inventions were marvelous: the seed plow, the sailboat, and
the potter's wheel.
Most workers in
Mesopotamia were farmers, but some devoted their time to trade. They
had a calendar based on the moon to aid the farmers, and they
developed a mathematical system using base 12. They were marvelous
inventors, creating complex systems of irrigation and discovering
the plow, the cart and the wheel, and used bronze (a mixture of
copper and tin) to make good farming tools. Both men and women owned
private property, had slaves, and were ruled by a king.
They built
cities known as Eridu, Lagash, Ur, Uruk, Isin, Kish, just to name a
few. They were smart, and developed Akkadian as their language. One
interesting aspect of Akkadian is that it lacks any tense forms such
as past or future tense. The verbs expressed the manner of an action
rather than its time.
By 3000 B.C. the
people had built major canals to channel water, and roads on which
to travel. Shepherds had dogs to help them tend the sheep, just as
we use today to help herd sheep together. Each city was surrounded
by a moat and a wall of brick, with as many as 900 towers inside the
city. Soldiers watched entry back and forth, and chariots and wagons
carried people and goods within the city. By 3000 B.C. mankind had
already built a mini-version of Manhattan, without the automobile
and steel skyscrapers. But Mesopotamia (unlike Egypt and China) was
not protected by geography, and would constantly face invasion by
foreigners.
Do not think
there was anything primitive about these ancient cities. They had
shipping, fishing, brewers and bakers. They spun wool and traded
fine jewelry. They discovered the Pythagorean Theorem, though it was
later named after a Greek. In 2500 B.C., the queen of Ur, which was
a prominent city, lived in a palace that featured harps and many
servants. Slavery existed, but it was typically confined to domestic
work in the cities rather than hard labor on the farm. Slaves were
given a minimum standard of living and often had the opportunity to
rise to freedom through diligent work.
Temples were
everywhere. But the people also built stepped mountains known as
ziggurats, with a temple on top, and the Bible tells how they tried
to build one higher and higher. A massive ziggurat at Ur that is
described in Genesis 11:1-9 as the Tower of Babel led to hundreds of
different languages in the world. As we shall learn in this course,
language is a central part of a society that has much to do with its
success or failure. Societies with useful languages prospered; those
with difficult-to-use languages failed.
Genesis Chapter
10 places the roots of modern mankind in Noah and his three sons:
Shem, Ham and Japheth. The term "Semitic" means "pertaining to the
descendants of Shem," and includes Assyrians, Chaldeans, Aramaeans,
Sabaeans, Arabs and Hebrews (now known as Jews). Semitic languages
include Hebrew and Arabic. Semitic religions include Judaism,
Christianity and Islam. One of Noah's descendants was Abram, who
later changed his name as Abraham to reflect his covenant with God.
Both the Bible
and many independent sources describe a Great Flood (or "Deluge"),
which historians date at about 3000 B.C. Very little of any history,
including writings and civilization, has survived from before that
time. The biblical account of the Flood is at Genesis 5-8,
describing an ark having reasonable dimensions similar to modern
ocean steamships. A non-biblical Sumerian (from Sumer in
Mesopotamia) account of the Flood was found in the last hundred
years, and that account was apparently written about 1600 B.C. Even
better, a cuneiform tablet from Babylon was found dating from 3000
B.C., which also described a massive flood in great detail.
There are many
other ancient accounts of a massive flood found in most other
cultures around the world. Fossils and limestone (the result of
ocean sediment) are found today on mountaintops and land worldwide
at all altitudes. Recently two scientists at Columbia University
published a widely praised book that proved that the Flood did
occur, entitled "Noah's Flood," which concludes that the biblical
Flood "is surely a true story of the permanent destruction of a land
and its people ...." (p. 251). Yet no public school textbook ever
mentions a massive flood.
Civilization
quickly prospered in Sumeria, the northwest (Akkad) was constantly
fighting the southeast (Sumer), and eventually an Akkadian warrior
named Sargon conquered Mesopotamia. Sargon was the first person in
recorded history to create an empire or multi-ethnic state, from
2334 to 2279 B.C. His empire included the region of the Tigris and
Euphrates rivers, and also part of what is Turkey today. The capital
of his empire was Agade in Akkad. But like many military rulers, his
empire collapsed when he died. He did not have a civil
(non-military) form of government to pay his soldiers and sustain
his empire. Instead, he could only survive as long his soldiers
continued to capture and loot. Once the empire stopped expanded upon
his death, it collapsed. After Sargon's death, the city of Ur in
Sumer was the leading city.
In sum, the
Sumerians established many of the things that define civilization
today: buildings, engineering, legal codes, written language and a
military. The Sumerians also had literature: in 2000 B.C., they
wrote "The Epic of Gilgamesh," considered to be oldest fictional
story ever written. It was based on a real person, however, who
ruled a city-state in Sumer. He struggles with religious issues in
the form of multiple gods, and the story seems to draw on some of
the wisdom of the Bible. This non-biblical source also describes a
great flood.
Inventions: We can thank Mesopotamia (probably Ur) for inventing the
wheel in about 3500 B.C., which is the single greatest invention of
all time. It is used for much more than transportation. The wheel is
essential to manufacturing and even pre-digital watches. No American
civilization had the wheel until the Europeans brought it to them.
Source: "http://www.conservapedia.com/Mesopotamia"
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