<h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
<p>
THE immense antiquity suggested in
the maritime conditions at Ur and
Eridu is again emphasized by the astronomical
tablets. At this remote date it appears
that these ancient Turanian Chaldeans
had traced the yearly course of the sun among
the stars.</p>
<p class='c000'>The twelve constellations forming the signs
of the zodiac had also been established by them,
with the significations which have continued
to the present day.</p>
<p class='c000'>They had divided the year into twelve
months, and the first month of their year—which
began with the vernal equinox—was
named for the constellation, or zodiacal sign,
which opened the year.</p>
<p class='c000'>This was Taurus, whose figure appears in
these ancient calendars as leading the months
at the beginning of the year. At the time this
was prepared the sun was in Taurus at the
vernal equinox. About 2500 B. C., the sun
entered Aries at this period of the year, while
the date when the sun entered Taurus at the
vernal equinox was 4700 B. C.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='68' id='Page_68'>[68]</span>Other evidences from these principal cities
of southern Mesopotamia, present, in the remoter
times, this land of Sumir as a populous,
fertile, well watered and cultivated country.</p>
<p class='c000'>It was divided into small states, each surrounding
a city containing a temple devoted to
the service of certain astral divinities, as Ur,
the city of the Moon God; or Larsa, with its
Temple of the Sun.</p>
<p class='c000'>Near these temples, and accessible from them
were the Zigguratas, the temple observatories
for astronomical and astrological studies.</p>
<p class='c000'>They had also priestly colleges, schools for
scribes, and libraries as at Erech, which was
known as the “City of Books.”</p>
<p class='c000'>These small states with their cities, were in
the earliest times each governed by “patesi,”
priest-kings, corresponding to the “pastor
princes” of ancient China, or the Horsheshu,
of ancient Egypt. Later on as certain of these
priest kings became more powerful, the neighboring
states and cities came under their domination,
until finally we find all southern Mesopotamia
ruled by kings of Sumir, and northern
Mesopotamia by kings of Accad.</p>
<p class='c000'>Of the explorations which have been undertaken
of these older cities of Chaldea, the most
extensive are those which have occurred on the
sites of the ancient Nippur and at Tel-Loh, the
ancient Shirpulla.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='69' id='Page_69'>[69]</span>The former excavations, which have been
conducted under the auspices of the University
of Pennsylvania, since the year 1888 to the
present date, have recovered the most ancient
remains as yet discovered of these older civilizations,
dating, as estimated by Prof. Hilfrecht,
from a period about 7000 B. C.</p>
<p class='c000'>This includes the enormous structure dedicated
to the older Bel, which had been rebuilt
by successive monarchs, its later ruins rising
to a height of over one hundred feet above the
plain, while its lower foundations reach as great
a depth below.</p>
<p class='c000'>From this and other great buildings in the
vicinity were obtained sacrificial vessels, marble
and silver vases, objects in gold and bronze,
stone door sockets and over thirty thousand
clay tablets.</p>
<p class='c000'>These include remains from the earliest periods
of civilization to the latest Babylonian
history, from the earliest primitive Sumerian
rulers to the latest Semitic kings.</p>
<p class='c000'>They give records of powerful kings as rulers
of Accad during the two milleniums preceding
the reigns of the great Sargon and his son,
Naram-Sin.</p>
<p class='c000'>Of these two monarchs a great number of inscribed
objects have been obtained, some of the
most important relics as yet discovered verifying
inscriptions found elsewhere of the extent
<span class='pageno' title='70' id='Page_70'>[70]</span>of their power. Remains were also found here
of later kings of Ur and other cities of this region,
whose names elsewhere appear as great
builders or restorers of ancient temples.</p>
<p class='c000'>Of this earlier period, that of the “patesi,”
or priest kings, some very wonderful records
have been discovered by M. de Sarzec at Tel-Loh.
The group of mounds of which Tel-Loh
is the chief, is the site of a very ancient city
in southern Mesopotamia, the ancient Zirgul,
or Sirgulla. It is situated between the Tigris
and Euphrates, near the junction of the former
river with the Shat-el-Hic, a small river which
flows southwesterly to the Euphrates, connecting
the waters of these two great rivers.</p>
<p class='c000'>The mound of Tel-Loh, “The Mound of
the Idol,” formed part of the royal quarter of
the ancient city, rising at this point forty feet
above the plain.</p>
<p class='c000'>It was in this locality that, in 1880-1881, M.
de Sarzec, French consul at Bagdad, who was
carrying on excavations in this region under
the direction of the French government, came
upon ten statues in the ruins of a very ancient
structure.</p>
<p class='c000'>This proved to be the royal residence of an
ancient king of Zirgul, the patesi, or priest-king
Gudea, whose date is fixed by various
authorities at about 4800 B. C.</p>
<p class='c000'>The statues were nearly life size, and all
<span class='pageno' title='71' id='Page_71'>[71]</span>were headless. Two heads soon after were
found in the ruins, one of them turbaned and
the other uncovered and shaved, supposed to
represent the king as priest.</p>
<p class='c000'>The type of feature reproduced in these finely
sculptured heads is unmistakably Turanian,
of the Tartar branch of this great family, while
the turban, another characteristic indication in
costume, might serve for a copy in sculpture
of the head dress worn by some living representative
of this race in central Asia at the
present day.</p>
<p class='c000'>All these statues were inscribed; nine of them
with memorials of Gudea, and the tenth of Urbahu,
an earlier king who ruled in Zirgul before
Gudea.</p>
<p class='c000'>The ruins of his palace were found by M. de
Sarzec below the palace of Gudea, and also the
foundations of an ancient pyramid temple first
erected by Urbahu and rebuilt by Gudea.</p>
<p class='c000'>The inscriptions were in very archaic cuneiform
and were incised upon the robes of the
figures. Upon the principal statue of Gudea
were inscribed three hundred and thirty-six
lines of writing, divided into nine columns.
About one hundred and thirty characters are
used, and these texts represent the longest of
the ancient cuneiform writings found.</p>
<p class='c000'>The material of the statues is a peculiar variety
of granite, a dark green diorite, one of the
<span class='pageno' title='72' id='Page_72'>[72]</span>hardest of stones. This was nowhere to be
found in Mesopotamia. So far as known, it
only appears in the peninsula of Sinai.</p>
<p class='c000'>Again, the facility and skill in the manipulation
of the material has indicated that the
tools used for the work must have been of the
hardest metals. They are supposed to have
been of the hardest bronze. But this presupposes
an amazing antiquity for the practice of
metallurgy.</p>
<p class='c000'>The replies to the question, from whence the
bronze? are now abundant, and come from a
variety of sources, but the testimony from the
inscriptions of the statues is the most direct
and ample, opening before us a commercial
intercourse between nations and people of these
regions scarcely suspected of such very remote
dates.</p>
<p class='c000'>There are indications that even in these early
days tin from Cornwall was exported to these
far off regions.</p>
<p class='c000'>The inscriptions relate chiefly to the building
of a pyramid temple by Urbahu, and on
the Gudea statues to the rebuilding of the temple
by this later prince.</p>
<p class='c000'>Referring constantly to himself as patesi, or
priest-king, he says that for this purpose his
God, Nin-Girsu, has opened the way for him
“from the sea of the highlands,”—the Persian
Gulf—“to the upper sea,” the Mediterranean.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='73' id='Page_73'>[73]</span>“I,” says Gudea, “made the lordly temple
of the God who enlightens the darkness; of
costly woods I made it for him; with wood
from Lebanon (Amanus); wood of seventy and
fifty cubits. I raised its roof twenty-five cubits
high.”</p>
<p class='c000'>From the copper and silver mines of the
Taurus, near “the great pass,” “the gate of
Syria,” copper was brought for the great pillars.
Marble also from the “Mountain of
Canaan,” (Tidalum), in Phœnicia, for the
foundations. He sent ships to upper Egypt,
where gold was obtained for the porch of the
temple. “To the country of Gubi and to the
country of Nituk which possesses every kind
of tree, vessels to be laden with all sorts of
trees for Sippara I have sent.”</p>
<p class='c000'>Sippara, “The City of the Bright Flame,”
was another name by which Zirgul was known.
Reference to this comes in the inscriptions
concerning the “God who enlightens the darkness.”</p>
<p class='c000'>Then of his statues he says: “Strong stone
being brought from Magan (Sinaitic peninsula)
I made an image therewith that my name may
be remembered gloriously.”</p>
<p class='c000'>Again of this statue he says: “Neither in
silver, nor in copper, nor in tin, nor in bronze
let any one undertake the execution. An image
yielding none of these no man will demand
<span class='pageno' title='74' id='Page_74'>[74]</span>as spoil; made of hard stone may it remain in
the place thereof, forever.”</p>
<p class='c000'>These statues thus had a peculiar religious
significance. Placed in the sacred temple, always
before the god to whose service they
were dedicated, they were supposed to represent
the king constantly in life, and like the
“Ka” statues of the Egyptian kings, to be
the residence of the soul of the departed prince
which was thus ever reverently before his god.
Thus we can understand the terrible curse pronounced
by Gudea upon whosoever should remove
this statue from its place.</p>
<p class='c000'>This and the companion statues from Tel-Loh,
were nevertheless sent to Paris and placed
in the Louvre, where they will receive more
distinction than has been accorded them for
ages. Perhaps this, and also the fact that the
inscriptions on them could not be read until
they were placed where competent Assyriologists
could have access to them, may induce
the Ka of Gudea to revoke his maledictions
should they threaten this later disturber of his
repose.</p>
<p class='c000'>However this may be, the view thus given
of this far off time, of which we have no trace
in history, is one of the most interesting archæological
discoveries of the century.</p>
<p class='c000'>Here, long ages before the time of Hiram,
king of Tyre, the friend of David and Solomon;
<span class='pageno' title='75' id='Page_75'>[75]</span>long ages even before the days of Abraham,
the ships of Gudea were navigating the
seas from the trading ports of Ur and Eridu,
then at the mouth of the Euphrates on the Persian
Gulf; coasting down the shores of the
Arabian peninsula, which they circumnavigated,
into the waters of the Red Sea; sailing
northward to Magan, “the enclosed port,” on
the peninsula of Sinai, where the diorite for
the statues was obtained, and perhaps copper
also from the Wady Magarah, “the land of
bronze;” then to various trading ports of the
Egyptian coasts, for gold from Meroe, and for
timber from Ethiopia, and then for the return
voyage.</p>
<p class='c000'>Other confirmation of the trade communications
of southern Mesopotamia with the peninsula
of Sinai appears in the beautiful statue of
Kephren, the builder of the second pyramid,
now in the Boulak museum. This statue was
recently exhumed from the sands of the desert
near the great Sphynx in Egypt, and is of stone
so similar to the diorite of the Tel-Loh statues
that it is evident they were both obtained from
the same source.</p>
<p class='c000'>We know in this connection, that Seneferu,
a predecessor of Kephren, had conquered and
held in possession the Sinaitic peninsula with
a strong garrison of Egyptian troops, which
were maintained here during his reign and the
<span class='pageno' title='76' id='Page_76'>[76]</span>reign of his immediate successors; that under
this protection the fine stone of this region was
quarried, and that at Wady Margarah the rich
mines of copper, turquoise and other precious
stones were worked.</p>
<p class='c000'>Another evidence of the contact of Gudea
with Egypt is the fact that on the lap of the
principal statue of Gudea the plan of the city
is carved, and the scale of measurement used
is the “pyramid inch,” instead of the Babylonian
or Chaldean.</p>
<p class='c000'>Aside from this, the finish, detail and workmanship
of the Tel-Loh statues is so similar
in style and character to the statue of Kephren
that they all suggest the same influence and
the same school of sculpture.</p>
<p class='c000'>There are many evidences from other sources
of the commercial intercourse between the Babylonians
and Egyptians at these early dates,
and it is probable that the cities of Eridu and
Ur may have maintained the same relations in
the prehistoric commerce of the Persian Gulf
which obtained in later times with Tyre and
Sidon on the Mediterranean. The commercial
horizon thus opening before us is a broad one
but is constantly extending.</p>
<p class='c000'>The natural depressions of the Mesopotamian
valley extend from the Persian Gulf northerly
and northwesterly, thence through the Orontes
valley to the Mediterranean. In prehistoric
<span class='pageno' title='77' id='Page_77'>[77]</span>times and for long ages this was “the highway
of nations,” by the great rivers, the Tigris
and Euphrates, from sea to sea, the chief trade
route between India and the western coasts of
Asia Minor.</p>
<p class='c000'>Solomon is said to have founded Tadmor in
the Desert for the extensive trade from the
Euphrates, by Damascus to Jerusalem, whence
the rich stuffs and spices from India were conveyed.</p>
<p class='c000'>Later on, Nebuchadnezzer established the
port of Teredon, on the Persian Gulf, for the
commerce brought from the southern seas destined
for the great waterways, the Tigris and
Euphrates, northwards.</p>
<p class='c000'>These facts are comparatively modern history
to Gudea and his days, when the waters of
the Persian Gulf washed the shores at Eridu,
while ships from India, Ceylon and the different
trading ports on the Red Sea unloaded their
cargoes on the docks of the great maritime city
of Ur of the Chaldees.</p>
<p class='c000'>The city of Ur, then not far from the mouth
of the Euphrates, was situated upon its western
shores, and was at this time, and later, a
city of great commercial and political importance,
and the first capital of the kings of all
Chaldea.</p>
<p class='c000'>As in all maritime cities trading with distant
countries, people of various nationalities were
<span class='pageno' title='78' id='Page_78'>[78]</span>gathered here. It is not improbable that the
name of “Ur of the Chaldees” may have reference
to certain families of foreign stock, the
“Kaldai” or “Kaldi” who inhabited the regions
round and about Ur, perhaps nomadic
tribes from Arabia. Other authorities, however,
speak of these “Kaldai” as a priest class,
magicians and astrologers, possessing strange
learning and speaking a peculiar language; as
representatives also of the primitive inhabitants
of the country, filling a sacred office and consulted
by the king on all religious subjects.</p>
<p class='c000'>The divinity of this city was Hurki, or Sin,
the great Moon God, and here may be seen at
the present day on the mounds of Mugheir the
remains of an ancient temple dedicated to this
deity, rising to the height of seventy feet above
the plain. This was founded by Urukh, or
Ur Gur, one of the earliest known of the kings
of united Sumir, who exercised dominion over
the greater portion of southern Mesopotamia.</p>
<p class='c000'>The remains of temples built by him are
found in all the larger of the ancient cities of
this region and the enormous proportions of
these and their number have won for him the
name of “The Builder.” It is evident that
this king had at his command vast resources
in human skill and industry.</p>
<p class='c000'>The Bowariyeh mound at Warka is described
as two hundred feet square and one hundred
<span class='pageno' title='79' id='Page_79'>[79]</span>feet high and that above thirty million bricks
must have gone into its construction.</p>
<p class='c000'>Other structures on a similar scale, the remains
of which are found at Erech, Larsa,
Calneh, Ur, Nippur and other cities in this
region, show the magnitude of his resources
and the extent of his authority. These buildings
are, for the most part, temples dedicated
to the tutelar divinity of each special locality,
as at Larsa, where he erected a temple to the
Sun God, and at Calneh to Belus.</p>
<p class='c000'>The distinguishing features of his structures
which were continued in the later Babylonian
temples, are the rectangular base, the peculiar
orientation of these with their angles to the
cardinal points, the rise in receding stages,
the sloped walls, the buttresses for increased
strength, the drains for the ventilation of the
walls, the external staircases for ascent and the
ornamental shrine crowning the whole.</p>
<p class='c000'>The temple founded by Ur Gur at Ur, was
originally of great size. It rose in three receding
stages to a vast height, where, upon the
final platform, the temple was placed, containing
the statue of the Moon God, which was
thus visible to a great distance from the surrounding
plain.</p>
<p class='c000'>The lower stages of this structure were built
of large bricks laid with bitumen. In the upper
stages the masonry is cemented with mortar.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='80' id='Page_80'>[80]</span>It appears that this was the work of two
monarchs, Ur Gur, and his son, Dungi, who
as his successor, completed here, as elsewhere,
the buildings unfinished by his father. The
names of both kings are inscribed upon the
bricks in the structure, and on the signet and
clay cylinders found in the ruins.</p>
<p class='c000'>These kings, are, however, of later date than
Gudea. In their day the priest kings of one
city had become kings of many, gathering various
localities in Sumir under their dominion.</p>
<p class='c000'>Among the discoveries obtained during the
explorations at Nippur, by the Babylonian expedition
of the University of Pennsylvania,
there are many relics of Dungi and Urea, or
Ur Gur.</p>
<p class='c000'>At this time, there are evidences of an organized
priesthood in whose hands were placed
the religious interests of the king and the people,
who proclaimed to them the will of the
gods as observed in the relations of the planets
and the stars.</p>
<p class='c000'>In more primitive times the religion of this
people was pure Shamanism, a worship of demons
and the evil influences of nature, a religion
common to all Turanian people even at
the present day.</p>
<p class='c000'>Very early, however, in the history of this
people, a recognition of the benign influences
in nature is apparent, and while the older belief
<span class='pageno' title='81' id='Page_81'>[81]</span>never became entirely extinct, yet the propitious
influences were regarded as attributes
of the higher gods.</p>
<p class='c000'>The sorcerers and magicians held a power
of their own, but they were subject to the
greater divinities by whose influence their mischiefs
could be averted.</p>
<p class='c000'>Whether this religious development was
brought about by contact with another race
possessing nobler religious ideals, or was a development
through their scientific applications
of astronomy to astrology, it is impossible to
say. However this may be, these higher religious
conceptions had developed very early
into a cult which became the inheritance of
later races that came into contact with them.</p>
<p class='c000'>The peculiar and distinct civilization of these
primitive Babylonians must have continued
through long ages. Their system of writing
had developed from the simple pictorial lines
into the cuneiform and these signs had become
phonetic, expressing sound as well as ideas.
They had also developed a syllabary.</p>
<p class='c000'>Finally, there are evidences of the gradual
increase among them of another race of people.
This was a Semitic people who seem at first to
have established themselves in northern Babylonia
in the kingdom of Accad, finally becoming
supreme in the land.</p>
<p class='c000'>About 3800 B. C., the kingdoms of Accad
<span class='pageno' title='82' id='Page_82'>[82]</span>and Sumir are found united under Sargon I, a
Semitic king. There are indications of Accadian
or Sumerian kings who ruled over the
separate kingdoms of Accad and Sumir at earlier
and later dates, but the main course of
testimony after Sargon I tells of Semitic kings
as rulers in northern Babylonia, or Accad, and
a Semitic influence dominant there.</p>
<p class='c000'>The influence of such close social contact
brought about material changes in the life,
literature and language of both people.</p>
<p class='c000'>In Accad, which came first under Semitic
influence, the old language rapidly declined.
In Sumir, or southern Mesopotamia, which
continued much longer under the ancient rule
and influence, the old language held its own
down to comparatively recent times.</p>
<p class='c000'>The Semites, however, seem to have received
from the Accadians more than they gave. The
arts and sciences and civilization of this ancient
people became the arts and sciences and civilization
of the Semitic Assyrians and Babylonians.</p>
<p class='c000'>They appropriated the religion and gods of
these early Chaldeans. They became heirs of
their literature and they adopted their system
of writing.</p>
<p class='c000'>The most curious instance in these various
adoptions of the Semites was the Sumerian
syllabary.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='83' id='Page_83'>[83]</span>Now in applying the syllabary of one language
to the uses of another, it might be expected
that the signs expressing a certain syllabic
sound in one language would be used to
express the syllabic sounds in the other. This
however, was not the case in this instance.
When the Semites adopted the old Accadian
syllabary they used these signs quite as often
to express the Semitic sounds of the original
ideographs as for syllabic signs.</p>
<p class='c000'>As an instance of this curious example of
polyphony, Mr. Taylor gives the cuneiform
sign which in the primitive pictorial form represented
an ear. The name of ear in Accadian
is <i>pi</i>. This sign had another syllabic value,
signifying a drop of water. When the Semites
adopted this sign to their uses they retained
the phonetic value of the sign as <i>pi</i>. They,
however, used this sign also to express the
sound of the Semitic words, “eznu,” an ear,
and “giltanu,” a drop of water.</p>
<p class='c000'>This use of signs is the reverse of homophonism,
where by the use of one sign many words
having the same sound are expressed. It is
an instance of polyphonism where one sign is
used to express words having different sounds.
The result was, however, the same. It led in
both cases to the increase of determinatives,
and other explanatory signs to indicate the
word to be expressed by the sign.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='84' id='Page_84'>[84]</span>The use of ideographs as determinatives was
evidently suggested by the Sumerian syllabary,
but the language of the Sumerians was simple,
requiring fewer signs to express sounds. On
the contrary, the Semitic language was more
copious, possessing a greater variety of syllabic
utterances.</p>
<p class='c000'>It will thus be seen that when the decipherment
of the Assyrian cuneiform was first attempted,
scholars could not for a time master
the curious complications they found.</p>
<p class='c000'>The Assyrian syllabary could only be explained
as a foreign importation, not as an evolution
from a Semitic speech. As Professor
Sayce says: “Like the discoverers of the
planet Uranus, they had to presuppose another
language to account for its origin and appearance.”</p>
<p class='c000'>The decipherment of the older cuneiform
soon after, and the discovery of the bilingual
texts, where copies from the old Sumerian originals
were placed side by side with the Semitic
translations, soon explained the sources
of confusion, the original values of these signs
and their application to another language.</p>
<span class='pageno' title='85' id='Page_85'>[85]</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />