<h2 class="title"><SPAN name="id2523463" name= "id2523463"></SPAN>Chapter VI. Wars of the City States of Sumer and Akkad</h2>
<p class="title"><b>Abstract</b></p>
<p>Civilization well advanced--The Patesi--Prominent City
States--Surroundings of Babylonia--The Elamites--Biblical
References to Susa--The Sumerian Temperament--Fragmentary
Records--City States of Kish and Opis--A Shopkeeper who became a
Queen--Goddess Worship--Tammuz as Nin-Girsu--Great Dynasty of
Lagash--Ur-Nina and his Descendants--A Napoleonic
Conqueror--Golden Age of Sumerian Art--The First Reformer in
History--His Rise and Fall--The Dynasty of Erech--Sargon of
Akkad--The Royal Gardener--Sargon Myth in India--A Great
Empire--The King who Purchased Land--Naram Sin the
Conqueror--Disastrous Foreign Raid--Lagash again Prominent--Gudea
the Temple Builder--Dynasty of Ur--Dynasty of Isin--Another
Gardener becomes King--Rise of Babylon--Humanized Deities--Why
Sumerian Gods wore Beards.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.109" name="page.anchor.109"></SPAN> When the
curtain rises to reveal the drama of Babylonian civilization we
find that we have missed the first act and its many fascinating
scenes. Sumerians and Akkadians come and go, but it is not always
possible to distinguish between them. Although most Semites are
recognizable by their flowing beards, prominent noses, and long
robes, some have so closely imitated the Sumerians as to suffer
almost complete loss of identity. It is noticeable that in the
north the Akkadians are more Semitic than their contemporaries in
the south, but it is difficult at times to say whether a city is
controlled by the descendants of the indigenous people or those
of later settlers. Dynasties rise and fall, and, as in Egypt at
times, the progress of the fragmentary narrative is interrupted
by a sudden change <SPAN name="page.anchor.110" name=
"page.anchor.110"></SPAN>of scene ere we have properly grasped a
situation and realized its significance.</p>
<p>What we know for certain is that civilization is well
advanced. Both in the north and the south there are many
organized and independent city states, and not unfrequently these
wage war one against another. Occasionally ambitious rulers tower
among their fellows, conduct vigorous military campaigns, and
become overlords of wide districts. As a rule, a subjugated
monarch who has perforce to acknowledge the suzerainty of a
powerful king is allowed to remain in a state of
semi-independence on condition that he pays a heavy annual
tribute of grain. His own laws continue in force, and the city
deities remain supreme, although recognition may also be given to
the deities of his conqueror. He styles himself a Patesi--a
"priest king", or more literally, "servant of the chief deity".
But as an independent monarch may also be a pious Patesi, it does
not always follow when a ruler is referred to by that title he is
necessarily less powerful than his neighbours.</p>
<p>When the historical narrative begins Akkad included the cities
of Babylon, Cutha, Kish, Akkad, and Sippar, and north of
Babylonia proper is Semitic Opis. Among the cities of Sumer were
Eridu, Ur, Lagash, Larsa, Erech, Shuruppak, and probably Nippur,
which was situated on the "border". On the north Assyria was yet
"in the making", and shrouded in obscurity. A vague but vast area
above Hit on the Euphrates, and extending to the Syrian coast,
was known as the "land of the Amorites". The fish-shaped
Babylonian valley lying between the rivers, where walled towns
were surrounded by green fields and numerous canals flashed in
the sunshine, was bounded on the west by the bleak wastes of the
Arabian desert, where during the dry season "the rocks branded
<SPAN name="page.anchor.111" name="page.anchor.111"></SPAN>the body" and
occasional sandstorms swept in blinding folds towards the "plain
of Shinar" (Sumer) like demon hosts who sought to destroy the
world. To the east the skyline was fretted by the Persian
Highlands, and amidst the southern mountains dwelt the fierce
Elamites, the hereditary enemies of the Sumerians, although a
people apparently of the same origin. Like the Nubians and the
Libyans, who kept watchful eyes on Egypt, the Elamites seemed
ever to be hovering on the eastern frontier of Sumeria, longing
for an opportunity to raid and plunder.</p>
<p>The capital of the Elamites was the city of Susa, where
excavations have revealed traces of an independent civilization
which reaches back to an early period in the Late Stone Age. Susa
is referred to in the Old Testament--"The words of Nehemiah.... I
was in Shushan the palace".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1144"
href="#ftn.fnrex1144" name="fnrex1144">144</SPAN>]</span> An Assyrian
plan of the city shows it occupying a strategic position at a
bend of the Shawur river, which afforded protection against
Sumerian attacks from the west, while a canal curved round its
northern and eastern sides, so that Susa was completely
surrounded by water. Fortifications had been erected on the river
and canal banks, and between these and the high city walls were
thick clumps of trees. That the kings of Elam imitated the
splendours of Babylonian courts in the later days of Esther and
Haman and Mordecai, is made evident by the Biblical references to
the gorgeous palace, which had "white, green, and blue hangings,
fastened with cords of fine linen and purple to silver rings and
pillars of marble; the beds were of gold and silver, upon a
pavement of red, and blue, and white, and black
marble".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1145" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1145" name="fnrex1145">145</SPAN>]</span> Beyond Elam were
the plains, plateaus, and grassy steppes occupied by the Medes
and other <SPAN name="page.anchor.112" name=
"page.anchor.112"></SPAN>peoples of Aryan speech. Cultural
influences came and went like spring winds between the various
ancient communities.</p>
<p>For ten long centuries Sumer and Akkad flourished and
prospered ere we meet with the great Hammurabi, whose name has
now become almost as familiar as that of Julius Caesar. But our
knowledge of the leading historical events of this vast period is
exceedingly fragmentary. The Sumerians were not like the later
Assyrians or their Egyptian contemporaries--a people with a
passion for history. When inscriptions were composed and cut on
stone, or impressed upon clay tablets and bricks, the kings
selected as a general rule to record pious deeds rather than to
celebrate their victories and conquests. Indeed, the average
monarch had a temperament resembling that of Keats, who
declared:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt> The silver
flow</tt>
<tt>Of Hero's tears, the swoon of
Imogen,</tt>
<tt>Fair Pastorella in the bandits'
den,</tt>
<tt>Are things to brood on with more
ardency</tt>
<tt>Than the death day of
empires.</tt></blockquote><p>The Sumerian king was emotionally religious as the great
English poet was emotionally poetical. The tears of Ishtar for
Tammuz, and the afflictions endured by the goddess imprisoned in
Hades, to which she had descended for love of her slain husband,
seemed to have concerned the royal recorder to a greater degree
than the memories of political upheavals and the social changes
which passed over the land, like the seasons which alternately
brought greenness and gold, barrenness and flood.</p>
<p>City chronicles, as a rule, are but indices of obscure events,
to which meagre references were sometimes also made on mace
heads, vases, tablets, stelae, and sculptured <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.113" name="page.anchor.113"></SPAN>monoliths.
Consequently, present-day excavators and students have often
reason to be grateful that the habit likewise obtained of
inscribing on bricks in buildings and the stone sockets of doors
the names of kings and others. These records render obscure
periods faintly articulate, and are indispensable for comparative
purposes. Historical clues are also obtained from lists of year
names. Each city king named a year in celebration of a great
event--his own succession to the throne, the erection of a new
temple or of a city wall, or, mayhap, the defeat of an invading
army from a rival state. Sometimes, too, a monarch gave the name
of his father in an official inscription, or happily mentioned
several ancestors. Another may be found to have made an
illuminating statement regarding a predecessor, who centuries
previously erected the particular temple that he himself has
piously restored. A reckoning of this kind, however, cannot
always be regarded as absolutely correct. It must be compared
with and tested by other records, for in these ancient days
calculations were not unfrequently based on doubtful
inscriptions, or mere oral traditions, perhaps. Nor can implicit
trust be placed on every reference to historical events, for the
memoried deeds of great rulers were not always unassociated with
persistent and cumulative myths. It must be recognized,
therefore, that even portions of the data which had of late been
sifted and systematized by Oriental scholars in Europe, may yet
have to be subjected to revision. Many interesting and important
discoveries, which will throw fresh light on this fascinating
early period, remain to be made in that ancient and deserted
land, which still lies under the curse of the Hebrew prophet, who
exclaimed: "Babylon, the glory of kingdoms, the beauty of the
Chaldees' excellency, shall be as when God overthrew Sodom and
<SPAN name="page.anchor.114" name="page.anchor.114"></SPAN>Gomorrah. It
shall never be inhabited; neither shall the Arabian pitch tent
there; neither shall the shepherds make their fold there. But
wild beasts of the desert shall lie there; and their houses shall
be full of doleful creatures; and owls shall dwell there, and
satyrs shall dance there. And the wild beasts of the islands
shall cry in their desolate houses and dragons in their pleasant
palaces."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1146" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1146" name="fnrex1146">146</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>The curtain rises, as has been indicated, after civilization
had been well advanced. To begin with, our interests abide with
Akkad, and during a period dated approximately between 3000 B.C.
and 2800 B.C., when Egypt was already a united kingdom, and the
Cretans were at the dawn of the first early Minoan period, and
beginning to use bronze. In Kish Sumerian and Akkadian elements
had apparently blended, and the city was the centre of a powerful
and independent government. After years have fluttered past
dimly, and with them the shadow-shapes of vigorous rulers, it is
found that Kish came under the sway of the pronouncedly Semitic
city of Opis, which was situated "farthest north" and on the
western bank of the river Tigris. A century elapsed ere Kish
again threw off the oppressor's yoke and renewed the strength of
its youth.</p>
<p>The city of Kish was one of the many ancient centres of
goddess worship. The Great Mother appears to have been the
Sumerian Bau, whose chief seat was at Lagash. If tradition is to
be relied upon, Kish owed its existence to that notable lady,
Queen Azag-Bau. Although floating legends gathered round her
memory as they have often gathered round the memories of famous
men, like Sargon of Akkad, Alexander the Great, and Theodoric the
Goth, who became Emperor of Rome, it is probable <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.115" name="page.anchor.115"></SPAN>that the queen was a
prominent historical personage. She was reputed to have been of
humble origin, and to have first achieved popularity and
influence as the keeper of a wine shop. Although no reference
survives to indicate that she was believed to be of miraculous
birth, the Chronicle of Kish gravely credits her with a prolonged
and apparently prosperous reign of a hundred years. Her son, who
succeeded her, sat on the throne for a quarter of a century.
These calculations are certainly remarkable. If the Queen
Azag-Bau founded Kish when she was only twenty, and gave birth to
the future ruler in her fiftieth year, he must have been an
elderly gentleman of seventy when he began to reign. When it is
found, further, that the dynasty in which mother and son
flourished was supposed to have lasted for 586 years, divided
between eight rulers, one of whom reigned for only three years,
two for six, and two for eleven, it becomes evident that the
historian of Kish cannot be absolutely relied upon in detail. It
seems evident that the memory of this lady of forceful character,
who flourished about thirteen hundred years before the rise of
Queen Hatshepsut of Egypt, has overshadowed the doubtful annals
of ancient Kish at a period when Sumerian and Semite were
striving in the various states to achieve political
ascendancy.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the purely Sumerian city of Lagash had similarly
grown powerful and aggressive. For a time it acknowledged the
suzerainty of Kish, but ultimately it threw off the oppressor's
yoke and asserted its independence. The cumulative efforts of a
succession of energetic rulers elevated Lagash to the position of
a metropolis in Ancient Babylonia.</p>
<p>The goddess Bau, "the mother of Lagash", was worshipped in
conjunction with other deities, including the god Nin-Girsu, an
agricultural deity, and therefore <SPAN name="page.anchor.116" name=
"page.anchor.116"></SPAN>a deity of war, who had solar attributes.
One of the titles of Nin-Girsu was En-Mersi, which, according to
Assyrian evidence, was another name of Tammuz, the spring god who
slew the storm and winter demons, and made the land fertile so
that man might have food. Nin-Girsu was, it would seem, a
developed form of Tammuz, like the Scandinavian Frey, god of
harvest, or Heimdal, the celestial warrior. Bau was one of the
several goddesses whose attributes were absorbed by the Semitic
Ishtar. She was a "Great Mother", a creatrix, the source of all
human and bestial life, and, of course, a harvest goddess. She
was identified with Gula, "the great one", who cured diseases and
prolonged life. Evidently the religion of Lagash was based on the
popular worship of the "Queen of Heaven", and her son, the dying
god who became "husband of his mother".</p>
<p>The first great and outstanding ruler of Lagash was Ur-Nina,
who appears to have owed his power to the successful military
operations of his predecessors. It is uncertain whether or not he
himself engaged in any great war. His records are silent in that
connection, but, judging from what we know of him, it may be
taken for granted that he was able and fully prepared to give a
good account of himself in battle. He certainly took steps to
make secure his position, for he caused a strong wall to be
erected round Lagash. His inscriptions are eloquent of his piety,
which took practical shape, for he repaired and built temples,
dedicated offerings to deities, and increased the wealth of
religious bodies and the prosperity of the State by cutting
canals and developing agriculture. In addition to serving local
deities, he also gave practical recognition to Ea at Eridu and
Enlil at Nippur. He, however, overlooked Anu at Erech, a fact
which suggests that he held sway over Eridu and <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.117" name="page.anchor.117"></SPAN>Nippur, but had to
recognize Erech as an independent city state.</p>
<p>Among the deities of Lagash, Ur-Nina favoured most the goddess
Nina, whose name he bore. As she was a water deity, and perhaps
identical with Belit-sheri, sister of "Tammuz of the Abyss" and
daughter of Ea, one of the canals was dedicated to her. She was
also honoured with a new temple, in which was probably placed her
great statue, constructed by special order of her royal
worshipper. Like the Egyptian goddess, the "Mother of Mendes",
Nina received offerings of fish, not only as a patroness of
fishermen, but also as a corn spirit and a goddess of maternity.
She was in time identified with Ishtar.</p>
<p>A famous limestone plaque, which is preserved in the Louvre,
Paris, depicts on its upper half the pious King Ur-Nina engaged
in the ceremony of laying the foundations of a temple dedicated
either to the goddess Nina or to the god Nin-Girsu. His face and
scalp are clean shaven, and he has a prominent nose and firm
mouth, eloquent of decision. The folds of neck and jaw suggest
Bismarckian traits. He is bare to the waist, and wears a pleated
kilt, with three flounces, which reaches almost to his ankles. On
his long head he has poised deftly a woven basket containing the
clay with which he is to make the first brick. In front of him
stand five figures. The foremost is honoured by being sculptured
larger than the others, except the prominent monarch. Apparently
this is a royal princess, for her head is unshaven, and her
shoulder dress or long hair drops over one of her arms. Her name
is Lida, and the conspicuous part she took in the ceremony
suggests that she was the representative of the goddess Nina. She
is accompanied by her brothers, and at least one official, Anita,
the cup-bearer, or high <SPAN name="page.anchor.118" name=
"page.anchor.118"></SPAN>priest. The concluding part of this
ceremony, or another ceremonial act, is illustrated on the lower
part of the plaque. Ur-Nina is seated on his throne, not, as
would seem at first sight, raising the wine cup to his lips and
toasting to the success of the work, but pouring out a libation
upon the ground. The princess is not present; the place of honour
next to the king is taken by the crown prince. Possibly in this
case it is the god Nin-Girsu who is being honoured. Three male
figures, perhaps royal sons, accompany the prominent crown
prince. The cup-bearer is in attendance behind the throne.</p>
<p>The inscription on this plaque, which is pierced in the centre
so as to be nailed to a sacred shrine, refers to the temples
erected by Ur-Nina, including those of Nina and Nin-Girsu.</p>
<p>After Ur-Nina's prosperous reign came to a close, his son
Akurgal ascended the throne. He had trouble with Umma, a powerful
city, which lay to the north-west of Lagash, between the
Shatt-el-Kai and Shatt-el-Hai canals. An army of raiders invaded
his territory and had to be driven back.</p>
<p>The next king, whose name was Eannatum, had Napoleonic
characteristics. He was a military genius with great ambitions,
and was successful in establishing by conquest a small but
brilliant empire. Like his grandfather, he strengthened the
fortifications of Lagash; then he engaged in a series of
successful campaigns. Umma had been causing anxiety in Lagash,
but Eannatum stormed and captured that rival city, appropriated
one of its fertile plains, and imposed an annual tribute to be
paid in kind. An army of Elamites swept down from the hills, but
Ur-Nina's grandson inflicted upon these bold foreigners a
crushing defeat and pursued them over the frontier. Several
cities were afterwards forced to <SPAN name="page.anchor.119" name=
"page.anchor.119"></SPAN>come under the sway of triumphant Lagash,
including Erech and Ur, and as his suzerainty was already
acknowledged at Eridu, Eannatum's power in Sumeria became as
supreme as it was firmly established.</p>
<p>Evidently Zuzu, king of the northern city of Opis, considered
that the occasion was opportune to overcome the powerful Sumerian
conqueror, and at the same time establish Semitic rule over the
subdued and war-wasted cities. He marched south with a large
army, but the tireless and ever-watchful Eannatum hastened to the
fray, scattered the forces of Opis, and captured the foolhardy
Zuzu.</p>
<p>Eannatum's activities, however, were not confined to
battlefields. At Lagash he carried out great improvements in the
interests of agriculture; he constructed a large reservoir and
developed the canal system. He also extended and repaired
existing temples in his native city and at Erech. Being a patron
of the arts, he encouraged sculpture work, and the finest
Sumerian examples belong to his reign.</p>
<p>Eannatum was succeeded by his brother, Enannatum I. Apparently
the new monarch did not share the military qualities of his royal
predecessor, for there were signs of unrest in the loose
confederacy of states. Indeed, Umma revolted. From that city an
army marched forth and took forcible possession of the plain
which Eannatum had appropriated, removing and breaking the
landmarks, and otherwise challenging the supremacy of the sovran
state. A Lagash force defeated the men of Umma, but appears to
have done little more than hold in check their aggressive
tendencies.</p>
<p>No sooner had Entemena, the next king, ascended the throne
than the flame of revolt burst forth again. The Patesi of Umma
was evidently determined to free, once <SPAN name="page.anchor.120"
name="page.anchor.120"></SPAN>and for all, his native state from the
yoke of Lagash. But he had gravely miscalculated the strength of
the vigorous young ruler. Entemena inflicted upon the rebels a
crushing defeat, and following up his success, entered the walled
city and captured and slew the patesi. Then he took steps to
stamp out the embers of revolt in Umma by appointing as its
governor one of his own officials, named Ili, who was duly
installed with great ceremony. Other military successes followed,
including the sacking of Opis and Kish, which assured the
supremacy of Lagash for many years. Entemena, with characteristic
vigour, engaged himself during periods of peace in strengthening
his city fortifications and in continuing the work of improving
and developing the irrigation system. He lived in the golden age
of Sumerian art, and to his reign belongs the exquisite silver
vase of Lagash, which was taken from the Tello mound, and is now
in the Louvre. This votive offering was placed by the king in the
temple of Nin-Girsu. It is exquisitely shaped, and has a base of
copper. The symbolic decorations include the lion-headed eagle,
which was probably a form of the spring god of war and fertility,
the lion, beloved by the Mother goddess, and deer and ibexes,
which recall the mountain herds of Astarte. In the dedicatory
inscription the king is referred to as a patesi, and the fact
that the name of the high priest, Dudu, is given may be taken as
an indication of the growing power of an aggressive priesthood.
After a brilliant reign of twenty-nine years the king died, and
was succeeded by his son, Enannatum II, who was the last ruler of
Ur-Nina's line. An obscure period ensued. Apparently there had
been a city revolt, which may have given the enemies of Lagash
the desired opportunity to gather strength for the coming
conflict. There is a reference to <SPAN name="page.anchor.121" name=
"page.anchor.121"></SPAN>an Elamite raid which, although repulsed,
may be regarded as proof of disturbed political conditions.</p>
<SPAN name="id2524106" name="id2524106"></SPAN>
<p class="title"><b>Figure VI.1. SILVER VASE DEDICATED TO THE GOD
NIN-GIRSU BY ENTEMENA</b></p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<p>The finest example extant of Sumerian metal work. (See page
120) <span class="emphasis"><em>Reproduced by permission from
"Découvertes en Chaldée" (E. Letoux,
Paris)</em></span></p>
</blockquote>
<ANTIMG alt="" src="img/13.jpg" />
<SPAN name="id2524128" name="id2524128"></SPAN>
<p class="title"><b>Figure VI.2. STELE OF NARAM SIN</b></p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<p>(<span class="emphasis"><em>Louvre, Paris</em></span>)</p>
</blockquote>
<ANTIMG alt="" src="img/14.jpg" />
<p>One or two priests sat on the throne of Lagash in brief
succession, and then arose to power the famous Urukagina, the
first reformer in history. He began to rule as patesi, but
afterwards styled himself king. What appears certain is that he
was the leader of a great social upheaval, which received the
support of a section of the priesthood, for he recorded that his
elevation was due to the intercession of the god Nin-Girsu. Other
deities, who were sons and daughters of Nin-Girsu and Nina, had
been given recognition by his predecessors, and it is possible
that the orthodox section of Lagash, and especially the
agricultural classes, supported the new ruler in sweeping away
innovations to which they were hostile.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />