Kuara (Sumer)

Kuara (also known as Kisiga, Ku'ara, modern Tell al-Lahm site, Dhi Qar Governorate, Iraq) was an ancient Sumerian city located on the western bank of the mouth of the Euphrates River, about 30 km southeast of Ur. [1] According to the Sumerian king list, Kuara was also the home of Dumuzid, the fisherman, legendary third king of Uruk .[2]

The city's patron deity was Meslamtaea (Nergal). [3] In Sumerian mythology, Kuara was also considered the birthplace of the god Marduk (Asarluhi), Enki's son. The cults of Marduk and Ninehama were centered in Kuara. [4] [5]

Kuara
Kuara
Location in Iraq
Coordinates:

Contents

History

Kuara was established ca. 2500 BC, during the Sumerian Early Dynastic II period. It was a seaport to the Persian Gulf, and traded with the port of Dilmun. [6]

In 709 BC, the Assyrian king Sargon II was trying to capture Marduk-apal-iddina II, who fled to Kuara, whereupon Sargon's army laid siege and destroyed the city. [7]

Alluvial soil carried by the Euphrates continually extended the land farther into the Persian Gulf; thus the modern site is far from the sea, even though it was a sea port 4500 years ago.

Archaeology

The site of Tel el Lahm consists of two mounds, with some peripheral ridges, near a dry canal bed.

The location was excavated for a few days in 1855 by J. E. Taylor. He found a few inscribed bricks, and a single cuneiform tablet. [8] [9] While working at Eridu for the British Museum in 1918, R. Campbell Thompson excavated there briefly. [10] In more modern times, Fuad Safar conducted soundings at Kuara. [11]

Notes

  1. ^ Frame, p.162
  2. ^ Beaulieu, p.114
  3. ^ Sumerian City-States
  4. ^ A.R. George, Babylonian Topographical Texts, Peeters Publishers, 1992, ISBN 9068314106
  5. ^ Black, p.134, 365
  6. ^ Theresa Howard-Carter, Dilmun: At Sea or Not at Sea?: A Review Article, Journal of Cuneiform Studies, vol. 39, no. 1, pp. 54-117, 1987
  7. ^ Boederman, p.99; Potts, p.191
  8. ^ J. E. Taylor, Notes on Abu Shahrein and Tel el Lahm, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, vol. 15, pp. 404-415, 1855
  9. ^ E. Sollberger, Mr. Taylor in Chaldaea, Anatolian Studies, vol. 22, pp. 129-139, 1972
  10. ^ R. Campbell Thompson, The British Museum excavations at Abu Shahrain in Mesopotamia in 1918, Oxford, 1920
  11. ^ Fuad Safar, Soundings at Tell Al-Laham, Sumer, vol. 5, pp. 154-172, 1949

References

See also

External links