The Uruk Period: Uruk Cities Mesopotamia Sumerian Sumer
The Uruk Period: Uruk Cities Mesopotamia Sumerian Sumer
was one of the most important cities (at one time, the most important) in
ancient Mesopotamia. According to the Sumerian King List, it was founded by King
Enmerkar sometime around 4500 BCE. Located in the southern region
of Sumer (modern day Warka, Iraq), Uruk was known in the Aramaic language
as Erech which, it is believed, gave rise to the modern name for the country of Iraq
(though another likely derivation is Al-Iraq, the Arabic name for the region
of Babylonia). The city of Uruk is most famous for its great king Gilgamesh and the
epic tale of his quest for immortality but also for a number of `firsts' in the development
of civilization which occurred there.
It is considered the first true city in the world, the origin of writing, the first example of
architectural work in stone and the building of great stone structures, the origin of the
ziggurat, and the first city to develop the cylinder seal which the ancient
Mesopotamians used to designate personal property or as a signature on documents.
Considering the importance the cylinder seal had for the people of the time, and that it
stood for one's personal identity and reputation, Uruk could also be credited as the city
which first recognized the importance of the individual in the collective community.
The city was continuously inhabited from its founding until c. 300 CE when, owing to
both natural and man-made influences, people began to desert the area. It lay
abandoned and buried until excavated in 1853 CE by William Loftus for the British
Museum.
In precisely what manner Uruk ruled the region, why and how it became the first city in
the world, and in what manner it exercised its authority is not fully known. The
historian Gwendolyn Leick writes:
The Uruk phenomenon is still much debated, as to what extent Uruk exercised political
control over the large area covered by the Uruk artifacts, whether this relied on the use
of force, and which institutions were in charge. Too little of the site has been excavated
to provide any firm answers to these questions. However, it is clear that, at this time,
the urbanization process was set in motion, concentrated at Uruk itself. (183-184)
Since the city of Ur had a more advantageous placement for trade, further south toward
the Persian Gulf, it would seem to make sense that city, rather than Uruk, would have
wielded more influence but this is not the case.
Perhaps the most striking example of the wide spread of some features of the
Uruk culture consists in the distribution of what must be one of the crudest forms ever
made, the so-called beveled-rim bowl. This kind of bowl, mould-made and mass-
produced, is found in large numbers throughout Mesopotamia and beyond. (30)
This bowl was the means by which workers seem to have been paid: by a certain
amount of grain ladled into a standard-sized bowl. The remains of these bowls,
throughout all of Mesopotamia, suggest that they “were frequently discarded
immediately after use, like the aluminum foil containing a modern take-away meal”
(Reade, 30). So popular was the beveled-rim bowl that manufacturing centres sprang up
throughout Mesopotamia extending as far away from Uruk as the city of Mari in the far
north. Because of this, it is unclear if the bowl originated at Uruk or elsewhere (though
Uruk is generally held as the bowl's origin). If at Uruk, then the beveled-rim bowl must
be counted among the many of the city's accomplishments as it is the first known
example of a mass-produced product.
Since temples were considered the literal dwelling place of deities on earth, and since
Inanna is regularly depicted as a goddess who very much preferred things her own
way, perhaps the walled district was simply to provide her with some privacy. Kramer
also notes that, even though Inanna continued to be a popular deity throughout
Mesopotamia (eventually merging into Ishtar) goddesses declined in power and
prestige at the same time, and at the same rate, as women's rights deteriorated. This
being the case, perhaps the Eanna district was walled off to restrict access to a male
priestly class. As with much concerning Uruk's history, however, this theory remains
largely speculation.
Inanna played a pivotal role in the mythological history of Uruk as it was she who stole
the sacred meh from her father-god Enki at the sacred city of Eridu and brought them to
Uruk. The meh were, in the words of Kramer (who first translated the cuneiform)
“divine decrees which are the basis of the culture pattern of Sumerian civilization.” As
Eridu was considered, by the Sumerians, the first city created by the gods and a place
holy to them, the removal of the meh to Uruk signified a transference of power and
prestige from one city to the other.
In the tale of Inanna and The God of Wisdom, Enki god goes to great lengths, once he finds
the meh are stolen, to have them brought back to Eridu – but in vain. Inanna has tricked
her father and now Uruk, not Eridu, would be the seat of power. Eridu was associated
with rural life and the primordial sea from which life sprang; Uruk was the
embodiment of the new way of life – the city. The story would have provided an
ancient Mesopotamian with the reason why Eridu declined in importance and Uruk
rose to the heights it did: it was the work of the gods.
The later king of that empire, Lugal-Zage (also known as Lugalzagesi), so admired the
city that he chose Uruk as his capital and seat of power. When Sumer was brought
under the rule of the Akkadian Empire in 2334 BCE, Sargon of Akkad continued to pay
special reverence to Uruk and the sacred districts of Inanna and Anu continued in use
and, in fact, were renovated and improved upon.
Even though the city lost the position of pre-eminence it had enjoyed during the Uruk
Period, it continued to play an important position down through the Ur III Period
(2047-1750 BCE). The Third Dynasty of Ur governed in such a way as to give birth to a
Sumerian Renaissance and Uruk benefited from this as much as the rest of the region.
With the fall of the city of Ur in 1750 BCE and the invasion of Sumer by Elamites, along
with the incursions of the Amorites, Uruk went into decline along with the rest of
Sumer.
The answer to the mystery of Uruk's prominence, however, may be simpler than it
appears. The historian Paul Kriwaczek has noted that any important change in a society
springs from “the everlasting conflict between progressives and conservatives, between
the forward and backward looking, between those who propose `let's do something
new' and those who think `the old ways are best'. No great shift in culture ever took
place without such a contest” (21).
Perhaps the story of Inanna and Enki and the shift of power from Eridu to Uruk told of
this very contest and showed how the old ways of rural life, exemplified in the ancient
site of Eridu, gave way to the rise of the city and a new kind of community. It had to
happen somewhere, once the process of urbanization began, and the place where it
happened was at Uruk.