READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF SUMER AND AKKADCHAPTER III THE AGE AND PRINCIPAL ACHIEVEMENTS OF SUMERIAN CIVILIZATION
In
attempting to set limits to the earlier periods of Sumerian history, it
is still impossible to do more than form a rough and approximate
estimate of their duration. For in dealing with the chronology of the
remoter ages, we are, to a great extent, groping in the dark. The
material that has been employed for settling the order of the early
kings, and for determining their periods, falls naturally into three
main classes. The most important of our sources of information consists
of the contemporary inscriptions of the early kings themselves, which
have been recovered upon the sites of the ancient cities in Babylonia.
The inscriptions frequently give genealogies of the rulers whose
achievements they record, and they thus enable us to ascertain the
sequence of the kings and the relative dates at which they reigned. This
class of evidence also makes it possible to fix certain points of
contact between the separate lines of rulers who maintained an
independent authority within the borders of their city-states. A
second class of material, which is of even greater importance for
settling the chronology of the later Sumerian epoch, comprises the
chronological documents drawn up by early scribes, who incorporated in
the form of lists and tables the history of their own time and that of
their predecessors. The system of dating documents which was in vogue
was not a very convenient one from the point of view of those who used
it, but it has furnished us with an invaluable
But
the disadvantages of the system are obvious, for an event might appear
of great importance in one city and might be of no interest to another
situated at some distance from it. Thus it happened that the same event
was not employed throughout the whole country for designating a
particular year, and we have evidence that different systems of dating
were employed in different cities. Moreover, it would have required an
unusually good memory to fix the exact period of a document by a single
reference to an event which took place in the year when it was drawn up,
more especially after the system had been in use for a considerable
time. Thus, in order to fix the relative dates of documents without
delay, the scribes compiled lists of the titles of the years, arranged
in order under the reigns of the successive kings, and these were
doubtless stored in some archive-chamber, where they were easily
accessible in the case of any dispute arising with regard to the date of
a particular year. It is fortunate that some of these early Sumerian
date-lists have been recovered, and we are furnished by them with an
outline of Sumerian history, which has the value of a contemporary
record. They have thrown light upon a period of which at one time we
knew little, and they have served to remove more than one erroneous
supposition. Thus the so-called Second Dynasty of Ur was proved by them
to have been non-existent, and the consequent reduplication of kings
bearing the names of Ur-Engur and Dungi was shown to have had no
foundation in fact. From
the compilation of lists of the separate years it was but a step to the
classification of the reigns of the kings themselves and their
arrangement in the form of dynasties. Among the mass of tablets
recovered from Niffer has been found a fragment of one of these early
dynastic tablets, which supplements the date-lists and is of the
greatest value for settling the chronology of the later period. The
reverse of the tablet gives complete lists of the names of the kings who
formed the Dynasties of Ur and Isin, together with notes as to the
length of their respective reigns, and it further states that the
Dynasty of Isin directly succeeded that of Ur. This document fixes once
for all the length of the period to which it refers, and it is much to
be regretted that so little of the text has been recovered. Our
information is at present confined to what is legible on part of one
column of the tablet. But the text in its complete form must have
contained no less than six columns of writing, and it probably gave a
list of various dynasties which ruled in Babylonia from the very
earliest times down to the date of its compilation, though many of the
dynasties enumerated were doubtless contemporaneous. It was on the base
of such documents as this dynastic list that the famous dynastic tablet
was compiled for the library of Ashurbanipal at Nineveh, and the
existence of such lengthy dynastic records must have contributed to the
exaggerated estimate for the beginnings of Babylonian history which have
come down to us from the work of Berossus. A
third class of material for settling the chronology has been found in
the external evidence afforded by the early historical and votive
inscriptions to which reference has already been made, and by tablets of
accounts, deeds of sale, and numerous documents of a commercial and
agricultural character. From a study of their form and material, the
general style of the writing, and the nature of the characters employed,
a rough estimate may sometimes be made as to the time at which a
particular record was inscribed, or the length of a period covered by
documents of different reigns. Further, in the course of the excavations
undertaken at any site, careful note may be made of the relative depths
of the strata in which inscriptions have been found. Thus, if texts of
certain kings occur in a mound at a greater depth than those of other
rulers, and it appears from an examination of the earth that the mound
has not been disturbed by subsequent building operations or by natural
causes, it may be inferred that the deeper the stratum in which a text
is found the earlier must be the date to be assigned to it. But this
class of evidence, whether obtained from palaeographical study or from
systematic excavation, is sometimes uncertain and liable to more than
one interpretation. In such cases it may only be safely employed when it
agrees with other and independent considerations, and where additional
support is not forthcoming, it is wiser to regard conclusions based upon
it as provisional. The
three classes of evidence that have been referred to in the preceding
paragraphs enable us to settle the relative order of many of the early
rulers of Babylonia, but they do not supply us with any definite date by
means of which the chronology of these earlier ages may be brought into
relation with that of the later periods of Babylonian history. In order
to secure such a point of connection, reliance has in the past been
placed upon a notice of one of the early rulers of Babylonia, which
occurs in an inscription of the last king of the Neo-Babylonian empire.
On a clay cylinder of Nabonidus, which is preserved in the British
Museum, it is stated that 3200 years elapsed between the burial of
Naram-Sin's foundation-memorial in the temple of the Sun-god at Sippar,
and the finding of the memorial by Nabonidus himself when digging in the
temple's foundations. Now Naram-Sin was an early king of Akkad, and,
according to later tradition, was the son of the still more famous
Sargon I. On the strength of the figure given by Nabonidus, the
approximate date of 3750 B.C. has been assigned to Naram-Sin, and that
of 3800 B.C. to his father Sargon; and mainly on the basis of these
early dates the beginning of Sumerian history has been set back as far
as 5000 and even 6000 BC. The
improbably high estimate of Nabonidus for the date of Naram-Sin has
long been the subject of criticism. It is an entirely isolated
statement, unsupported by any other reference in early or late texts;
and the scribes who were responsible for it were clearly not anxious to
diminish the antiquity of the foundation-record, which had been found at
such a depth below the later temple's foundations, and after so
prolonged a search. To accept it as accurate entailed the leaving of
enormous gaps in the chronological schemes, even when postulating the
highest possible dates for the dynasties of Ur and Babylon. An
alternative device of partially filling the gaps by the invention of
kings and even dynasties was not a success, as their existence has since
been definitely disproved. Moreover, the recent reduction in the date
of the First Dynasty of Babylon, necessitated by the proof that the
first three dynasties of the Kings' List were partly contemporaneous,
made its discrepancy with Nabonidus's figures still more glaring, while
at the same time it furnished a possible explanation of so high a figure
resulting from his calculations. For his scribes in all good faith may
have reckoned as consecutive a number of early dynasties which had been
contemporaneous. The final disproof of the figure is furnished by
evidence of an archaeological and epigraphic character. No such long
interval as twelve or thirteen hundred years can have separated the art
of Gudea's period from that of Naram-Sin; and the clay tablets of the
two epochs differ so little in shape, and in the forms of the characters
with which they are inscribed, that we must regard the two ages as
immediately following one another without any considerable break. By rejecting the figures of Nabonidus we cut away our only external connection with the chronology of the later periods, and, in order to evolve a scheme for earlier times we have to fall back on a process of reckoning from below. Without discussing in detail the later chronology, it will be well to indicate briefly the foundations on which we can begin to build. By the aid of the Ptolemaic Canon, whose accuracy is confirmed by the larger List of Kings and the principal Babylonian Chronicle, the later chronology of Babylon is definitely fixed back to the year 747 BC; by means of the eponym lists that for Assyria is fixed back to the year 911 BC. Each scheme controls and confirms the other, and the solar eclipse of June 15th, 763 BC, which is recorded in the eponymy of Pur-Sagale, places the dead reckoning for these later periods upon an absolutely certain basis. For the earlier periods of Babylonian history, as far back as the foundation of the Babylonian monarchy, a chronological framework has been supplied by the principal List of Kings. In spite of gaps in the text which render the lengths of Dynasties IV and VIII uncertain, it is possible, mainly by the help of synchronisms between Assyrian and Babylonian kings, to fix approximately the date of Dynasty III. Some difference of opinion exists with regard to this date, but the beginning of the dynasty may be placed at about the middle of the eighteenth century BC. With
regard to Dynasty II of the King's List it is now known that it ruled
in the Sea-country in the region of the Persian Gulf, its earlier kings
being contemporary with the close of Dynasty I and its later ones with
the early part of Dynasty III. Here we come to the first of two points
on which there is a considerable difference of opinion. The available
evidence suggests that the kings of the Sea-country never ruled in
Babylon, and that the Third, or Kassite, Dynasty followed the First
Dynasty of Babylon without any considerable break. But the date 2232 BC,
which probably represents the beginning of the non-mythical dynasties
of Berossus, has hitherto played a considerable part in modern schemes
of chronology, and, in spite of the fact that no amount of ingenuity can
reconcile his dynasties with those of history, there is still a strong
temptation to retain the date for the beginning of Dynasty I of the
Kings' List as affording a fixed and certain point from which to start
calculations. But this can only be done by assuming that some of the
kings of the Sea-country ruled over the whole of Babylonia, an
assumption that is negatived by such historical and archaeological
evidence as we possess. It is safer to treat the date 2232 BC as without
significance, and to follow the evidence in confining the kings of the
Sea-country to their own land. If we do this we obtain a date for the
foundation of the Babylonian monarchy about the middle of the
twenty-first century BC. The
second important point on which opinion is not agreed, concerns the
relation of the First Dynasty of Babylon to that of Isin. From the
Nippur dynastic list we know the duration of the dynasties of Ur and
Isin, and if we could connect the latter with the First Dynasty of
Babylon, we should be able to carry a fixed chronology at least as far
back as the age of Gudea. Such a point of connection has been suggested
in the date-formula for the seventeenth year of Sin-muballit's reign,
which records a capture of Isin; and by identifying this event with the
fall of the dynasty, it is assumed that the kings of Isin and of Babylon
overlapped for a period of about ninety-nine years. In a later chapter
the evidence is discussed on which this theory rests, and it is shown
that the capture of Isin in Sin-muballit's seventeenth year had nothing
to do with the dynasty of that name, but was an episode in the later
struggle between Babylon and Larsa. We thus have no means of deciding
what interval, if any, separated the two dynasties from one another, and
consequently all the earlier dates remain only approximate. The
contract-tablets dating from the period of the Dynasty of Isin, which
have been found at Nippur, are said to resemble closely those of the
First Babylonian Dynasty in form, material, writing, and terminology. It
would thus appear that no long interval separated the two dynasties
from one another. We have seen that the foundation of the Babylonian
monarchy may be set in about the middle of the twenty-first century BC,
and by placing the end of the Dynasty of Isin within the first half of
that same century we obtain the approximate dates of 2300 BC for the
Dynasty of Isin, and 2400 BC for the Dynasty of Ur. It is true that we
know that the Dynasty of Ur lasted for exactly one hundred and seventeen
years, and that of Isin for two hundred and twenty-five years and a
half, but until we can definitely connect the Dynasty of Isin with that
of Babylon, any attempt to work out the dates in detail would be
misleading. We must be content to await the recovery of new material,
and meanwhile to think in periods. There is evidence that Ur-Engur established his rule in Ur, and founded his dynasty in the time of Ur-Ningirsu, the son of Gudea of Lagash. We may therefore place Gudea's accession at about 2450 BC. This date is some thirteen hundred years later than that assigned to Naram-Sin by Nabonidus. But the latter, we have already seen, must be reduced, in accordance with evidence furnished by Tello tablets, which are dated in the reigns of the intermediate patesis of Lagash. If we set this interval at one hundred and fifty years, we obtain for Naram-Sin a date of 2600 BC, and for Shar-Gani-Sharri one of 2650 BC. For the later Semitic kings of Kish, headed by Sharru-Gi, one hundred years is not too much to allow; we thus obtain for Sharru-Gi the approximate date of 2750 B.C. It is possible that Manishtusu, King of Kish, was the contemporary of Urukagina of Lagash, but the evidence in favour of the synchronism is not sufficiently strong to justify its acceptance. By placing Urukagina at 2800 BC, we obtain for Ur-Nina an approximate date of 3000 BC, and for still earlier rulers such as Mesilim, a date rather earlier than this. It is difficult to estimate the age of the early graves, cylinder-seals and tablets found at Fara, but they cannot be placed at a much later period than 3400 BC. Thus the age of Sumerian civilization can be traced in Babylonia back to about the middle of the fourth millennium BC, but not beyond. It
must be confessed that this is a reduction in the date usually assigned
to the earliest relics that have been recovered of the Sumerian
civilization, but its achievements are by no means belittled by the
compression of its period of development. It is not suggested that this
date marks the beginning of Sumerian culture, for, as we have noted, it
is probable that the race was already possessed of a high standard of
civilization on their arrival in Babylonia. The invention of cuneiform
writing, which was one of their most noteworthy achievements, had
already taken place, for the characters in the earliest inscriptions
recovered have lost their pictorial form. Assuming the genuineness of
the "Blau Monuments", it must be admitted that even on them the
characters are in a comparatively advanced stage of development. We may
thus put back into a more remote age the origin and early growth of
Sumerian culture, which took place at a time when it was not Sumerian. In
the concluding chapter of this volume an estimate is given to the
extent to which Sumerian culture influenced, either directly or
indirectly, other races in Asia, Egypt, and the West. In such matters
the interest attaching to the Sumerian original is largely derived from
its effects, and its study may be undertaken mainly with the view of
elucidating a later development. But one department of Sumerian activity
forms a striking exception to this rule. The arts of sculpture and
engraving, as practised by the Sumerians, are well worthy of study on
their own account, for while their work in all periods is marked by
spirit and originality, that of the later time reaches a remarkable
standard of excellence. The improvement in technique observable in the
later period may largely be due to the influence of Semitic work, which
was derived from Sumer and reacted in its turn on the parent stem. But
the original impulse to artistic production was of purely Sumerian
origin, and it is possible to trace the gradual development of its
products from the rudest reliefs of the archaic period to the finished
sculpture of Gudea's reign. The character of the Semitic art of Akkad
was secondary and derivative, though the Semites certainly improved on
what they borrowed; in that of the Sumerians the seeds of its later
excellence may be detected from the beginning. The most ancient of the
sculptured reliefs of the Sumerians are very rudely cut, and their age
is attested not only by their primitive character, but also by the
linear form of the writing which is found upon them. These, owing to
their smaller size, are the best preserved, for the later reliefs, which
belong to the period when Sumerian art reached its fullest development,
are unfortunately represented only by fragments. But they suffice to
show the spirit which animated these ancient craftsmen, and enabled them
successfully to overcome difficulties of technique which were carefully
avoided by the later sculptors of Assyria. To take a single instance,
we may note the manner in which they represented the heads of the
principal figures of a composition in full-face, and did not seek to
avoid the difficulty of foreshortening the features by a monotonous
arrangement in profile. A good example of their bolder method of
composition is afforded by the relief of a god, generally identified
with Ningirsu, which dates from the epoch of Gudea; he is seated upon a
throne, and while the torso and bearded head are sculptured full-face,
the legs are in profile. On another fragment of a relief of the same
period, beautifully cut in alabaster but much damaged by fire, a goddess
is represented seated on the knees of a god. The rendering of the group
is very spirited, for while the god gazes in profile at his wife, she
looks out from the sculpture curving her body from the hips. In
neither instance can it be said that the sculptor has completely
succeeded in portraying a natural attitude, for the head in each case
should be only in three-quarter profile, but such attempts at an
unconventional treatment afford striking evidence of the originality
which characterized the work of the Sumerians. Both the sculptures
referred to date from the later Sumerian period, and, if they were the
only instances recovered, it might be urged that the innovation should
be traced to the influence of North Babylonian art under the patronage
of the kings of Akkad. Fortunately, however, we possess an interesting
example of the same class of treatment, which undoubtedly dates from a
period anterior to the Semitic domination. This is afforded by a
perforated plaque, somewhat similar to the more primitive ones of
Ur-Nina, engraved in shallow relief with a libation scene. The figure of
a man, completely nude and with shaven head and face, raises a
libation-vase with a long spout, from which he is about to pour water
into a vase holding two palm leaves and a flowering branch. The goddess
in whose honour the rite is being performed is seated in the mountains,
represented as in later times by a number of small lozenges or half
circles. While her feet and knees are in profile, the head is
represented full-face, and the sculptor's want of skill in this novel
treatment has led him to assign the head a size out of all proportion to
the rest of the body. The effect is almost grotesque, but the work is
of considerable interest as one of the earliest attempts on the part of
the Sumerian sculptors to break away from the stiff and formal
traditions of the archaic period. From the general style of the work the
relief may probably be dated about the period of Eannatum's reign. The
Sumerians did not attain the decorative effect of the Assyrian
bas-reliefs with which the later kings lined the walls of their palaces.
In fact, the small size of the figures rendered them suitable for the
enrichment of stelae, plaques, basins and stone vases, rather than for
elaborate wall sculptures, for which in any case they had not the
material. The largest fragment of an early bas-relief that has been
recovered appears to have formed the angle of a stone pedestal, and is
decorated with figures in several registers representing ceremonies of
Sumerian worship. In the upper register on the side that is best
preserved is a priest leading worshippers into the presence of a god,
while below is a crouching figure, probably that of a woman who plays on
a great lyre or harp of eleven cords, furnished with two uprights and
decorated with a horned head and the figure of a bull. On the side in
the upper row is a heavily bearded figure on a larger scale than the
rest, and the mixture of Sumerian and Semitic types in the figures
preceding him suggests that the monument is to be assigned to the period
of Semitic domination, under the rule of the kings of Kish or Akkad.
But it is obviously Sumerian in character, resembling the work of
Gudea's period rather than that of Naram-Sin. The
perfection of detail which characterized the best work of the Sumerian
sculptors is well illustrated by two fragments of reliefs, parts of
which are drawn in outline in the accompanying blocks. The one on the
left is from a bas-relief representing a line of humped cattle and
horned sheep defiling past the spectator. It is badly broken, but enough
is preserved to show the surprising fidelity with which the sculptor
has reproduced the animal's form and attitude. Though the subject
recalls the lines of domestic animals upon the Assyrian bas-reliefs, the
Sumerian treatment is infinitely superior. The same high qualities of
design and workmanship are visible in the little fragment on the right.
Of the main sculpture only a human foot remains; but it is beautifully
modelled. The decorative border below the foot represents the spouting
vase with its two streams of water and two fish swimming against the
stream. A plant rises from the vase between the streams, the symbol of
vegetation nourished by the waters. The extreme delicacy of the original
shows to what degree of perfection Sumerian work attained during the
best period. The
use of sculpture in relief was also most happily employed for the
decoration of basins or fountains. The most elaborate of those
recovered, unhappily represented by mutilated fragments only, was
decorated on the outside with a chain of female figures passing from
hand to hand vases of spouting water. Better preserved are the remains
of another basin, which was set up by Gudea in Ningirsu's temple at
Lagash. Rectangular in shape, each corner was decorated with a lion. The
head, drawn in the accompanying block, is a fine piece of sculpture,
and almost stands out from the corner, while the body, carved in profile
on the side of the basin, is in low relief. In this portrayal of a lion
turning its head, the designer has formed a bold but decorative
combination of relief with sculpture in the round. The
most famous examples of Sumerian sculpture are the statues of Gudea,
and the rather earlier one of Ur-Bau, which, however, lose much of their
character by the absence of their heads. It is true that a head has
been fitted to a smaller and more recently found figure of Gudea; but
this proves to be out of all proportion to the body—a defect that was
probably absent from the larger statues. The traditional attitude of
devotion, symbolized by the clasping of the hands over the breast, gives
them a certain monotony; but their modelling is superior to anything
achieved by the Babylonians and Assyrians of a later time. Thus there is
a complete absence of exaggeration in the rendering of the muscles; the
sculptor has not attempted by such crude and conventional methods to
ascribe to his model a supernatural strength and vigour, but has worked
direct from nature. They are carved in diorite, varying in colour from
dark green to black, and that so hard a material should have been worked
in the large masses required, is in itself an achievement of no small
importance, and argues great technical skill on the part of the
sculptors of the later period. For
smaller figures and statuettes a softer stone, such as white limestone,
alabaster, or onyx, was usually employed, but a few in the harder stone
have been recovered. The most remarkable of these is a diorite
statuette of a woman, the upper part of which has been preserved. The
head and the torso were found separately, but thanks to their hard
material they join without leaving a trace of any break. Here, as usual,
the hands are crossed upon the breast, and the folds of the garment are
only indicated under the arms by a few plain grooves as in the statues
of Gudea. But the woman's form is visible beneath the stuff of her
garment, and the curves of the back are wonderfully true. Her hair,
undulating on the temples, is bound in a head-cloth and falls in the
form of a chignon on the neck, the whole being secured by a stiff band,
or fillet, around which the cloth is folded with its fringe tucked in. The
drawing in Fig. 23 scarcely does justice to the beauty of the face,
since it exaggerates the conventional representation of the eyebrows,
and reproduces the texture of the stone at the expense of the outline.
Moreover, the face is almost more striking in profile. The nose, though
perfectly straight, is rather large, but this is clearly a racial
characteristic. Even so, the type of female beauty portrayed is
singularly striking, and the manner in which the Sumerian sculptor has
succeeded in reproducing it was not approached in the work of any later
period. Another head from a female statuette, with the hair dressed in a
similar fashion, is equally beautiful. The absence of part of the nose
tends to give it a rather less marked ethnographic character, and
probably increases the resemblance which has been claimed for it to
types of classical antiquity. The
art of casting in metal was also practised by the Sumerians, and even
in the earliest period, anterior to the reign of Ur-Nina, small
foundation-figures have been discovered, which were cast solid in
copper. In fact, copper was the metal most commonly employed by the
Sumerians, and their stage of culture throughout the long period of
their history may be described as a copper age, rather than an age of
bronze. It is true that the claim is sometimes put forward, based on
very unsatisfactory evidence, that the Sumerian metal-founders used not
only tin but also antimony in order to harden copper, and at the same
time render it more fusible; and it is difficult to explain the
employment of two ideograms for the metal, even in the earlier periods,
unless one signified bronze and the other copper. But a careful analysis
by M. Berthelot of the numerous metal objects found at Tello, the dates
of which can be definitely ascertained, has shown that, even under the
later rulers of Lagash and the kings of Ur, not only votive figures, but
also tools and weapons of copper, contain no trace of tin employed as
an alloy. As at Tello, so at Tell Sifr, the vessels and weapons found by
Loftus are of copper, not bronze. The presence of an exceedingly small
proportion of elements other than copper in the objects submitted to
analysis was probably not intentional, but was due to the necessarily
imperfect method of smelting that was employed. No
trace has yet been found of any mould used by the Sumerians in the
process of casting metal, but we may assume that clay was employed both
for solid and hollow castings. While many figures of the same form have
been found, no two are exactly alike nor of quite the same proportions,
so that it may be inferred that a mould was never used a second time,
but that each was broken in order to remove the casting. The copper
foundation-figures usually take the form of nails, terminating with the
bust of a female figure, and they were set in a socket beneath stone
foundation-inscriptions which they support. Later, votive objects, cast
in copper, represent male figures, bearing on their heads the builder's
basket, in which is clay for the sacred bricks of the temple's
foundation; or they consist of great cones or nails supporting a
recumbent bull, or clasped by the kneeling figure of a god. Large
figures of wood were sometimes covered with thin plates of copper joined
by a series of small nails or rivets, as is proved by the horn of a
bull of natural size, which has been discovered at Tello. But hollow
castings in copper of a considerable size have also been found. A good
example is the bull's head, figured in the accompanying block, which
probably dates from a period not later than the close of Ur-Nina's
dynasty. Its eyes are inlaid with mother-of pearl and lapis-lazuli, and a
very similar method of inlaying is met with in the copper head of a
goat which was found at Fara. A
far simpler process of manufacture was employed for the making of
votive figures of terra-cotta, which, in order of development, preceded
the use of metal for this purpose, though they continued to be
manufactured in considerable quantities during the later periods. Here
the mould, in a single piece, was cut in stone or some other hard
material, and the clay, after being impressed into it, was smoothed down
on the back by hand. The flat border of clay left by the upper surface
of the mould, was frequently not removed, so that the figures are
sometimes found standing out from a flat background in the manner of a
sculptured plaque, or bas-relief. In the period of Gudea, the mould was
definitely used as a stamp, thus returning to the original use from
which its later employment was developed. Interesting examples of such
later stamped figures include representations of a god wearing a horned
headdress, to which are added the ears of a bull, and of a hero, often
identified with Gilgamesh, who holds a vase from which two streams of
water flow. The clay employed for the votive figures is extremely fine
in quality, and most of them are baked to a degree of hardness
resembling stone or metal. The art of inlaying was widely practised by the Sumerians, who not only treated metal in this way, but frequently attempted to give more expression or life to stone statues by inlaying the white of the eye with mother-of-pearl or shell, and representing the pupil and iris by lapis-lazuli or bitumen. A similar method was employed to enrich votive stone figures of animals, and to give a varied and polychrome effect to vases carved in stone. The finest example of this class of work is a libation-vase of Gudea made of dark green steatite, which was dedicated by him to his patron deity Ningishzida. The vase has a short projecting spout running up from the base and grooved, so as to allow only a small stream of liquid to escape during the pouring of a libation. Its scheme of decoration is interesting as it affords an excellent example of the more fantastic side of Sumerian art, inspired by a large and important section of the religious belief. The two intertwined serpents, whose tongues touch the point where the liquid would leave the vase, are modelled from nature, but the winged monsters on each side well illustrate the Sumerian origin of later Babylonian demonology. It is probable that such composite monsters, with the bodies and heads
of serpents and the wings and talons of birds, were originally
malevolent in character, but here, like the serpents, they are clearly
represented as tamed, and in the service of the god to whom the vase was
dedicated. This is sufficiently proved by the ringed staffs they carry,
their modified horned headdresses, and their carefully twisted locks of
hair. They were peculiarly sacred to Ningishzida and in Fig. 12 they
may be seen rising as emblems from his shoulders. The rich effect of the
dark green steatite was originally enhanced by inlaying, for the bodies
of the dragons are now pitted with deep holes. These were no doubt
originally inlaid with some other material, probably shell, which has
been found employed for this purpose in a fragment of a vase of a very
similar character. In
the same category with the monsters on the vase we may class the
human-headed bulls, of which small sculptured figures, in a recumbent
attitude, have been found at Tello; these were afterwards adopted by the
Assyrian kings, and employed as the colossal guardians of their palace
door-ways. The extent to which this particular form of composite monster
was employed for religious and decorative purposes may be seen on the
cylinder-seals, upon which in the earlier period it represents the
favourite device. Examples are frequently found in decorative
combinations, together with figures of early bearded heroes, possibly to
be identified with Gilgamesh, and with a strange creature, half-man and
half-bull, resembling the later descriptions of Eabani, who strive with
lions and other animals. Gudea's catalogue of the temple furniture and
votive objects, with which he enriched E-ninnu, throws light upon the
manner in which Sumerian art reflected this aspect of the Sumerian
religion. Some of the legends and beliefs may well have been derived
from Semitic sources, but the imagery, which exerted so strong an
influence upon the development of their art, may probably be traced to
the Sumerians themselves. The
engraving upon cylinder-seals during the Sumerian period appears to
have been done generally by hand, without the help of a drill or a
revolving tool. Outline engraving with the point was also practised,
that on stone having probably preceded the use of the bas-relief, but it
continued to be employed in the later periods for the decoration of
metal and shell. The finest example of metal engraving is the silver
vase of Entemena, around which is incised in outline a decorative band,
consisting of variations of the emblem of Lagash, arranged beneath a row
of seven calves. But the largest number of designs engraved in outline
have been found, not upon stone or metal, but upon shell. It is an
interesting fact that among the smaller objects found by M. de Sarzec at
Tello, there is not a single fragment of ivory, and it would seem that
this material was not known to the earliest inhabitants of Babylonia, a
fact which has some bearing on the disputed question of their relations
to Egypt, and to the earlier stages of Egyptian culture. From
the earliest period at Lagash fragments of shell were employed in place
of ivory, and the effect produced by it is nearly the same. Certain
species of great univalves or conch-shells, which are found in the
Indian Ocean, have a thick core or centre, and these furnished the
material for a large number of the earliest cylinder-seals. Small
plaques or lozenges could also be obtained from the core by sectional
cutting, while the curved part of the shell was sometimes employed for
objects to which its convex form could be adapted. The numerous flat
lozenges that have been found are shaped for inlaying furniture,
caskets, and the like, and curved pieces were probably fitted to others
of a like shape in order to form small cups and vases. Each piece is
decorated with fine engraving, and in nearly every instance the outline
is accentuated by the employment of a very slight relief. The designs
are often spirited, and they prove that even in the earliest periods the
Sumerian draughtsman had attained to a high standard of proficiency. One
of the most interesting engraved fragments that have been recovered
consists of a slightly curved piece of shell, which probably formed part
of a small bowl or cup. The rest of the side seems to have been built
up of pieces of similar shape, held together by bitumen, or, more
probably, fitted to a metal lining by rivets through holes in the shell.
The scene engraved upon the fragment represents a lion seizing a bull
in a thicket of shrubs or high flowering plants. Though the group upon
the fragment is complete in itself, there are indications that it formed
only part of a more elaborate composition. For in the space on the
right of the fragment behind the lion's mane are engraved two weapons.
The upper one is a hilted dagger with its point towards the lion; this
may be compared with the short daggers held by the mythological beings
resembling Ea-bani upon one of Lugal-anda's seals, with which they are
represented as stabbing lions in the neck. Below is a hand holding a
curved mace or throwing stick, formed of three strands bound with
leather thongs or bands of metal, like that held by Eannatum upon the
Stele of the Vultures. It is, therefore, clear that on the panel to the
right of the lion and bull a king, or patesi, was represented in the act
of attacking the lion, and we may infer that the whole of the cup was
decorated with a continuous band of engraving, though some of the groups
in the design may have been arranged symmetrically, with repetitions
such as are found upon the earlier cylinder-seals. The
position of the lion upon the fragment, represented with luxuriant mane
and with head facing the spectator, and the vigour of the design as a
whole combined with certain inequalities of treatment, have suggested a
comparison with the lions upon the sculptured mace-head of Mesilim. The
piece has, therefore, been assigned to the epoch of the earlier kings of
Kish, anterior to the period of Ur-Nina. It may perhaps belong to the
rather later period of Ur-Nina's dynasty, but, even so, it suffices to
indicate the excellence in design and draughtsmanship attained by the
earlier Sumerians. In vigour and originality their representations of
animals were unequalled by those of the later inhabitants of Babylonia
and Assyria, until shortly before the close of the Assyrian empire. But
the Sumerian artists only gradually acquired their skill, and on some of
the engraved fragments recovered it is possible to trace an advance on
earlier work. The designs in the accompanying blocks have been selected
as illustrating, to some extent, the change which gradually took place
in the treatment of animal forms by the Sumerians. Of
the three designs, that on the left is engraved upon a convex piece of
shell, thin as the shell of an egg; it represents a lion-headed eagle
which has swooped down upon the back of a human-headed bull and is
attacking him with mouth and claws. The subject resembles that found
upon the most primitive Sumerian cylinder-seals, and its rough and
angular treatment is sufficient indication of the very archaic character
of the work. The central panel resembles in shape that of the lion and
the bull. The design represents a leaping ibex with flowering plants in
the background, and the drawing is freer and less stiff than that of the
animals on the silver vase of Entemena. Some archaic characteristics
may still be noted, such as the springing tufts of hair at the joints of
the hind legs; but the general treatment of the subject marks a
distinct advance upon the archaic conventions of the earlier fragment.
The third design is that of a leaping kid, engraved upon a flat piece of
shell and cut out for inlaying. Here the drawing is absolutely true to
nature, and the artist has even noted the slight swelling of the head
caused by the growing horns. The
Sumerians do not appear to have used complete shells for engraving,
like those found on Assyrian and Aegean sites. A complete shell has
indeed been recovered, but it is in an unworked state and bears a
dedicatory formula of Ur-Ningirsu, the son and successor of Gudea. Since
it is not a fine specimen of its class, we may suppose that it was
selected for dedication merely as representing the finer shells employed
by the workmen in the decoration of the temple-furniture. The Sumerians
at a later period engraved designs upon mother-of-pearl. When used in
plain pieces for inlaying it certainly gave a more brilliant effect than
shell, but to the engraver it offered greater difficulties in
consequence of its brittle and scaly surface. Pieces have been found,
however, on which designs have been cut, and these were most frequently
employed for enriching the handles of knives and daggers. The panels in
the accompanying blocks will serve to show that the same traditional
motives are reproduced which meet us in the earlier designs upon
fragments of shell and cylinder-seals. They include a bearded hero, the
eagle attacking the bull, a hero in conflict with a lion, the
lion-headed eagle of Lagash, a winged lion, a lion attacking an ibex,
and a stag. Even when allowance is made for the difficulties presented
by the material, it will be seen that the designs themselves rank far
below those found upon shell. The employment of mother-of-pearl for
engraving may thus be assigned to a period of decadence in Sumerian art
when it had lost much of its earlier freshness and vigour. The above brief sketch of the principal forms and productions of Sumerian art may serve to vindicate the claim of the Sumerians to a place among the more artistic races of antiquity. Much oriental art is merely quaint, or interesting from its history and peculiarities, but that of the Sumerians is considerably more than this. Its sculpture never acquired the dull monotony of the Assyrian bas-reliefs with their over-elaboration of detail, intended doubtless to cloak the poverty of the design. Certain conventions persisted through all periods, but the Sumerian sculptor was never a slave to them. He relied largely on his own taste and intelligence, and even the earliest work is bold and spirited. After centuries of independent development fresh vigour was introduced by the nomad Semitic races who settled in the north, but in the hands of the later Semites the Sumerian ideals were not maintained. For the finest period of Babylonian art we must go back to a time some centuries before the founding of the Babylonian monarchy.
THE EARLIEST SETTLEMENTS IN SUMER; THE DAWN OF HISTORY AND THE RISE OF LAGASH
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