READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF SUMER AND AKKADCHAPTER VWARS OF THE CITY-STATES;EANNATUM AND THE STELE OF THE VULTURES
WHEN
the patesiate of Lagash passed from Akurgal
to his son Eannatum we may picture the
city-state as owing a general allegiance to
Akkad in the north. Nearer home, the relations of Lagash to Umma appear to
have been of an amicable character.
Whatever minor conflicts may have taken place
between the two cities in the interval, the treaty of Mesilim was still regarded
as binding, and its terms were
treated with respect by both parties. The question whether Eannatum, like
Akurgal, had had some minor cause
of disagreement with the men of Umma at the beginning of his reign
depends upon our interpretation of
some broken passages in the early part of the text engraved upon the Stele of
the Vultures. The second column
deals with the relations of Umma and Lagash during the reign of
Akurgal, and the fourth column concerns
the reign of Eannatum. The name of neither of these rulers is
mentioned in the intermediate portion of the
text, which, however, refers to Umma and Lagash
in connection with a shrine or chapel dedicated to the god Ningirsu. It is
possible that we have here a
continuation of the narrative of the preceding column, and in that case we should
assign this portion of the text
to the reign of Akurgal, rather than to the early part of the reign of his
successor. But it may equally well
refer to Eannatum's own reign, and may either record a minor cause of
dispute between the cities which
was settled before the outbreak of the great war, or may perhaps be
taken in connection with the following
columns of the text.
These
two columns definitely refer to Eannatum's reign and describe certain
acts of piety which he perĀformed in the service of his gods. They record work carried out in E-ninnu, by
which the heart of Ningirsu was
rejoiced; the naming and dedication of some portion of E-anna, the
temple of the goddess Ninni; and
certain additions made to the sacred flocks of the goddess Ninkharsag. The
repetition of the phrase referring
to Ninni's temple suggests a disconnected list of Eannatum's
achievements in the service of his gods,
rather than a connected narrative. The text in the fifth column continues
the record of the benefits bestowed
by him upon Ningirsu, and here we may perhaps
trace a possible cause of the renewal of the war with Umma. For the text
states that Eannatum bestowed
certain territory upon Ningirsu and rejoiced his heart; and, unless this
refers to land occupied after the
defeat of Umma, its acquisition may have been resented by the
neighbouring city. Such an incident would
have formed ample excuse for the invasion of the territory of Lagash by
the injured party, though, according
to the records of Eannatum himself and of Entemena, it would appear
that the raid of the men of Umma
was unprovoked. But, whatever may have been the immediate cause of the
outbreak of hostilities, we shall
see reason for believing that the war was ultimately due to the influence of
Kish.
The
outbreak of the war between Umma and Lagash is recorded concisely in
the sixth column of the inscription upon the Stele of the Vultures, which
states that the
patesi of Umma, by the command of his god, plundered Gu-edin, the territory beloved of Ningirsu. In this record, brief as it
is, it is interesting to note that the
patesi of Umma is regarded as no more than the instrument of his city-god,
or the minister who carries out
his commands. As the gods in a former
generation had
drawn up the treaty between Lagash and Umma, which Mesilim, their
suzerain, had at the command of his
own goddess engraved upon the stele of delimitation, so now it was the god, and
not the patesi, of Umma, who
repudiated the terms of that treaty by sending his army across the border.
Gu-edin, too, is described, not in its
relation to the patesi of Lagash, but as the special property of Ningirsu, the
opposing city-god. We shall see
presently that Eannatum's first act, on hearing news of the invasion, was quite
in harmony with the theocratic feeling
of the time.
The
patesi who led the forces of Umma is not named
by Eannatum upon the Stele of the Vultures, but from the Cone of Entemena we learn that his name was
Ush. In the summary of events which is given upon that document it is
stated that Ush, patesi of Umma,
acted with ambitious designs, and that, having removed the stele of
delimitation which had been set up in
an earlier age by Mesilim between the territories of the respective states,
he invaded the plain of Lagash. The
pitched battle between the forces of Umma and Lagash, which followed the
raid into the latter's territory,
is recorded by Entemena in equally brief terms.
The battle is said to have taken place at the word of Ningirsu, the
warrior of Enlil, and the destruction of the men of Umma is ascribed not only to the command, but also to
the actual agency, of Enlil
himself. Here, again, we find Enlil, the god of the central cult of Nippur,
recognized as the supreme arbiter
of human and divine affairs. The various city-gods might make war on one
another, but it was Enlil
who decreed to which side victory should incline.
In the
record of the war which Eannatum himself has
left us, we are furnished with details of a more striking character than
those given in Entemena's brief
summary. In the latter it is recorded that the battle was waged at the
word of Ningirsu, and the Stele
of the Vultures amplifies this bald statement by describing the
circumstances which attended the notification of the divine will. On learning
of the violation of his
border by the men of Umma and the plundering of his territory which had
ensued, Eannatum did not at
once summon his troops and lead them in pursuit of the enemy. There was
indeed little danger in delay,
and no advantage to be gained by immediate action.
For Umma, from its proximity to Lagash, afforded
a haven for the plunderers which they could reach in safety before the
forces of Lagash could be called
to arms. Thus Eannatum had no object in hurrying
out his army, when there was little chance of overtaking the enemy
weighed down with spoil. Moreover,
all the damage that could be done to Gu-edin
had no doubt been done thoroughly by the men of Umma. In addition to
carrying off Mesilim's stele, they
had probably denuded the pastures of all flocks and cattle, had trampled
the crops, and had sacked and
burnt the villages and hamlets through which they had passed. When once
they and their plunder were
safe within their own border, they were not likely to repeat the raid
at once. They might be expected
to take action to protect their own territory, but the next move obviously
lay with Lagash. In these
circumstances Eannatum had no object in attacking before his army was
ready
for the field, and his preparations
for war had been completed; and while the
streets of Lagash were doubtless re-echoing with the blows of the armourers
and the tramp of armed men,
the city-gates must have been thronged with eager groups of citizens,
awaiting impatiently the return
of scouts sent out after the retreating foe. Meanwhile, we may picture
Eannatum repairing to the temple
of Ningirsu, where, having laid his complaint before him, he awaited the
god's decision as to the course
his patesi and his people should follow under the provocation to which
they had been subjected.
It is
not directly stated in the text as preserved upon the stele that it was
within E-ninnu Eannatum sought
Ningirsu's counsel and instructions; but we may assume that such was
the case, since the god dwelt
within his temple, and it was there the patesi would naturally seek him
out. The answer of the god to
Eannatum's prayer was conveyed to him in a
vision; Ningirsu himself appeared to the patesi, as he appeared in a later age
to Gudea, when he gave the
latter ruler detailed instructions for the rebuilding of E-ninnu, and granted him
a sign by which he should
know that he was chosen for the work. Like
The
account of the battle is very broken upon the Stele of the Vultures, but sufficient details are preserved to enable us to gather that it was a
fierce one, and
that victory was wholly upon the side of Lagash. We may conjecture that the
men of Umma did not await
Eannatum's attack behind their city-walls, but went out to meet him with
the object of preventing their
own fields and pastures from being laid waste. Every man capable of
bearing arms, who was not required
for the defence of two cities, was probably engaged in the battle, and
the two opposing armies were
doubtless led in person by Eannatum himself and by Ush, the patesi of
Umma, who had provoked the
war. The army of Lagash totally defeated the men of Umma and pursued
them with great slaughter. Eannatum
puts the number of the slain at three thousand
six hundred men, or, according to a possible reading, thirty-six
thousand men. Even the smaller of
these figures is probably exaggerated, but there is no doubt that Umma suffered
heavily. According to his
own account, Eannatum took an active part in the fight, and he states
that he raged in the battle. After
defeating the army in the open plain, the troops of
Lagash pressed on to
Umma itself. The
fortificaĀtions had probably been denuded of their full
garrisons, and
were doubtless held by a mere handful of defenders. Flushed with victory the
men of Lagash swept on to the attack,
and, carrying the walls by assault, had the city itself
at their mercy. Here another slaughter took place,
and Eannatum states that within the city he swept all before him "like an evil storm".
The
record of his victory which Eannatum has left us is couched in metaphor,
and is doubtless coloured by Oriental
exaggeration; and the scribes who drew it up would naturally be inclined
to represent the defeat of Umma
as even more crushing than it was. Thus the number of burial-mounds
suggests that the forces of Lagash
suffered heavily themselves, and it is quite possible the remnant of
Umma's army rallied and made a
good fight within the city. But we have the independent testimony of
Entemena's record, written not
many years after the fight, to show that there is considerable truth under
Eannatum's phrases; and a clear
proof that Umma was rendered incapable of further resistance for the
time may be seen in the terms
of peace which Lagash imposed. Eannatum's first act, after he had
received the submission of the city,
was to collect for burial the bodies of his own dead which strewed the
field of battle. Those of the enemy
he would probably leave where they fell, except such as blocked the streets
of Umma, and these he would
remove and cast out in the plain beyond the city-walls. For we may
conclude that, like Entemena, Eannatum
left the bones of his foes to be picked clean by the birds and beasts of
prey. The monument on which
we have his record of the fight is known as the Stele of the Vultures
from the vultures sculptured upon
the upper portion of it. These birds of prey are represented as swooping off
with the heads and limbs of the
slain, which they hold firmly in their beaks and talons. That the sculptor
should have included this striking
incident in his portrayal of the battle is further testimony to the magnitude
of the slaughter which had taken
place. That Eannatum duly buried his own dead
is certain, for both he and Entemena state that the burial-mounds which he
heaped up were twenty in
number ; and two other sculptured portions of the Stele of the Vultures, to
which we shall presently refer, give
vivid representations of the piling of the mounds above the dead.
The
fate of Ush, the patesi of Umma, who had brought
such misfortune on his own city by the rash challenge he had given
Lagash, is not recorded; but it is
clear he did not remain the ruler of Umma. He may have been slain in the
battle, but, even if he survived,
he was certainly deprived of his throne, possibly
at the instance of Eannatum. For Entemena records the fact that it
was not with Ush, but with a
certain Enakalli, patesi of Umma, that Eannatum concluded a treaty of
peace. The latter ruler may have
been appointed patesi by Eannatum himself, as at later day, Ili owed his nomination to
Entemena on the
defeat of the patesi Urlumma. But, whether this was so or not,
Enakalli was certainly prepared to make
great concessions, and was ready to accept whatever terms Eannatum demanded,
in order to secure the removal
of the troops of Lagash from his city, which they doubtless continued to
invest during the negotiaĀtions. As might be expected, the various terms of the treaty are chiefly
concerned with the fertile plain of
Gu-edin, which had been the original cause of the war. This was unreservedly
restored to Lagash, or, in the
words of the treaty, to Ningirsu, whose "beloved territory" it is
stated to have been. In order that there
should be no cause for future dispute with regard to the boundary-line
separating the territory of Lagash and
Umma, a deep ditch was dug as a permanent line of demarcation. The ditch
is described as extending "from
the great stream" up to Gu-edin, and with the great stream we may
probably identify an eastern branch
of the Euphrates, through which at this period it emptied a portion of its
waters into the Persian Gulf. The
ditch, or canal, received its water from the river, and, by surrounding the
unprotected sides of Gu-edin, it
formed not only a line of demarcation but to some extent a barrier to any
hostile advance on the part of Umma.
On the bank of the
frontier-ditch the stele of Mesilim,
which had been taken away, was erected once
more, and another stele was prepared by the orders of Eannatum, and was
set up beside it. The second monument was inscribed with the text of the treaty drawn up between Eannatum and Enakalli, and its text was probably identical with the
greater part of that found upon the fragments of the Stele of the Vultures, which have been recovered; for the contents of that text mark it out as admirably
suited to serve as a
permanent memorial of the boundary. After the historical narrative describing the events which led up to the new treaty, the text of the
Stele of the Vultures
enumerates in detail the divisions of the territory of which Gu-edin was composed. Thus the stele which was set up on the frontier formed
in itself an
additional security against the violation of the territory of Lagash. The course of a boundary-ditch might possibly be altered, but while the
stele remained in
place, it would serve as a final authority to which appeal could be made in the case of any dispute arising. It is probably in this way that we may explain the separate fields which are enumerated by name upon the fragment of the Stele of the
Vultures which is preserved in the British Museum, and upon a small foundation-stone which also refers to the treaty. The
fields there enumerated either made up the territory known by the general name of Gu-edin, or perhaps formed an addition to that territory, the cession
of which Eannatum
may have exacted from Umma as part of the terms of peace. While consenting to the restoration of the disputed territory, and the
rectification of the frontier, Umma was also obliged to pay as tribute to Lagash a considerable quantity of grain,
and this Eannatum
brought back with him to his own city.
In connection with the formal ratification of the treaty it would appear that certain shrines or chapels were erected in honour of Enlil, Ninkharsag, Ningirsu and Babbar. We may conjecture that this was done in order that the help of these deities might be secured for the preservation of the treaty. According to Entemena's narrative, chapels or shrines were erected to these four deities only, but the Stele of the Vultures contains a series of invocations addressed not only to Enlil, Ninkharsag, and Babbar, but also to Enki, Enzu, and Ninki, and it is probable that shrines were also erected in their honour. These were built upon the frontier beside the two stelae of delimitation, and it was doubtless at the altar of each one of them in turn that Eannatum and Enakalli took a solemn oath to abide by the terms of the treaty and to respect the frontier. The oaths by which the treaty was thus ratified are referred to upon the Stele of the Vultures by Eannatum, who invokes each of the deities by whom he and Enakalli swore, and in a series of striking formulae calls down destruction upon the men of Umma should they violate the terms of the compact. "On the men of Umma", he exclaims, "have I, Eannatum, cast the great net of Enlil! I have sworn the oath, and the men of Umma have sworn the oath to Eannatum. In the name of Enlil, the king of heaven and earth, in the field of Ningirsu there has been . . . , and a ditch has been dug down to the water level. . . . Who from among the men of Umma by his word or by his . . . will go back upon the word (that has been given), and will dispute it in days to come ? If at some future time they shall alter this word, may the great net of Enlil, by whom they have sworn the oath, strike Umma down!". Eannatum then turns to Ninkharsag, the goddess of the Sumerian city of Kesh, and in similar phrases invokes her wrath upon the men of Umma should they violate their oath. He states that in his wisdom he has presented two doves as offerings before Ninkharsag, and has performed other rites in her honour at Kesh, and turning again to the goddess, he exclaims, "As concerns my mother, Ninkharsag, who from among the men of Umma by his word or by his . . . will go back upon the word (that has been given), and will dispute it in days to come? If at some future time they shall alter this word, may the great net of Ninkharsag, by whom they have sworn the oath, strike Umma down!". Enki, the god of the abyss of waters beneath the earth, is the next deity to be invoked, and before him Eannatum records that he presented certain fish as offerings; his net Eannatum has cast over the men of Umma, and should they cross the ditch, he prays that destruction may come upon Umma by its means. Enzu, the Moon-god of Ur, whom Eannatum describes as "the strong bull-calf of Enlil," is then addressed ; four doves were set as offerings before him, and he is invoked to destroy Umma with his net, should the men of that city ever cross Ningirsu's boundary, or alter the course of the ditch, or carry away the stele of delimitation. Before Babbar, the Sun-god, in his city of Larsa, Eannatum states that he has offered bulls as offerings, and his great net, which he has cast over the men of Umma, is invoked in similar terms. Finally, Eannatum prays to Ninki, by whom the oath has also been taken, to punish any violation of the treaty by wiping the might of Umma from off the face of the earth. The great stele of Eannatum, from the text upon which we have taken much
of the description of his war with Umma, is the most striking example of early
Sumerian art that has come down to us, and the sculptures upon it throw
considerable light upon the customs and beliefs of this primitive race. The
metaphor of the net, for example, which is employed by Eannatum throughout the
curses he calls down upon Umma, in the event of any violation of the treaty, is
strikingly illustrated by a scene sculptured upon two of the fragments of the
stele which have been recovered. When complete, the stele consisted of a large
slab of stone, curved at the top, and it was sculptured and inscribed upon both
sides and also upon its edges. Up to the present time seven fragments of it
have been recovered during the course of the excavations at Tello, of which six
are in the Louvre and one is in the British Museum; these are usually
distinguished by the symbols A to G. Although the fragments thus recovered represent
but a small proportion of the original monument, it is possible from a careful
study of them to form a fairly complete idea of the scenes that were sculptured
upon it. As we have already noted, the monument was a stele of victory set up
by Eannatum, and the two faces of the slab are sculptured in low relief with
scenes illustrating the victory, but differing considerably in character. On
the face the representations are mythological and religious, while on the back
they are historical. It might very naturally be supposed that the face of the
stele would have been occupied by representations of Eannatum himself
triumphing over his enemies, and, until the text upon the stele was thoroughly
deciphered and explained, this was indeed the accepted opinion. But it is now
clear that Eannatum devoted the front of the stele to representations of his
gods, while the reverse of the monument was considered the appropriate place
for the scenes depicting the patesi and his army carrying out the divine will.
The arrangement of the reliefs upon the stone thus forcibly illustrates the
belief of this early period that the god of the city was its real ruler, whose
minister and servant the patesi was, not merely in metaphor, but in actual
fact.
Upon the largest portion of the stele that has been recovered, formed of
two fragments joined together, we have the scene which illustrates
Eannatum's metaphor of the net. Almost the whole of this portion of the monument
is occupied with the figure of a god, which appears of colossal size if it is
compared with those of the patesi and his soldiers upon the reverse of the
stele. The god has flowing hair, bound with a double fillet, and, while cheeks
and lips are shaved, a long beard falls in five undulating curls from the chin
upon the breast. He is nude to the waist, around which he wears a close-fitting
garment with two folds in front indicated by double lines. It was at first
suggested that we
The metaphor of the net, both of the fisherman and the fowler, is
familiar in the poetical literature of the Hebrews, and it is interesting to
note this very early example of its occurrence among the primitive Sumerian
inhabitants of Babylonia. In the text engraved upon the Stele of the Vultures Eannatum, as we have
already seen, seeks to guard the terms of his treaty by placing it under the
protection of the nets of Enlil and of other deities. He states that he has
cast upon the men of Umma the nets of the deities by whom he and they have
sworn, and, in the event of any violation of their oath, he prays that the nets
may destroy them and their city. Thus the meshes of each net may in a sense be regarded as the words of the
oath, by the utterance of which they have placed themselves within the power of
the god whose name they have invoked. But the scene on the front of the stele
is not to be regarded as directly referring to this portion of the text, nor is
the colossal figure that of Enlil, the chief god of Babylonia. For his
destruction of the men of Umma is merely invoked as a possible occurrence in
the future, while the god on the stele is already engaged in clubbing captives
he has caught; and, whether the net of Ningirsu was referred to in a missing
portion of the text or not, the fact that the figure on the stele grasps the
emblem of Lagash is sufficient
indication that Ningirsu and not Enlil, noi any other deity, is intended. Thus the
face of the stele illustrates the
text of Eannatum as a whole, not merely the
imprecatory formulae attached to the treaty with Umma. It refers to the past victories of
Ningirsu in his character
as the city-god of Lagash.
The representation of Ningirsu clubbing his enemies forms only a portion
of a larger scheme which occupied the whole of the upper part of the Stele of
the Vultures. Though his is the principal figure of the composition, it is not
set in the centre of the field but on the extreme right, the right-hand edge of
the fragments illustrated on above representing the actual edge of the stele.
On the left behind the god and standing in attendance upon him was a goddess,
parts of whose head and headdress have been recovered upon a fragment from the
left edge of the stele. She wears a horned crown, and behind her is a standard surmounted by an emblem
in the form of an eagle with outspread wings. She is sculptured on a smaller
scale than the figure of Ningirsu, and thus serves to indicate his colossal
proportions; and she stood on a fillet or lintel, which cuts off the upper
register from a second scene which was sculptured below it. The fragment of the
stele in the British Museum preserves one of Ningirsu's feet and a corner of the net with the prisoners in
it, and both are represented as resting on the same fillet or lintel. This
fragment is a piece of some importance, for, by joining two other pieces of the
stele in the Louvre, it enables us to form some idea of the scene in the lower register. Here, too,
we have representations of deities, but they are arranged on a slightly
different plan. We find upon the fragment from the right of the stele (C) part
of the head and headdress of a goddess very like that in the register above.
Here she faces to the left, and on another fragment (F), which joins the
British Museum fragment upon the left, is a portion of a very complicated
piece of sculpture. This has given rise to many
conjectures, but there appears to be little doubt that it represents the forepart of a
chariot. We have the same curved
front which is seen in the chariot of Eannatum
upon the reverse of the stele, and the same arrangement of the reins which pass
through a double ring fixed in
the front of the chariot and are hitched over
a high support. Here the support and the front of the chariot are decorated with a form of
the emblem of Lagash, the
spread eagle and the lions, and we may therefore
conclude that the chariot is that of Ningirsu; indeed, on the left of the fragment a
part of the god's plain garment
may be detected, similar to that which he
wears in the upper register. He is evidently standing in the chariot, and we
may picture him riding in triumph
after the destruction of his foes.
A close analogy may thus be traced between the two scenes upon the front
of the stele and the two upper registers upon the back. In the latter we have
representations of Eannatum on foot leading his warriors to battle, and also
riding victoriously in a chariot at their head. On the front of the stele are
scenes of a similar character in the religious sphere, representing Ningirsu
slaying the enemies of Lagash, and afterwards riding in his chariot in triumph.
It may also be noted that the composition of the scenes in the two registers
upon the face of the stone is admirably planned. In the upper register the
colossal figure of Ningirsu with his net, upon the right, is balanced below on
the left by his figure in the chariot; and, similarly, the smaller figure or
figures above were balanced by the ass that drew Ningirsu's chariot, and the
small figure of a goddess who faces him.
There are few indications to enable us to identify the goddesses who
accompany Ningirsu. If the figures in both registers represent the same divine
personage the names of several goddesses suggest themselves. We might, perhaps,
see in her Ningirsu's wife Bau, the daughter of Anu, or his sister Nina, the
goddess of the oracle, to whose service Eannatum was specially devoted, or
Gatumdug, the mother of Lagash. But the military standard which accompanies the
goddess in the upper scene, and the ends of two darts or javelins which appear in the same fragment to rise
from, or be bound upon, her
shoulders, seem to show that the upper goddess,
at any rate, is of a warlike character. Moreover, in another inscription,
Eannatum ascribes a success he
has achieved in war to the direct intervention of the goddess Ninni, proving that
she, like the later Babylonian and Assyrian goddess Ishtar, was essentially
the goddess of battle. It is permissible,
therefore, to see in the
upper goddess, sculptured upon the face of the Stele of the Vultures, a representation of
Ninni, the goddess of
battle, who attends the city-god Ningirsu while he is engaged in the slaughter of his foes. In
the lower register it is
possible we have a second representation of Ninni, where she appears to welcome
Ningirsu after the slaughter
is at an end. But though the headdresses of the two goddesses are identical, the
accompanying emblems appear
to differ, and we are thus justified in suggesting
for the lower figure some goddess other than Ninni, whose work was finished when
Ningirsu had secured the
victory. The deity most fitted to gladden Ningirsu's sight on his return would have
been his faithful wife
Bau, who was wont to recline beside her lord
upon his couch within the temple E-ninnu. We may thus provisionally identify the
goddess of the lower register
with Bau, who is there portrayed going out to meet the chariot of her lord and master
upon his return from battle.
Perhaps the scenes which are sculptured upon the back of the Stele of the Vultures are of even greater interest than those upon its face, since they afford us a picture of these early Sumerian peoples as they appeared when engaged in the continual wars which were waged between the various city-states. Like the scenes upon the face of the stele, those upon the back are arranged in separate registers, divided one from the other by raised bands, or fillets, stretching across the face of the monument and representing the soil on which the scenes portrayed above them took place. The registers upon the back are smaller than those on the face, being at least four in number, in place of the two scenes which are devoted to Ningirsu and his attendant deities. As might be expected, the scenes upon the back of the stele are on a smaller scale than those upon the face, and the number and variety of the figures composing them are far greater. Little space has been left on the reverse of the stone for the inscription, the greater part of which is engraved on the front of the monument, in the broad spaces of the field between the divine figures. Of the highest of the four registers upon the reverse four fragments have been recovered, one of which (A) proves that the curved head of the stele on this side was filled with the representations of vultures, to which reference has already been made. The intention of the sculptor was clearly to represent them as flying thick in the air overhead, bearing off from the field of battle the severed heads and limbs of the slain. The birds thus formed a very decorative and striking feature of the monument, and the popular name of the stele, which is derived from them, is fully justified. In the same register on the left is a scene representing Eannatum leading his troops in battle and we there see them advancing over the bodies of the slain; while from the extreme right of the same register we have a fragment representing men engaged in collecting the dead and piling them in heaps for burial. We may conjecture that the central portion of the register, which is missing, portrayed the enemies of Eannatum falling before his lance. In the register immediately below we find another representation of Eannatum at the head of his troops. Here, however, they are not in battle array but on the march, and Eannatum, instead of advancing on foot, is riding before them in his chariot. The sculptured representations of Eannatum and his soldiers, which are
preserved upon these fragments, are of the greatest importance, for they give a
vivid picture of the Sumerian method of fighting, and supply detailed
information with regard to the arms and armour in use at this early period. We
note that the
Both Eannatum and his soldiers wear a conical helmet, covering the brow
and carried down low at the back so as to protect the neck, the royal helmet
being distinguished by the addition at the sides of moulded pieces,to protect
the ears. Both the shields and the helmets
were probably of leather, though the nine circular bosses on the face of each of
the former may possibly have
been of metal. Their use was clearly to strengthen
the shields, and they were probably attached to a wooden framework on the other side.
They would also tend to
protect the surface of the shields by deflecting blows aimed at them. The
royal weapons consisted of
a long lance or spear, wielded in the left hand, and a curved mace or throwing-stick, formed of
three strands bound together
at intervals with thongs of leather or bands
of metal. When in his chariot on the march, the king was furnished with additional
weapons, consisting of
a flat-headed axe like those of his soldiers, and a number of light darts, some fitted with
double points. These last he
carried in a huge quiver attached to the fore
part of his chariot, and with them we may note a double-thonged whip, doubtless intended
for driving the ass or
asses that drew the vehicle. It is probable that the soldiers following Eannatum in both
scenes were picked
men, who formed the royal body-guard, for those in the battle-scene are
distinguished by the long hair
or, rather, wig, that falls upon their shoulders from beneath their helmets, and
those on the march are seen to
be clothed from the waist downwards in the rough woollen garment similar to that worn by
the king. They may well
have been recruited among the members of
the royal house and the chief families of Lagash. The king's apparel is distinguished from
theirs by the addition of a
cloak, possibly of skin,worn over the left shoulder in such a way that it
leaves the right arm and
shoulder entirely free.
Considerable light is thrown upon the burial customs of the Sumerians by
the scene sculptured in the third register, or section, on the reverse of the
stele of Eannatum. Portions of the scene are preserved upon the fragments C and
F, which we have already noted may be connected with each other by means of the
fragment G, preserved in the British Museum. In this register we have a representation
of the scenes following the victory of Eannatum, when the king and his army had
time to collect their dead and bury them with solemn rites and sacrifices beneath huge tells
or burial-mounds.
It will be remembered that a fragment of the top register portrays the collection of the dead upon the battlefield; here, on the left, we see the mounds in course of construction, under which the
dead were buried. The dead are quite nude, and are seen to be piled up in rows, head to head and feet to feet alternately. The two corpses at the base are sculptured
lying flat upon the ground, and, as the tell rises, they appear to be arranged like the sticks of a
fan. This
arrangement was doubtless due to the sculptor's necessity of filling the semi-circular head of the
tell, and does not represent the manner in which the corpses were actually arranged for burial. We may conclude that they were set out symmetrically in double
rows, and that the position of every one was horizontal, additional rows being added until sufficient height had been attained.
Two living figures are sculptured on the fragment, engaged in the work
of completing the burial. They are represented as climbing the pile of corpses,
and they seem to be helping themselves up by means of a rope which they grasp
in their right hands. On their heads they carry baskets piled up with earth,
which they are about to throw upon the top of the mound. In the relief they
appear to be climbing upon the limbs of the dead, but it is probable that they
began piling earth from below and climbed the sides of the mound as it was
raised. The sculptor has not seen how to represent the sides of the tell
without hiding his corpses, so he has omitted the piled earth altogether,
unless, indeed, what appears to be a rope which the carriers hold is really
intended for the side of the mound in section. It has been suggested that the
carriers are bearing offerings for the dead, but the baskets appear to be
heaped with earth, not offerings, and the record in the text upon the stele,
that Eannatum piled up twenty burial-mounds after his battle with the men of
Umma, is sufficient justification for the view that the scene represents one of
these mounds in course of construction.
The continuation of the scene upon
the other two fragments, proves that the burial of the dead was attended
with elaborate funeral rites,
and the offering of sacrifices. To the right of the workers
engaged in piling
up the burial-mound may be seen a bull lying on his back
upon the ground, and
bound securely with ropes to two stout stakes driven into
the soil close to its
head and tail. He is evidently the victim, duly prepared for
sacrifice, that
will be offered when the burial-mound has been completed. In
the field above
the bull are sculptured other victims and offerings,
Of the last scene that is preserved upon the Stele of the Vultures very
little remains upon the fragments recovered, but this is sufficient to indicate
its character.
According to this alternative we need assume the existence of no
registers other than those of which we already possess fragments, and the
conception and arrangement of the reliefs gains immensely in unity and
coherence. On the obverse we have only two registers, the upper one rather
larger than the one below, and both devoted, as we have seen, to representations
of Ningirsu and his attendant goddesses. The reverse of the stone, divided into
four registers, is assigned entirely to Eannatum, who is seen leading his
troops to the attack, returning in his chariot from the field of battle,
performing funeral rites for his dead soldiers, and deciding the fate of
captives he has taken. Thus the reliefs admirably illustrate the description of
the war with Umma, and we may conclude that the Stele of the Vultures was
either the actual stele of delimitation set up by Eannatum upon the frontier, or, as is more probable, an exact copy of
its text, embellished
with sculptures, upon a stone which Eannatum caused to be carved and set up
within his own city as a
memorial of his conquest. Indeed, we may perhaps
make the further assumption that the stele was erected within the temple of Ningirsu,
since it commemorates
the recovery of Gu-edin, the territory that
was peculiarly his own. The Stele of the Vultures, with its elaborate and delicate relief,
would have been out of place
upon the frontier of Gu-edin, where, we may
conjecture, the memorial stone would have been made as strong and plain as possible, so
as to offer little scope
for mutilation. But, if destined to be set up within the shelter of Ningirsu's
temple in Lagash, the sculptor
would have had no restriction placed upon his efforts; and the prominent place
assigned to Ningirsu in the
reliefs, upon the face of the memorial, is
fully in keeping with the suggestion that the Stele of the Vultures at one time stood within
his shrine.
In favour of the view that the monument was not the actual stele of
delimitation we may note that towards the close of its text some four columns
were taken up with lists of other conquests achieved by Eannatum. But in all
"kudurru-inscriptions", or boundary-stones, which were intended to
safeguard the property or claims of private individuals, the texts close with a
series of imprecations calling down the anger of the gods upon any one
infringing the owner's rights in any way. Now in general character the text
upon the Stele of the Vultures closely resembles the " kudurru-
inscriptions," only differing from them in that it sets out to delimit,
not the fields and estates of individuals, but the respective territories of
two city-states. We should therefore expect that, like them, it would close
with invocations to the gods. Moreover, the Cone of Entemena, the text of which
was undoubtedly copied from a similar stele of delimitation, ends with curses,
and not with a list of Entemena's own achievements. But if the short list of
Eannatum's titles and conquests be omitted, the text upon the Stele of the
Vultures would end with the series of invocations to Enlil and other deities,
to which reference has already been made.
We may therefore conclude that the original text,
as engraved upon the stele of delimitation, did end at this point, and that the
list of other conquests was only added upon the memorial erected in Ningirsu's
temple.
Apart from the interest attaching to the memorial itself, this point has
a bearing upon the date of the conquest of Umma in relation to the other
successful wars conducted by Eannatum in the course of his reign. It might
reasonably be urged that the subjugation of the neighbouring city of Umma
would have preceded the conquest of more distant lands and cities, over which
Eannatum succeeded in imposing his sway. In that case we must assume that the
list of conquests upon the Stele of the Vultures was added at a later date. On
the other hand, it is equally possible that the war with Umma took place well
on in Eannatum's reign, and that, while the patesi and his army were away on
distant expeditions, their ancient rival Umma refrained from taking advantage
of their absence to gain control of the coveted territory of Gu-edin. Both
cities may for years have respected the terms of Mesilim's treaty, and Lagash,
while finding scope elsewhere for her ambition, may have been content to
acquiesce in the claims of independence put forward by her nearest neighbour.
Thus the list of Eannatum's conquests may well have been engraved upon the
Stele of the Vultures at the time the treaty with Umma was drawn up. In
accordance with this view we shall see there are reasons for believing that
several of Eannatum's conquests did take place before his war with Umma, and it
is quite possible to assign to this earlier period the others that are
mentioned in the list.
The conquest of Kish stands in close relation to that of Umma, for,
apart from the portrayal of the king of Kish as a captive upon the Stele of the
Vultures, there is a passage in the main body of the inscription which would
seem to connect the outbreak of war between Umma and Lagash with the influence
of that city. In the broken passage recording the encourageĀment given to
Eannatum by Ningirsu after the raid of Gu-edin, the names of Umma and Kish occur
together, and the context of the passage suggests that Ningirsu here promises his patesi victory over
both these cities. We
may, therefore, conjecture that the ambitious designs described by Entemena as actuating Ush,
the patesi of Umma, in
raiding the territory of Lagash, were fostered by the city of Kish. It is probable that
Eannatum had already given
proof of his qualities as a military leader, and had caused the king of Kish to see in
Lagash a possible rival
for the hegemony which the North had long
enjoyed. To sow dissension between her and her neighbour Umma, would have appeared a
most effective
method of crippling her growing power, and it is possible that the king of Kish not
only promised his support,
but furnished a contingent of his own soldiers
to assist in the attack. The representation of the captive king of Kish upon the Stele
of the Vultures may possibly be
interpreted as proving that he led his troops
in person, and was captured during the battle. But the relief is, perhaps, not to be
taken too literally, and
may merely symbolize the defeat of his forces along with those of Umma, and his failure to
render them any
effective
aid. On the other
hand, in a text enĀgraved upon one of his foundation-stones, Eannatum boasts that he
added the kingdom of Kish to his dominions
: "Eannatum, patesi of Lagash, by the goddess Ninni who loves him, along with
the patesiate of Lagash was
presented with the kingdom of Kish." It would seem that in this passage
Eannatum lays claim, not only
to have defeated Kish, but also to exercising
suzeranity over the northern kingdom.
With Eannatum's victory over Kish we must probably connect the success
which he achieved over another northern city, Opis. For towards the end of the
text upon the foundation-stone referred to above, these achievements appear to
be described as a single event, or, at least, as two events of which the second
closely follows and supplements the first. In the course of the formulae
celebrating the principal conquests of his reign, Eannatum exclaims : "By
Eannatum was Elam broken in the head, Elam was driven back to his own land; Kish was broken in the head, and the king of Opis was driven back to his own land". When referring to the victory over Opis in an
earlier passage of the same inscription, Eannatum names the king who attacked him, and, although he does not
give many details
of the war, it may be inferred that Opis was defeated only after a severe struggle. "When the king of Opis rose up", the text runs,
"Eannatum, whose name was spoken by Ningirsu, pursued Zuzu, king of Opis, from the Antasurra of Ningirsu up to the city of Opis, and there he smote him and
destroyed him". We have already seen reasons for believing that the king of Kish took an active part in Umma's war with Lagash, and shared her defeat; and we may conjecture that it was to help and avenge his ally
that Zuzu, king of
Opis, marched south and attacked Eannatum. That he met with some success at first is perhaps indicated by the point from which
Eannatum records that he drove him back to his own land. For the Antasurra was a shrine or temple dedicated to Ningirsu, and stood within the territory of Lagash, though possibly upon or near the frontier. Here Eannatum met the invaders in force, and not only dislodged them, but followed up his victory by pursuing
them back to their own city, where he claims that he administered a still more crushing defeat.
It is possible
that the conquest of Maer, or Mari, took place at this time, and in connection with the war with Opis and Kish, for in one passage Eannatum refers to the defeat of these three states at the Antasurra of Ningirsu. Maer may well have been allied with Kish and Opis, and may have contributed a contingent to the army led by Zuzu in his attack on Lagash.
It is interesting to note that Kish and the king of Kish represented the
most dreaded enemies of Lagash, at least during a portion of the reign of
Eannatum. For on a mortar of black basalt which is preserved in the British
Museum, Eannatum, after recording that he has dedicated it to Nina,
"the Lady of the Holy Mountain",
prays that no man may damage it or carry it
away; and he then adds the petition, "May the King of Kish not seize
it!". This ejaculation is eloquent
of the dread which the northern kingdom inspired
in the cities of the south, and we may see in it evidence of many a
raid during which the temples of
Lagash had been despoiled of their treasures. We may well ascribe the
dedication of the altar and the
cutting of the inscription to the early part of Eannatum's reign; at any
rate, to a period before the power
of Kish was broken in the south; and, if we are right in this supposition,
the mortar may perhaps serve to
date another group of Eannatum's campaigns. For in a passage on the second
side of this monument it appears
to be recorded that he had conquered the cities of Erech and Ur. The
passage follows the invocations set
forth by Eannatum upon the other side, in the course of which he prays
that no one shall remove the
mortar, or cast it into the fire, or damage it in any way ; and it might be
argued that the lines were an
addition made to the original text of dedication at a considerably later
period. In that case the passage
would afford no proof that the conquest of Ur and Erech preceded that
of Kish. But both sides of the
monument have the appearance of having been engraved by the same hand,
and we are probably justified
in assuming that the whole of the inscription was placed upon the vessel
at the time it was made. We may
thus provisionally place the conquest of Ur and Erech before that of
Kish. Further, in his foundation-inscriptions,
Eannatum groups his conquest of Ur
and Erech with that of Ki-babbar, "the place of the Sun-god", a
term which may with considerable probability
be identified with Larsa, the centre of the cult of the Sun-god in
Southern Babylonia. It would thus
appear that Eannatum conquered these cities, all situated in the extreme
south of Babylonia at about the
same period, and probably in the early part of his reign.
An
indication that we are right in placing the southern conquests of
Eannatum before the war with Umma may,
perhaps, be seen in the invocations to
The other conquests recorded in the inscriptions of Eannatum fall into two groups. In all the lists of his victories that have come down to usāon the Stele of the Vultures, the foundation-stones, and the brick-inscriptionsāthe defeat of Elam is given the first place. This is probably not to be taken as implying that it was the first in order of time. It is true that the order in which the conquered districts and cities are arranged is generally the same in the different lists, but this is not invariably the case. Apart from differences caused by the omission or insertion of names, the order is sometimes altered; thus the conquest of Arua is recorded before that of Ur on the Stele of the Vultures, whereas on the foundation-stones this arrangement is reversed. It would, therefore, be rash to assume that they were enumerated in the order of their occurrence; it is more probable that the conquered states and districts are grouped on a rough geographical basis, and that these groups are arranged according to the importance attaching to them. That Elam should always be mentioned first in the lists is probably due to the fact that she was the hereditary enemy of the cities of Sumer and Akkad, whose rulers could never be sure of immunity from her attacks. The agricultural wealth of Babylonia offered a temptĀing prey to the hardy tribes who dwelt among the hills upon the western border of Elam, and the dread of the raider and mountaineer, experienced by the dweller in the plain, is expressed by Eannatum in his description of Elam as "the mountain that strikes terror." That
in their conflict with Eannatum the Elamites were, as usual, the
aggressors, is clear from the words of the
record upon his longer foundation-inscriptionā "by Eannatum was Elam
broken in the head, Elam was driven
back to his own land." In other passages referring
to the discomfiture of the Elamites, Eannatum adds the formula that "he
heaped up burial-mounds,"
a phrase which would seem to imply that the
enemy were only defeated with considerable loss. It
is not unlikely that we may fix the field of battle, upon which the forces of
Elam were defeated, on the banks
of the Asukhur Canal, which had been cut two generations before by
Ur-Nina, Eannatum's grandĀfather; at least, the canal gives its name to a
battlefield which is mentioned immediately before the name of Elam in one of the lists
of conquests. It would thus
seem that the Elamites were engaged in raiding the territory of Lagash
when Eannatum fell upon them with
his army and drove them northwards and across the Tigris.
Closely
associated with Eannatum's success against the Elamites were his
conquest of Shakh, of a city the
reading of the name for which is unknown, and probably also of a land or
district which bore the name of Sunanam.
The conquest of this last place is only mentioned
in a broken passage upon the Stele of the Vultures, between the names of Elam and Shakh, and that
of the unknown city, so that little can be inferred with regard to it. Shakh,
on the other hand, whenever it is
referred to in the inscriptions of Eannatum, follows immediately after the name
of Elam, and it was not improbably
a district on the Elamite frontier which Eannatum
ravaged during his pursuit of the invaders. The city with the unknown
name was evidently a place
of some importance, for not only was it governed by a patesi, but when its
conquest is mentioned in the lists
details are usually given. The interpretation of a phrase recording its
patesi's action with regard to the emblem
of the city is not quite certain, but it would appear that on the approach
of Eannatum he planted it
before the city-gate. The context would seem to imply that this was
intended as an act of defiance, not of
submission, for Eannatum states that he conquered the city and heaped up
burial-mounds. The site of the
city, like its name, is unknown, but since the records referring to it
always follow those concerning Elam,
we may provisionally regard it as having lain in the direction of the
Elamite frontier.
The
remaining group of Eannatum's conquests comprise the victories he achieved
over Az, Mishime, and Arua.
The first of these places was a city ruled by a patesi, whom Eannatum
slew when he captured and destroyed
it. It was formerly regarded as situated in the neighbourhood of the
Persian Gulf, but the grounds on
which this view was held have proved inadequate. Moreover, Eannatum's
references to Mishime and Arua do not
assist us much in determining their positions, for he merely states that
he destroyed and annihilated them.
In a passage upon the Stele of the Vultures, however, a reference to the
land of Sumer follows closely
upon a record of the conquest of Arua, which perhaps is an indication
that all three places should be sought
in Southern Babylonia. We are thus without data for settling
definitely the region in which this group
of cities lay, and we are equally without information as to the period of his
reign in which Eannatum captured
or destroyed them. The fact that they are mentioned last in the lists
is no proof that they were among
his most recent conquests; it may merely be due to their relatively
small importance. In support of this
suggestion we may note that in the longest of his foundation-inscriptions
Eannatum refers to them once only,
while his successes against Elam and the northern cities are celebrated in
two or three separate passages.
From
the preceding discussion of the campaigns of Eannatum it will have
been seen that during his reign
a considerable expansion took place in the power and influence of Lagash.
From being a city-state with her
influence restricted to her own territory, she became head of a confederation of
the great Sumerian cities, she
successfully disputed with the northern cities the hegemony in Babylonia, and
she put a check upon the encroachments
of Elam, the hereditary foe of Sumer and
Akkad alike. According to the view of Eannatum's conquests which has been put
forward, the first expansion
of the city's influence took place southwards. The
cities of Ur, Erech, Larsa, Kesh, and probably Eridu, had already become her
vassal states, before Kish and Opis attempted to curtail her growing power; and
in the war which followed it is probable that we may see a struggle between the
combined forces of Sumer on the one hand, and those of Akkad on the other. One
of the most important episodes in this conflict was the war with Umma, since
the raid by the men of that city into the territory of Lagash furnished the
occasion for the outbreak of hostilities. The issue of the conflict placed
Lagash in the position of the leading city in Babylonia. The fact that from
this time forward Eannatum did not permanently adopt the title of
"king" in his inscriptions, may perhaps be traced to his preference
for the religious title of "patesi," which emphasized his dependence
upon his own city-god Ningirsu.
The
military character of Eannatum is reflected in his inscriptions, which in this
respect form a striking contrast to those of his grandfather, Ur-Nina. While
the earlier king's records are confined entirely to lists of temples and other
buildings, which he erected or restored in Lagash and its neighbourhood, the
texts of Eannatum are devoted almost exclusively to his wars. From a few
scattered passages, however, we gather that he did not entirely neglect the
task of adding to and beautifying the temples in his capital. Thus he built a
temple for the goddess Gatumdug, and added to other buildings which were
already standing in Ur-Nina's time. But his energies in this direction were
mainly devoted to repairing the fortifications of Lagash, and to putting the
city in a complete state of defence. Thus he boasts that he built the wall of
Lagash and made it strong. Since Ur-Nina's time, when the city-wall had been
thoroughly repaired, it is probable that the defences of the city had been
weakened, for Eannatum also records that he restored Girsu, one of the quarters
of the city, which we may suppose had suffered on the same occasion, and had
been allowed to remain since then in a partly ruined condition. In honour of
the goddess Nina he also records that he rebuilt, or perhaps largely increased,
the quarter or the city which was named after her, and he constructed a wall for
the special protection of Uru-azagga,
another quarter of Lagash. In fact, the political
expansion, which took place at this period in the power of Lagash, was
accompanied by an equally
striking increase in the size and defences of the city itself.
During
the reign of Eannatum it is clear that the people of Lagash enjoyed a
considerable measure of prosperity,
for, although they were obliged to furnish men for their patesis army,
the state acquired considerable wealth from the sack of conquered cities, and
from the
tribute of grain and other supplies which was levied upon them as a mark of
their permanent subjection. Moreover,
the campaigns could not have been of very long duration, and, after
the return of the army on the completion
of a war, it is probable that the greater part of it would be disbanded,
and the men would go back to
their ordinary occupations. Thus the successful prosecution of his foreign
policy by Eannatum did not
result in any impoverishment of the material resources of his people,
and the fertile plains around the
city were not left untilled for lack of labour. Indeed, it would appear
that in the latter part of his reign
he largely increased the area of land under cultivation. For in his
longer foundation-inscriptions, after
recording his principal conquests, he states : " In that day Eannatum did (as
follows). Eannatum, . . . when
his might had borne fruit, dug a new canal for Ningirsu, and he named it
Lummadimdug." By the expression
" when his might had borne fruit," it is clear that Eannatum refers
to the latter part of his reign,
when he was no longer obliged to place his army incessantly in the
field, and he and his people were
enabled to devote themselves to the peaceful task of developing the
material resources of their own district
in Sumer.
Another
canal, which we know was cut by Eannatum, was that separating the plain of
Gu-edin from the
territory of Umma, but this was undertaken, not for purposes of irrigation,
but rather as a frontier-ditch
to mark the limits of the territory of Lagash in that direction. There is
little doubt, however, that at least
a part of its stream was used for supplying water to those portions of
Gu-edin which lay along its banks. Like
the canal Lummadimdug, this frontier-ditch was also dedicated to Ningirsu,
and in the inscription upon a
small column which records this fact, the name of the canal is given as
Lummagirnuntashagazaggipadda. But
this exceedingly long title was only employed upon state occasions, such as
the ceremony of dedication; in common
parlance the name was abbreviated to Lumma-girnunta, as we learn from
the reference to it upon Entemena's
Cone. It is of interest to note that in the
title of the stone of delimitation, which occurs upon the Stele of the
Vultures, reference is made to a
canal named Ug-edin, the title of the stone being given as "O Ningirsu,
lord of the crown . . . , give life
unto the canal Ug-edin!" In the following lines the monument itself is
described as "the Stele of Gu-edin,
the territory beloved of Ningirsu, which I, Eannatum, have restored to
Ningirsu"; so that it is clear
that the canal, whose name is incorporated in that of the stele, must
have had some connection with the
frontier-ditch. Perhaps the canal Ug-edin is to be identified with
Lummagirnunta, unless one of the two was a
subsidiary canal.
For
the supply of his principal irrigation-canal with water after the period of
the spring-floods, Eannatum did
not depend solely upon such water as might find its way in from the river,
before the surface of the latter
sank below the level of the canal-bed; nor did he confine himself to the
laborious method of raising it from
the river to his canal by means of irrigation- machines. Both these
methods of obtaining water he doubtless
employed, but he supplemented them by the construction of a
reservoir, which should retain at least a
portion of the surplus water during the early spring, and store it up for gradual
use in the fields after the water-level
in the river and canals had fallen. In the passage in his
foundation-inscription, which records this fact, he says: "For
Ningirsu he founded the canal Lummadimdug
and dedicated it to him; Eannatum, endowed
with strength by Ningirsu, constructed the
Smaller
canals were possibly dug during Eannatum's reign for supplying water
to those quarters of Lagash which
he improved or added to; and we also know that, where canalization
was impracticable, he obtained water
by sinking wells. Within the enclosure of Ningirsu's temple, for
instance, he constructed a well for
supplying the temple with water, and some of the bricks have been recovered
which lined the well on the
inside. On these he inscribed his name beside those
of the gods by whom he had been favoured ; and, after giving a list of his
more important conquests, he recorded
that he had built the well in the spacious forecourt of the temple,
and had named it Sigbirra, and
had dedicated it to Ningirsu. From the reference to his conquests in the
inscription upon the bricks, it is
clear that the sinking of the well, like the cutting of the irrigation-canal
Lummadimdug, took place in the
later years of Eannatum's reign.
The
phrase with which the well-inscription of Eannatum ends may be taken
as indicating the measure of
prosperity to which the state of Lagash attained under his rule. "In
those days," it says, "did Ningirsu love Eannatum". But
Eannatum's claim to remembrance rests, as we have seen, in a greater degree
upon his
military successes, by means of which he was enabled to extend the authority of
Lagash over the whole of Sumer
and a great part of Akkad. He proved himself strong enough at the same
time to defend his empire from
the attack of external foes, and it is probable that, after his signal
defeat of the Elamites, he was not troubled
by farther raids from that quarter. Three
THE CLOSE OF UR-NINA'S DYNASTY, THE REFORMS OF URUKAGINA, AND THE FALL OF LAGASH
THE CLOSE OF UR-NINA'S DYNASTY,THE REFORMS OF URUKAGINA,AND THE FALL OF LAGASH
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