Shuruppak

Shuruppak or Shuruppag (Sumerian: "The Healing Place") was an ancient Sumerian city situated about 35 miles south of Nippur on the banks of the Euphrates at the site of modern Tell Fara in Iraq's Al-Qādisiyyah Governorate.

Shuruppak was dedicated to Ninlil, also called Sud, the goddess of grain and the air.

Shuruppak
Shuruppak
Location in Iraq
Coordinates:

Contents

History

Shuruppak became a grain storage and distribution city and had more silos than any other Sumerian city. The earliest excavated levels at Shuruppak date to the Jemdet Nasr period about 3000 BCE; it was abandoned shortly after 2000 BCE. Schmidt found one Isin-Larsa cylinder seal and several pottery plaques which may date to early in the second millennium BC.[1] Surface finds are predominantly Early Dynastic.[2]

At the end of the Uruk period there was an archaeologically attested river flood in Shuruppak. Polychrome pottery from a destruction level below the flood deposit has been dated to the Jemdet Nasr period that immediately preceded the Early Dynastic I period.[3][4]

The city expanded to its greatest extent at the end of the Early Dynastic III period (2600BCE to 2350BCE) when it covered about 100 hectares. At this stage it was destroyed by a fire which baked the clay tablets and mudbrick walls, which then survived for millennia.[5]

Two possible kings of Shuruppak are mentioned in epigraphic data. In the Sumerian King List a king Ubara-Tutu is listed as the ruler of Shuruppak and the last king "before the flood". In the Epic of Gilgamesh a Utanapishtim (also Uta-na'ishtim), son of Ubara-Tutu, is noted to be king of Shuruppak. The names Ziusudra and Atrahasis is also associated with him. These figures may well be mythical and have not been supported by archaeological finds.

Archaeology

The site of Shuruppak extends about a kilometer from north to south. The total area is about 120 hectares, with about 35 hectares of the mound being above the 3 meter contour.

After a brief survey by Hermann Volrath Hilprecht in 1900, it was first excavated in 1902 by Robert Koldewey and Friedrich Delitzsch of the German Oriental Society for 8 months.[6] Among other finds, hundreds of pre-Sargonic tablets were collected which ended up in the Berlin Museum and Istanbul Museum. In March and April 1931 a joint team of the American Schools of Oriental Research and the University of Pennsylvania excavated Shuruppak for a further six week season with Erich Schmidt as director and with epigraphist Samuel Noah Kramer.[7][8] The excavation recovered 87 tablets and fragments, mostly from pre-Sargonic times, biconvex, and unbaked. In 1973, a three day surface survey of the site was conducted by Harriet P. Martin. Consisting mainly of pottery shard collection, the survey confirmed that Shuruppak dates at least as early as the Jemdet Nasr period, expanded greatly in the Early Dynastic period and was also an element of the Akkadian Empire and the Third Dynasty of Ur.[9]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Harriet P. Martin, FARA: A reconstruction of the Ancient Mesopotamian City of Shuruppak, Birmingham, UK: Chris Martin & Assoc., 1988, ISBN 0907695027 p. 44, p. 117 and seal no. 579.
  2. ^ Robert McC. Adams, Heartland of Cities (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1981), ISBN 0-226-00544-5, Fig. 33 compared with Fig. 21.
  3. ^ Schmidt (1931)
  4. ^ Martin (1988)pp. 20-23
  5. ^ Gwendolyn Leick, Mesopotamia - the Invention of the City,(Penguin, 2002)
  6. ^ Ernst Heinrich and Walter Andrae, ed. "Fara, Ergebnisse der Ausgrabungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft in Fara und Abu Hatab" (Berlin:Staatlich Museen zu Berlin, 1931)
  7. ^ Erich Schmidt, Excavations at Fara, 1931, University of Pennsylvania's Museum Journal, 2, pp 193-217, 1931
  8. ^ Samuel N. Kramer, New Tablets from Fara, Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 52, No. 2, pp. 110-132, Jun., 1932
  9. ^ Harriet P. Martin, Settlement Patterns at Shuruppak, Iraq, vol. 45, no. 1, pp. 24-31, 1983

References

External links