READING HALL DOORS OF WISDOM |
MESILIM OF KISH(2500 BC)
THE EARLIEST SETTLEMENTS IN SUMER; THE DAWN OF HISTORY AND THE RISE OF LAGASHIN their origin the great cities of Babylonia were little more than collections of rude huts constructed at first of reeds cut in the marshes, and gradually giving place to rather more substantial buildings of clay and sundried brick. From the very beginning it would appear that the shrine of the local god played an important part in the foundation and subsequent development of each centre of population. Of the prehistoric period in Babylonia we know little, but it may be assumed that, already at the time of the Sumerian immigration, rude settlements had been formed around the cult-centres of local gods. This, at any rate, was the character of each town or city of the Sumerians themselves during the earliest periods to which we can trace back their history. At Fara, the most primitive Sumerian site that has yet been examined, we find the god Shuruppak giving his own name to the city around his shrine, and Ningirsu of Lagash dominates and directs his people from the first. Other city-gods, who afterwards became powerful deities in the Babylonian pantheon, are already in existence, and have acquired in varying degrees their later characters. Enki of Eridu is already the god of the deep, the shrine of Enzu or Nannar in the city of Ur is a centre of the moon-cult, Babbar of Larsa appears already as a sun-god and the dispenser of law and justice, while the most powerful Sumerian goddess, Ninni or Nana of Erech, already has her shrine and worshippers in the city of her choice. By what steps the city-gods acquired their later characters it is impossible now to say, but we may assume that the process was a gradual one. In the earlier stages of its history the character of the
local god, like that
of his city, must have been far more simple and primitive than it appears to us as seen in the light of its later development. The authority
of each god did
not extend beyond the limits of his own people's territory. Each city was content to do battle on his behalf, and the defeat of one was synonymous with the downfall of the other. With the gradual amalgamation of the cities into larger states, the
god of the
predominant city would naturally take precedence over those of the conquered
or dependent towns, and to the subsequent process of adjustment we may probably trace the relationships between the different deities and the growth of a pantheon. That Enki should have been the god of the deep from the beginning
is natural enough in view of Eridu's position on an expanse of water connected with the Persian Gulf. But how it came about that Ur was the centre of a moon-cult, or that Sippar in the north and Larsa in
the south were
peculiarly associated with the worship of the sun, are questions which cannot as yet be answered, though it is probable that future excavations on
their sites may
throw some light upon the subject.
In the case of one city excavation has already enabled us to trace the
gradual growth of its temple and the surrounding habitations during a
considerable portion of their history. The city of Nippur stands in a peculiar
relation to others in Sumer and Akkad, as being the central shrine in the two
countries and the seat of Enlil, the chief of the gods. Niffer, or Nuffar, is
the name by which the mounds marking its site are still known. They have been
long deserted, and, like the sites of many other ancient cities in Babylonia
and Assyria, no modern town or village is built upon them or in their immediate
neighbourhood. The nearest small town is Suk el-Afej, about four miles to the
south, lying on the eastern edge of the Afej marshes, which begin to the south
of Niffer and stretch away to the west. The nearest large town is Diwaniya, on
the left bank of the Euphrates twenty miles to the south-west.
In the summer the marshes in the neighbourhood of the mounds consist of pools of water connected by channels through the reed-beds, but in the
spring, when the snows have melted in the Taurus and the mountains of Kurdistan, the flood-water converts
the marshes into a
vast lagoon, and all that meets the eye are isolated date-palms and a few small hamlets built on rising knolls above the water-level.
Although, during the floods, Niffer is at times nearly isolated, the water never approaches within a considerable distance of the actual mounds. This is not due to any natural configuration of the soil, but to the fact that around the inner city, the site of which is marked by the mounds, there was built an outer ring of habitations at a time when the enclosed town of the earlier periods became too small to contain the growing population. The American excavations, which have been conducted on the site between the years 1889 and 1900, have shown that the earliest area of habitation was far more restricted than the mounds which cover the inner city.
The
excavations on the site of Nippur and its temple have illustrated the
gradual increase in the size of a
Sumerian city, and the manner in which the temple of the city-god
retained its position as the central
and most important building. The diggings, however, have thrown little
light upon the form the temple
assumed during periods anterior to the Dynasty of Ur. In fact, we do not
yet know the form or arrangement
of an early Sumerian temple; for on early sites such as Fara,
Surghul, and Bismaya, the remains of no
important building were uncovered, while the scanty remains of
Ningirsu's temple at Tello date from the
comparatively late period of Ur-Bau and Gudea. On the latter site,
however, a number of earlier constructions have been discovered, and, although
they are not of
a purely religious character, they may well have been employed in connection
with the temple service. Apart
from private dwellings, they are the only buildings of the early Sumerians
that have as yet been recovered,
and they forcibly illustrate the primitive character of the cities of
this time.
The
earliest written records of the Sumerians which we possess, apart from
those engraved upon stone and of a
purely votive character, concern the sale and donation of land, and they
prove that certain customs were
already in vogue with regard to the transfer of property, which we meet
with again in later historical periods.
A few such tablets of rounded form and fashioned
of unburnt clay were found at Lagash on Tell K, and slightly below the
level of Ur-Nina's building; they may thus be assigned to a period anterior to his reign. Others of the
same rounded form, but of
baked clay, have been found at Shuruppak. It is a significant fact that
several of these documents, after describing
the amount of land sold and recording the principal price that was
paid for it, enumerate a number
of supplementary presents made by the buyer to the seller and his
associates. The presents consist of
oxen, oil, wool and cloth, and precisely similar gifts are recorded on the Obelisk
of Manishtusu. It would thus
appear that even in this early period the system of land tenure was already firmly
established, which prevailed in both Sumer and Akkad under the earlier historical rulers.
In
order to assign a date to such figures
as that of Lupad, it is necessary, in the absence of other evidence, to be guided entirely by
the style of the sculpture
and the character of the writing. Several such figures of archaic Sumerian type have been
recovered, and
three of them represent kings who
ruled in different cities at this early
period. The finest of these is a standing
figure of Esar, King of Adab, which
was found in the course of the American
excavations at Bismaya, and is now
preserved in the Imperial Ottoman
Museum at Constantinople. Its
discoverers claimed that it was the earliest
example of Sumerian sculpture known, but it may be
roughly placed at about the time of Ur-Nina's dynasty. A second king is
represented by two fragments of a statuette from Tello, inscribed in archaic characters with a
dedicatory text of E-abzu, King of Urama, while the third is a seated figure of a king of the northern city or
district of Maer, or Mari, and is preserved
in the British Museum. The same uncertainty applies to the date of
Ur-Enlil, a patesi of Nippur, whose
name is mentioned on one of the fragments of votive vases from that city
which were found together on the
south-east side of the temple-tower. As in the
It is
in the city of Lagash
that our knowledge of Sumerian history may be said to begin. The excavation of the site has yielded an abundance
of material from which
it is possible to arrange
her rulers for long
periods in chronological order, and to reconstruct the part they played in conflicts between
the early city-states.
It is true that some
of her earlier kings and
patesis remain little more
than names to us, but
with the accession of Ur-Nina
we enter a period
in which our knowledge
of events is continuous,
so far at least as the
fortunes of the city were
concerned. With the
growth of her power it is also possible to trace in some detail the relations
she maintained with other great
cities in the land.
At the
earliest period of which we have any historical records it would appear
that the city of Kish exercised a
suzerainty over Sumer. Here there ruled at this time a king named Mesilim,
to whom Lagash, and probably
other great cities in the south, owed allegiance. During his reign a certain
Lugal-shag-engur was patesi of
Lagash, and we have definite record that he acknowledged Mesilim's supremacy.
For a votive
mace-head of colossal size has
been found at Tello, which bears
an inscription stating that it was
dedicated to Ningirsu by Mesilim,
who had restored his great
temple at Lagash during the
time that Lugal-shag-engur was
patesi of that city. The text,
the brevity of which is characteristic of these early votive inscriptions, consists of
but a few words,
and reads : "Mesilim, King of
Kish, the builder of the temple of Ningirsu, deposited this mace-head (for) Ningirsu
(at the time
when) Lugal-shag-engur (was)
patesi of Lagash". In spite of its
brevity the importance of the
inscription is considerable, since
it furnishes a synchronism between
two early rulers of Sumer and
the North.
The
weapon itself, upon which it is
engraved, is also noteworthy. As may
be inferred from its colossal size the mace was never intended for actual use in
battle, but was sculptured by Mesilim's
orders with the special object of being dedicated in the temple of the god. It
is decorated with rudely-carved
figures of lions, which run around it and form a single composition
in relief. The lions are six in number,
and are represented as pursuing and attacking one another. Each has
seized the hind-leg and the back of the
one which precedes it; they thus form an endless chain around the object,
and are a most effective form of
decoration. Unlike the majority of mace-heads, that of Mesilim is not
perforated from top to bottom. The hole
for receiving the handle of the weapon, though deep, is not continued to
the top of the stone, which is
carved in low relief with a representation of a lion-headed eagle with wings
outspread and claws extended. Looked
at from above, this fantastic animal appears as an isolated figure, but it
is not to be separated from the lions
running round the side of the mace-head. In fact, we may see in the whole
composition a development of the
symbol which formed the arms of the city of Lagash, and was the
peculiar emblem of the city-god Ningirsu. In the latter, the lion-headed eagle grasps two lions by the back, and
in Mesilim's sacred mace we have
the same motive of a lion-headed eagle above lions. It was, indeed, a
peculiarly appropriate votive offering
for an
overlord of Lagash to make. As suzerain of Lagash, Mesilim had repaired
the temple
of Ningirsu,
the city-god; the colossal mace-head, wrought with a design taken from
the emblem of the city and its
god, was thus a fitting object for his inscription. By depositing it in Ningirsu's
temple, he not only sought to
secure the favour of the local god by his piety, but he left in his city a
permanent record of his own dominion.
Of
Lugal-shag-engur we know as yet nothing beyond
his name, and the fact that he was patesi of Lagash at the time of
Mesilim, but the latter ruler has left a
more enduring mark upon history. For a later patesi of Lagash, Entemena,
when giving a historical summary
of the relations which existed between his own city and the
neighbouring city of Umma, begins his
account with the period of Mesilim, and furnishes additional testimony to the
part which this early king
of Kish played in the local affairs of southern
The
form in which the record of the treaty is cast is of peculiar interest, for
it forcibly illustrates the theocratic feeling of these early peoples. It is
in accordance with
their point of view that the actual patesis of Lagash and Umma are not
named, and the dispute is regarded
as having been adjusted by the gods. The deity
who presided over the conference, and at whose invitation the treaty is
stated to have been made, was Enlil,
"the king of the lands". Owing to his unique position among the local
gods of Babylonia, his divine authority
was recognized by the lesser city-gods. Thus it was at his command that
Ningirsu, the god of Lagash, and
the city-god of Umma fixed the boundary. It is true that Mesilim, the King
of Kish, is referred to by name,
but he only acted at the word of his own goddess Kadi, and his duties were
confined to making a record of the
treaty which the gods themselves had drawn up. We could not have a more
striking instance of the manner
in which the early inhabitants of Babylonia regarded the city-gods as
the actual kings and rulers of their
cities. The human kings and patesis were nothing
THE TREATY OF MESALIM (c. 2500 B.C.)
By the immutable word of Enlil, king of the
lands, father of the gods, Ningirsu and Shara set a boundary to their lands. Mesilim,
King of Kish, at the command of his deity Kadi, set up a stele [a boundary
marker] in the plantation of that field. Ush, ruler of Umma,
formed a plan to seize it. That stele he broke in pieces, into the plain of
Lagash he advanced. Ningirsu, the hero of Enlil, by his just command, made war upon Umma. At the command of Enlil,
his great net ensnared them. He erected their burial mound on the plain in that
place.
Eannatum, ruler
of Lagash, brother of the father of Entemena [who put
up this inscription] . . . for Enakalli, ruler of Umma, set the border to the land. He carried a canal from
the great river to Guedin. He opened the field of Ningirsu on its border for 210 spans to the power of Umma. He ordered the royal field not to be seized. At the
canal he inscribed a stele. He returned the stele of Mesilim to its place. He did not encroach on the plain of Mesilim. At the boundary-line of Ningirsu,
as a protecting structure, he built the sanctuary of Enlil,
the sanctuary of Ninkhursag . . . By harvesting, the
men of Umma had eaten one storehouse-full of the
grain of Nina [goddess of Oracles], the grain of Ningirsu;
he caused them to bear a penalty. They brought 144,000 gur,
a great storehouse full, [as repayment]. The taking of this grain was not to be
repeated in the future.
Urlumma, ruler
of Umma, drained the boundary canal of Ningirsu, the boundary canal of Nina; those steles he threw
into the fire, he broke [them] in pieces; he destroyed the sanctuaries, the
dwellings of the gods, the protecting shrines, the buildings that had been
made. He was as puffed up as the mountains; he crossed over the boundary canal
of Ningirsu. Enannatum, ruler
of Lagash, went into battle in the field of Ugigga,
the irrigated field of Ningirsu. Entemena,
the beloved son of Enannatum, completely overthrew
him. Urlumma fled. In the midst of Umma he killed him. He left behind 60 soldiers of his force
[dead] on the bank of the canal
"Meadow-recognized-as-holy-from-the-great-dagger." He left these
men--their bones on the plain. He heaped up mounds for them in 5 places. Then
Ili, Priest of Ininni of Esh in Girsu, he established as a vassal ruler over Umma.
Ili took the ruler of Umma into his hand. He
drained the boundary canal of Ningirsu, a great
protecting structure of Ningirsu, unto the bank of
the Tigris above from the banks of Girsu. He took the
grain of Lagash, a storehouse of 3600 gur. Entemena, ruler of Lagash declared hostilities on Ili, whom
for a vassal he had set up. Ili, ruler of Umma,
wickedly flooded the dyked and irrigated field; he
commanded that the boundary canal of Ningirsu; the
boundary canal of Nina, be ruined. . . Enlil and Ninkhursag did not permit [this to happen]. Entemena, ruler of Lagash, whose name was spoken by Ningirsu, restored their canal to its place according to
the righteous word of Enlil, according to the
righteous word of Nina, their canal which he had constructed from the river
Tigris to the great river, the protecting structure, its foundation he had made
of stone . . .
(From George A. Barton, "Inscription of Entemena #7" The Royal Inscriptions of Sumer and Akkad (New Haven, Conn. 1929) pp.
61, 63 & 65. The original post is at the Ancient History Sourcebook.)
THE CONE OF ENTEMENA (2450-2375 BC)
"For the goddess Inanna, for the god Lord Emesh. Entemena, the
ruler of Lagash. The temple Emesh, beloved of
the people, he built it. He ordered these clay nails for it. Entemena, the man who built the Emesh,
his personal god is god Shulutul. Entemena, the ruler of Lagash and Lugal-kinishe-dudu,
the ruler of Uruk, made a brotherhood treaty."
We could not have a more striking instance of the manner in which the early inhabitants of Babylonia regarded the city-gods as the actual kings and rulers of their cities. The human kings and patesis were nothing their more than ministers, or agents, appointed to carry out their will. Thus, when one city made war upon another, it was because their gods were at feud; the territory of the city was the property of the city-god, and, when a treaty of delimitation was proposed, it was naturally the gods themselves who arranged it and drew up its provisions.
We are
enabled to fix approximately the period of Mesilim by this reference
to him upon the cone of Entemena,
but we have no such means of determining the
date of another early ruler of the city of Ivish, whose name has been
recovered during the American excavations
on the site of Nippur. Three fragments of a vase of dark brown
sandstone have been found there, engraved
with an inscription of Utug, an early patesi of Kish. They are said to have
been found in the strata beneath
the chambers of the great temple of Enlil on the south-east side of the
ziggurat, or temple-tower. It
would be rash to form any theory as to the date of the vase solely from the
position in which the fragments are said to have been discovered, but the extremely archaic forms of
the characters of the inscription suggest that it dates from the earliest
period of
Babylonian history. Moreover, Utug is termed upon it patesi, not king,
of Kish, suggesting that he ruled
at a time when Kish had not the power and influence it enjoyed under
Mesilim. The hegemony in
Sumer and Akkad constantly passed from one city to another, so that it is
possible that Utug should be set
after Mesilim, when the power of Kish had temporarily declined. But as the
characters of Utug's inscription
are far more archaic than those of Mesilim, we may provisionally set
him in the period before Kish attained
the rank of a kingdom in place of its patesiate. But how long an interval
separated Utug from Mesilim there
is no means of telling.
On the
assumption that Utug ruled in this early period,
we may see in the fragments of his vase from Nippur, evidence of the
struggles by which the city of Kish
attained the position of supremacy it enjoyed under
Mesilim. For Utug's vase was not carried to Nippur as spoil from Kish,
but was deposited by Utug himself
in the temple of Enlil, in commemoration of a victory he had achieved
over the land of Khamazi. We
here learn the name of one of the enemies with whom Kish had to fight in
the early stages of its existence
as an independent city-state, and we may conjecture
that many more such battles had to be fought
and won before its influence was felt beyond the boundaries of Akkad by the
Sumerian cities in the south.
The fact that after his victory Utug deposited the vase at Nippur as a
thank-offering proves that in his
time the shrine of Enlil was already regarded as the central sanctuary of
Babylonia. Zamama, the god of Kish,
had achieved the victory over Khamazi, but Enlil, as the supreme lord of the
world, was entitled to some recognition
and gratitude, and also probably to a share of the spoil. From one line
of the inscription upon Utug's
vase we may perhaps infer that his father's name was Bazuzu, but, as no
title follows the name, he is not to be
reckoned as a patesi of Kish. We may thus conclude that Utug did not
succeed his father upon the throne.
Whether he was a usurper or succeeded some other relative, and whether
he followed up his military successes
by founding at Kish a powerful dynasty to which Mesilim may have
belonged, are among the questions
which may perhaps be answered as the result of future excavation in
Northern Babylonia.
It is
probable that the early supremacy which Kish enjoyed during the reign of
Mesilim continued for some time
after his death. At any rate, the names of two other early rulers of that
city are known, and, as they both
bear the title of king, and not patesi, we may conclude that they lived
during a period of the city's prosperity
or expansion. The name of one of these kings,
Urzage, occurs upon a broken vase of white calcite
stalagmite, which
was found at Nippur, approximately in the same
place as the vase of the patesi
Utug. The
inscription upon the vase records the fact that
it was
dedicated by Urzage to Enlil, "king of the
lands", and his consort Ninlil,
"the lady of heaven and earth". The end of the
text is wanting, but
we may conjecture that, like his earlier
predecessor Utug, the king dedicated
the vase in the temple of Enlil, at Nippur, in
gratitude for some victory over
his enemies. We may thus see in the dedication
of the vase further evidence of
the continued prosperity of Kish, though it is
clear that it only maintained
its position among the other great cities of the
land by force of arms. The
name of the other early king of Kish,
Lugaltarsi, is known to us from a short
inscription upon a small tablet of lapis-lazuli
preserved in the British
Museum. The text records the building of the
wall of the enclosure, or outer court, of
a temple dedicated to Anu and the goddess Ninni,
but, as its provenance is
unknown, it is impossible to base any argument
upon it with reference to the
extent of the influence exerted by Kish during
the reign of Lugaltarsi. Such are the few facts which have come down to
us with regard to the earliest
period of the supremacy of Kish. But the
fortunes of the city were destined to
undergo a complete change, in consequence of the
increase in the power of
Lagash which took place during the reign of
Eannatum. Before we describe the
transfer of power from the north to Sumer, it
will be necessary to retrace our
steps to the point where we left the history of
that city, during the time that
Mesilim was ruling in the north.
The names of the successors of Lugal-shag-engur, Mesilim's contemporary, upon the throne of Lagash have not yet been recovered, and we do not know how long an interval separated his reign from that of Ur-Nina, the early king of Lagash, from whose time so many inscriptions and archaeological remains have been recovered at Tello. It is possible that within this period we should set another ruler of Lagash, named Badu, to whom reference appears to be made by Eannatum upon the famous Stele of the Vultures. The passage occurs in the small fragment that has been preserved of the first column of the text engraved upon the stele, the following line containing the title "King of Lagash". The context of the passage is not preserved, but it is possible that the signs which precede the title are to be taken as a proper name, and in that case they would give the name of an early ruler of the city. In favour of this view we may note that in the text upon an archaic clay tablet found below the level of Ur-Nina's building at Tello the name Badu occurs, and, although it is not there employed as that of a king or patesi, the passage may be taken as evidence of theuse of Badu as a proper name in this early age. Assuming that Badu represents a royal name, it may be inferred from internal evidence furnished by Eannatum's inscription that he lived and reigned at some period before Ur-Nina. The introductory columns of Eannatum's text appear to give a brief historical summary concerning the relations which were maintained between Lagash and the neighbouring city of Urama in the period anterior to Eannatum's own reign. Now the second column of the text describes the attitude of Umma to Lagash in the reign of Akurgal, Ur-Nina's son and successor; it is thus a natural inference that Badu was a still earlier ruler who reigned at any rate before Ur-Nina. Whether he reigned before Lugal-shag-engur also, there are no data for deciding. It will be noted that Eannatum calls him "king" of Lagash, not "patesi", but the use of these titles by Eannatum, as applied to his predecessors, is not consistent, and, that he should describe Badu as "king", is no proof that Badu himself claimed that title. But he may have done so, and we may provisionally place him in the interval between the patesi Lugal-shag-engur and Ur-Nina, who in his numerous texts that have been recovered always claims the title of "king" in place of "patesi", a fact that suggests an increase in the power and importance of Lagash. To the same period we may probably assign Enkhegal, another early king of Lagash, whose name has been recovered on an archaic tablet of limestone.
It has been suggested that the title lugal, "king", did not acquire its later significance until the age of Sargon (Shar-Gani-sharri), but that it was used by earlier rulers as the equivalent of the Semitic belu, "lord". But, in view of the fact that Mesilim bore the title, it would seem that in his time it already conveyed a claim to greater authority than that inherent in the word patesi. The latter title was of a purely religious origin; when borne by a ruler it designated him as the representative of his city-god, but the title "king" was of a more secular character, and connoted a wider dominion. But it must be admitted that some inconsistencies in the use of the titles by members of Ur-Nina's dynasty seem to suggest that the distinction between them was not quite so marked as in the later periods.
It is
possible that Ur-Nina himself, though not a great soldier, did something to
secure, or at least to maintain, the independence of his city. In any case, we
know that he was the founder of his dynasty, for to neither his father Gunidu,
nor to his grandfather Gursar, does he ascribe any titular rank. We may assume
that he belonged to a powerful Sumerian family in Lagash, but, whether he
obtained the throne by inheritance from some collateral branch, or secured it
as the result of a revolt within the city, is not recorded. It is strange that
in none of his numerous inscriptions does he lay claim to any conquest or
achievement in the field. Most of his texts, it is true, are of a dedicatory
character, but, to judge from those of other Sumerian rulers, this fact should
not have prevented him from referring to them, had he any such successes to
chronicle. The nearest approach to a record of a military nature is that he
rebuilt the wall of Lagash. It is therefore clear that, though he may not have
embarked on an aggressive policy, he did not neglect the defence of his own
city. But that appears to have been the extent of his ambition : so long as
the fortifications of the city were intact, and the armed men at her disposal
sufficient for the defence of Lagash herself and her outlying territory, he did
not seek to add to his own renown or to the city's wealth by foreign conquest.
The silence of Entemena
But,
while Ur-Nina's policy appears to have been mainly of a domestic
character, he did not fail to maintain relations with other cities in the
sphere of religious observance.
That he should have continued in active communication
with Nippur, as the religious centre of the
whole of Babylonia, is what we might infer from the practice of the period,
and we may probably trace to
this fact his dedication to Enlil of one of the canals which was cut during his
reign. A more striking instance
of the deference paid by Ur-Nina to the god of another city may be seen
in his relations to Enki, the
Sumerian prototype of the god Ea. When Ur- Nina planned the rebuilding
of the temple E-ninnu, he appears
to have taken precautions to ensure the success of his scheme by making a
direct appeal to Enki, the city-god
of Eridu. On a diorite plaque that has been found at Tello he records the delivery of his prayer to
Enki, that in his character of Chief Diviner he should use his pure reed, the wand
of his divination, to render the work good and should pronounce a favourable
oracle. The temple of Enki in the city of Eridu, near the shore of the Persian
Gulf, was one of the earliest and most sacred of Sumerian shrines, and we may
perhaps picture Ur-Nina as journeying thither from Lagash, in order to carry
his petition in person into the presence of its mysterious god.
Of the
deities of Lagash to whose service Ur-Nina appears especially to have devoted
himself, the goddess Nina, whose name he bore within his own, was one of the
most favoured. For one of the chief claims to distinction that he puts forward
is that he built her temple at Lagash; and although, unlike the later great
builder Gudea, he gives in his inscriptions few details of his work, we may
conclude that he lavished his resources upon it. He also boasts that he made a
statue of Nina, which he no doubt set up within her temple, and one of his
canals he dedicated to her. Her daughter Ninmar was not neglected, for he
records that he built her temple also, and he erected a temple for Gatumdug,
Nina's intercessor, and fashioned a statue of her. Another group of Ur-Nina's buildings
was connected with the worship of Ningirsu, the city-god of Lagash, whose
claims a ruler, so devoted to the interests of his own city as Ur-Nina, would
naturally not have ignored.
A glance at his texts will show that Ur-Nina more than once describes himself as the builder of "the House of Girsu", a title by which he refers to E-ninnu, the great temple dedicated to Ningirsu, since it stood in that quarter of the city which was named Girsu and was by far its most important building. He also built E-pa, a sanctuary closely connected with E-ninnu and the worship of Ningirsu. This temple was added to at a later date by Gudea, who installed therein his patron god, Ningishzida, and set the nuptial gifts of Bau, Ningirsu's consort, within its shrine; it is possible that Ur-Nina's onyx bowl, which was dedicated to Bau, and the fragments of other bowls found with it, mere deposited by Ur-Nina in the same temple. Of other deities in Ningirsu's entourage, whom Ur-Nina singled out for special veneration, may be mentioned Dunshagga, Ningirsu's son, and Uri-zi, the god whose duty it was to look after Ningirsu's karim. Among lesser temples, or portions of temples, which were built or restored by him was the Tirash, where on the day of the New Moon's appearance it was the custom to hold a festival in honour of Ningirsu; while another act of piety which Ur-Nina records was the making of a statue of Lugal-uru, the god from whose festival one of the Sumerian months took its name. In this connection, mention may also be made of the god Dun ..., whom Ur-Nina describes as the "God-king", since he stood in a peculiar relation to Ur-Nina and his family. He became the patron deity of the dynasty which Ur-Nina founded, and, down to the reign of Enannatum II, was the personal protector of the reigning king or patesi of Lagash. For
the construction of his temples Ur-Nina states that he fetched wood from
the mountains, but unlike Gudea
in a later age, he is not recorded to have brought in his craftsmen
from abroad. In addition to the
building of temples, Ur-Nina's other main activity appears to have
centred in the cutting of canals;
among these was the canal named Asukhur, on the
banks of which his grandson Eannatum won a
battle. That the changes he introduced into the canalization of the country
were entirely successful may be
inferred from the numerous storehouses and magazines, which he records
he built in connection with
the various temples, and by his statement that when he added to the temple
of Ningirsu he stored up
large quantities of grain within the temple-granaries.
We are
not dependent solely on what we can gather from the inscriptions themselves for
a knowledge of Ur-Nina. For he has left us sculptured representations, not only
of himself, but also of his sons and principal officers, from which we may form
a very clear picture of the primitive conditions of life obtaining in Sumer at
the time of this early ruler. The sculptures take the form of limestone
plaques, roughly carved in low relief with figures of Ur-Nina surrounded by his
family and his court. The plaques are oblong in shape, with the corners slightly rounded, and in the
centre of each is bored a circular hole. Though they are obviously of a votive
character, the exact object for which they are intended is not clear at first
sight. It has been, and indeed is still, conjectured that the plaques were
fixed vertically to the walls of shrines, but this explanation has been discredited by the discovery of the plaque, or
rather block, of Dudu, the priest of Ningirsu during the reign of Entemena.
From the shape of the latter, the reverse of which is not flat but pyramidal,
and also from the inscription upon it, we gather that
The
largest of the plaques is sculptured with two separate
scenes, in each of which Ur-Nina is represented in a different attitude and
with a different occupation, while
around him stand his sons and ministers. In the upper scene the king is
standing; he is nude down to the
waist and his feet are bare, while around his loins he wears the rough
woollen garment of the period, and
upon his shaven head he supports a basket which he steadies with his right
hand. The text engraved beside
the king, in addition to giving his name and genealogy, records that he
has built the temple of Ningirsu,
the abzu-banda which was probably a great laver or basin intended for
the temple-service, and the
temple of Nina; and it has been suggested that the king is here portrayed
bearing a basket of offerings to lay
before his god or goddess. But the basket he carries is exactly similar
to those borne by labourers for
heaping earth upon the dead as represented upon the Stele of the Vultures, and baskets have always been used
in the east by labourers and builders for carrying earth and other
building-materials. It is therefore more
probable that the king is here revealed in the character
of a labourer
bearing materials
for the construction of the temples referred to in the text.
The same
explanation applies to the copper votive figures of a later period which are
represented bearing baskets on
their heads. In a similar spirit Gudea has left us statues of himself as an
architect, holding tablet and rule;
Ur-Nina represents himself in the still more humble role of a
labourer engaged in the actual work of
building the temple for his god.
Behind the king is a little
figure intended for the royal
cup-bearer, Anita, and facing him are five of his children. It is usually
held that the first of these figures,
who bears the name of Lidda and is clothed in a more elaborate dress than
the other four, is intended for
the king's eldest son. But in addition to the distinctive dress,
this figure is further differentiated from the others by wearing long
hair in place of having the head
shaved. In this respect it bears some resemblance to an archaic statuette,
which appears to be that of a
woman;and the sign attached to Lidda's name, engraved upon
the stone,
is possibly that for "daughter", not "son". It is
thus not unlikely that
we should identify the figure with a
daughter of Ur-Nina. The other
figures in the row are four of the
king's sons, named Akurgal, Lugal-ezen,
Anikurra and Muninni-kurta.
A curious point that may be
noted is that the height of these figures
increases as they recede from the
king. Thus the first of the small figures,
that of Akurgal,
who succeeded Ur-Nina upon the throne, is represented as smaller than
his
A smaller plaque, rather more oval in shape than the large one figured
on the plaque, but like it in a perfect state of preservation,
gives a similar scene, though with less elaboration of detail. According to
its inscription this tablet also commemorates the building of Ningirsu's
temple. Here the king carries
Another of Ur-Nina's plaques is not completely preserved, for the right
half is wanting upon which
While Ur-Nina's sons upon the
smaller plaques are all roughly of the
same size, we have noted that the similar figures upon the
largest plaque vary
slightly in height. It has been suggested that the intention
of the sculptor
was to indicate the difference in age between the brothers,
and in consequence
it has been argued that Akurgal, who succeeded Ur-Nina upon
the throne of
Lagash, was his fifth, and not his eldest, son. This inference
has further been
employed to suggest that after Ur-Nina's death there may have
followed a period
of weakness within the state of Lagash, due to disunion among
his sons; and
during the supposed struggle for the succession it is
conjectured that the city
may have been distracted by internal conflicts, and, in
consequence, was
unable to maintain her independence as a city-state, which she
only succeeded
in recovering in the reign of Eannatum, the son and successor
of Akurgal. But a brief examination of the theory will show that there
is little to
be said for it, and it is probable that the slight difference
in the height of
the figures is fortuitous and unconnected with their
respective ages. It may be
admitted that a good deal depends upon the sex of Lidda, who,
on the largest
plaque, faces the standing figure of Ur-Nina. If this is
intended for a son of
the king, his richer clothing marks him out as the
That
the crown-prince should be here represented as attending his sister may
appear strange, but, in view of our
imperfect knowledge of this early period, the suggestion should not be
dismissed solely on that account.
Indeed, the class of temple votaries, who enjoyed a high social
position under the Semitic kings of the
First Dynasty of Babylon, probably had its counterĀpart at the centres of
Sumerian worship in still earlier
times; and there is evidence that at the time of the First Dynasty, the
order included members of the royal
house. Moreover, tablets dating from the close of Ur-Nina's dynasty show
the important part which women
played in the social and official life of the early Sumerians. Thus
it is possible that Ur-Nina's daughter held
high rank or office in the temple hierarchy, and her presence on the plaque
may have reference to some special
ceremony, or act of dedication, in which it was her privilege to take the
leading part after the king, or to be
his chief assistant. In such circumstances it would not be unnatural for
her eldest brother to attend her.
In both the other compositions Lidda is absent, and Akurgal occupies the
place of honour. In the one he
stands on a line with the king immediately behind the royal cup-bearer, and
he is the only royal son who is specifically
labelled as such; in the other he is again on a
line with the king,
separated from
Anita, the cupĀbearer, by a high officer of state, and followed
by the royal
scribe. In these scenes he is clearly set in the most favoured position,
and, if Lidda was not his sister but
the crown-prince, it would be hard to explain the
But,
whether Akurgal was Ur-Nina's eldest son or not, the evidence of at
least the smaller of the two complete
plaques would seem to show that he was recognized
as crown-prince during the lifetime of his father, and we may infer
that he was Ur-Nina's immediate successor. For an estimate of his reign we
must depend
on references made to him by his two sons. It has already been mentioned
that the early part of the text engraved
upon the Stele of the Vultures appears to have given an account of the
relations between Lagash and Umma
during the reigns preceding that of Eannatum, and in a badly preserved
passage in the second column we
find a reference to Akurgal, the son of Ur-Nina. The context is broken, but "the men of Umma" and "the city of Lagash" are mentioned almost immediately before the name of
Akurgal, and it would appear that
Eannatum here refers to a conflict which took place between the two
cities during the former's reign. It
should be noted that upon his Cone Entemena makes no mention of any war
at this period, and, as in the
case of Ur-Nina's reign, his silence might be interpreted as an indication of
unbroken peace. But the narratives
may be reconciled on the supposition either that the conflict in the
reign of Akurgal was of no great
importance, or that it did not concern the fertile plain of Gu-edin. It must
be remembered that the text
upon the Cone of Entemena was composed after the stirring times of
Eannatum, Entemena's uncle, and the successes
won by that monarch against Umma were naturally
of far greater importance in his eyes than the lesser conflicts of his
predecessors. It is true that he describes
the still earlier intervention of Mesilim in the
The
only other evidence with regard to the achievements of Akurgal is furnished by
the titles ascribed to him by
his two sons. Upon the Stele of the Vultures, Eannatum describes him as
"king" of Lagash, and from
this passage alone it might be inferred that he was as successful as his
father Ur-Nina in maintaining the
independence of his city. But in other texts upon foundation-stones, bricks,
and a small column, Eannatum describes
him only as "patesi", as also does his other son Enannatum I. It should be
noted that in the majority of his
inscriptions Eannatum claims for himself the title of patesi, and at the end
of one of them, in which he has
enumerated a long list of his own conquests, he exclaims, "He (i.e. Eannatum) is the son of Akurgal, the
patesi of Lagash, and his grandfather is Ur-Nina, the patesi of Lagash". That he should term Ur-Nina "patesi"
does not accord with that ruler's own texts, but, if Eannatum himself
had been merely a patesi at the
beginning of his reign, and his father had also been one before him, he may well
have overlooked the more ambitious
title to which his grandfather had laid claim, especially as this omission
would enhance the splendour of his
own achievements. It is also possible that at this time the distinction
between the two titles was not so
strictly drawn as in the later periods, and that an alteration in them did not
always mark a corresponding political
change. However this may be, the subsequent conflicts of Eannatum
suggest that Lagash had failed
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