3,500 BC to 2,000
BC
The rise of the Sumerian cities-states along the banks of the Euphrates
provided the Sumerians with a unique opportunity. Now that the cities had
a stable food supply, the Sumerians could afford to support people in a
role other than that of food gathering. As a result new developments such
as the use of the wheel for transportation (3200
BC) and a basic cuneiform writing (3100 BC) came into use.
Cuneiform writing involved a series of wedge shaped symbols written on
clay tablets using a reed, mainly for the purposes of record keeping. The
tablets were later baked to provide a long lasting record. The Sumerian
language itself is unrelated to any other currently known, which gives us
no indication as to their origins. They did, though, develop quite a
sophisticated system of mathematics that still influences us today. Their
mathematics used a base 60 system (we use a decimal system today which is
of base 10), which is the reason why we have such things as 360 degrees
in a circle (60 x 6) and 60 minutes in an hour (60 x 1).
Sargon of Akkad:
The legend of Sargon claims that he was a "foundling", that he did not
know his parents, but was raised in the city of Kish and eventually
became the cupbearer of Ur-Zababa, the king of Kish. It is unclear if
Lagalzagesi, the king of Uruk, or Sargon himself overthrew Ur-Zababa, but
the end result was that Sargon gained the throne of Kish in 2320 BC.
Sargon raised his army and captured Uruk, then turned toward the Persian
Gulf and captured the cities of Ur, Lagash and Umma. He appointed Semitic
governors to rule each of the Sumerian city-states, and the Semitic
language Akkadian became prominent in the region at the expense of
Sumerian.
Sargon set up the first centralised government in the area, built a new
capital on the banks of the Euphrates which he named "Agade" and
continued to push at the boundaries of his empire. He conquered all of
the land that lay between the Euphrates and Tigris rivers, then pushed
into Lebanon and the Taurus Mountains.
Sargon continue to fight to hold his empire together against invaders and
internal revolts right up to his death, after which his son, Rimush, took
over. Rimush only ruled for nine years before his administrators, angered
by his policies, apparently killed him with their clay tablets.
The Akkadian empire only lasted till around 2180
BC, where the centralised government fractured as individual
cities broke from the empire. Eventually the Guti, and people from the
north, invaded and put a final end to the Akkadians. The Guti, though,
held power only breifly before the Sumerians led the city of
Uruk in revolt around 2130 BC.
With the Guti defeated, the Sumerians regained control of the region, the
city of Ur becoming the chief city of the new Sumerian empire. This
period became a golden age for Sumerian culture with a number of great
epics recorded in writing. This renewed empire, though, shortly found
themselves under more frequent attacks by the Semitic Amorites from the
north, as well as the Elamites from the north-east.
With their cities under siege and a famine in the land, the Sumerian
empire collapsed around 2000 BC.
Although the Sumerians were to disappear from Near Eastern life, their
influence would to be felt for another 1,500 years as their culture was
adopted by each successive empire that came to rule the region.
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