CULTURE
In
ancient times the land area now known as modern Iraq was almost
equivalent to Mesopotamia, the land between the two rivers Tigris
and Euphrates (in Arabic, the Dijla and Furat, respectively),
the Mesopotamian plain was called the Fertile Crescent. This region
is known as the Cradle of Civilization; was the birthplace of
the varied civilizations that moved us from prehistory to history.
An advanced civilization flourished in this region long before
that of Egypt, Greece, and Rome, for it was here in about 4000BC
that the Sumerian culture flourished . The civilized life that
emerged at Sumer was shaped by two conflicting factors: the unpredictability
of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, which at any time could unleash
devastating floods that wiped out entire peoples, and the extreme
richness of the river valleys, caused by centuries-old deposits
of soil. Thus, while the river valleys of southern Mesopotamia
attracted migrations of neighboring peoples and made possible,
for the first time in history, the growing of surplus food, the
volatility of the rivers necessitated a form of collective management
to protect the marshy, low-lying land from flooding.
As surplus production increased and as collective management became
more advanced, a process of urbanization evolved and Sumerian
civilization took root. The people of the Tigris and the Euphrates
basin, the ancient Sumerians, using the fertile land and the abundant
water supply of the area, developed sophisticated irrigation systems
and created what was probably the first cereal agriculture as
well as the earliest writing, cuneiform - a way of arranging impression
stamped on clay by the wedge-like section of chopped-off reed
stylus into wet clay. Through writing, the Sumerians were able
to pass on complex agricultural techniques to successive generations;
this led to marked improvements in agricultural production.
Writing evolved to keep track of property. Clay envelopes marked
with the owner's rolled seal were used to hold tokens for goods,
the tokens within recording a specific transaction. Later on,
the envelope and tokens were discarded and symbols scratched into
clay recorded transactions such as 2 bunches of wheat or 7 cows.
As writing evolved, pictures gave way to lines pressed into clay
with a wedge tip; this allowed a scribe to make many different
types of strokes without changing his grip. By 3,000 BC, the script
evolved into a full syllabic alphabet. The commerce of the times
is recorded in great depth. Double entry accounting practices
were found to be a part of the records.
This remarkable innovation has been used to this day, as a standard
for record keeping. It was the custom for all to pay for what
they needed at a fair price. Royalty was not exception. The king
may have had an edge on getting a "better deal", but
it wasn't the law as it was in Egypt where the Pharaoh was the
"living god" and as such, owned all things. It seems
that everyone had the right to bargain fairly for his or her goods.
Unlike their Egyptian neighbors, these people were believers in
private property, and the kings were very much answerable to the
citizens. In Egypt, all things, including the people and property,
were owned by the pharaoh. Sumerians invented the wheel and the
first plow in 3700 BC.
Sumerians developed a math system based on the numeral 60, which
is the basis of time in the modern world. Sumerian society was
"Matriarchal" and women had a highly respected place
in society. Banking originated in Mesopotamia (Babylonia) out
of the activities of temples and palaces, which provided safe
places for the storage of valuables. Initially deposits of grain
were accepted and later other goods including cattle, agricultural
implements, and precious metals.
Another important Sumerian legacy was the recording of literature.
Poetry and epic literature were produced. The most famous Sumerian
epic and the one that has survived in the most nearly complete
form is the epic of Gilgamesh. The story of Gilgamesh, who actually
was king of the city-state of Uruk in approximately 2700 BC, is
a moving story of the ruler's deep sorrow at the death of his
friend Enkidu, and of his consequent search for immortality. Other
central themes of the story are a devastating flood and the tenuous
nature of man's existence, and ended by meeting a wise and ancient
man who had survived a great flood by building an ark.
Land was cultivated for the first time, early calendars were used
and the first written alphabet was invented here. Its bountiful
land, fresh waters, and varying climate contributed to the creation
of deep-rooted civilization that had fostered humanity from its
affluent fountain since thousand of years. Sumerian states were
believed to be under the rule of a local god or goddess, and a
bureaucratic system of the priesthood arose to oversee the ritualistic
and complex religion. High Priests represented the gods on earth,
one of their jobs being to discern the divine will.
A favorite method of divination was reading sheep or goat entrails.
The priests ruled from their ziggurats, high rising temples of
sunbaked brick with outside staircases leading to the shrine on
top. The Sumerian gods personified local elements and natural
forces. The Sumerians worshiped anu, the supreme god of heaven,
Enlil, god of water, and Ea, god of magic and creator of man.
The Sumerians held the belief that a sacred ritual marriage between
the ruler and Inanna, goddess of love and fertility brought rich
harvests.
Eventually, the Sumerians would have to battle another peoples,
the Akkadians, who migrated up from the Arabian Peninsula. The
Akkadians were a Semitic people, that is, they spoke a language
drawn from a family of languages called Semitic languages; a Semitic
languages include Hebrew, Arabic, Assyrian, and Babylonian (the
term "Semite" is a modern designation taken from the
Hebrew Scriptures; Shem was a son of Noah and the nations descended
from Shem are the Semites). When the two peoples clashed, the
Sumerians gradually lost control over the city-states they had
so brilliantly created and fell under the hegemony of the Akkadian
kingdom, which was based in Akkad (Sumerian Agade).
This great capital of the largest empire humans had ever seen
up until that point that was later to become Babylon, which was
the commercial and cultural center of the Middle East for almost
two thousand years.
In 2340 BC, the great Akkadian military leader , Sargon, conquered
Sumer and built an Akkadian empire stretching over most of the
Sumerian city-states and extending as far away as Lebanon. Sargon
based his empire in the city of Akkad, which became the basis
of the name of his people.
But Sargon's ambitious empire lasted for only a blink of an eye
in the long time spans of Mesopotamian history. In 2125 BC, the
Sumerian city of Ur in southern Mesopotamia rose up in revolt,
and the Akkadian empire fell before a renewal of Sumerian city-states.
Mesopotamia is the suspected spot known as the "Garden of
Eden." Ur of the Chaldees, and that's where Abraham came
from, (that's just north of the traditional site of the Garden
of Eden, about twenty-five miles northeast of Eridu, at present
Mughair), was a great and famous Sumerian city, dating from this
time. Predating the Babylonian by about 2,000 years, was Noah,
who lived in Fara, 100 miles southeast of Babylon (from Bab-ili,
meaning "Gate of God"). The early Assyrians, some of
the earliest people there, were known to be warriors, so the first
wars were fought there, and the land has been full of wars ever
since. The Assyrians were in the northern part of Mesopotamia
and the Babylonians more in the middle and southern part.