A Mysterious Group of People came to settle in southern Mesopotamia, sometime around 5400BC. What is now the modern state of Iraq, the first city of Mesopotamia was founded named Eridu. Although historians have generally regarded this as the world’s first city, we have seen this challenged on numerous occasions by recent discoveries too numerous to mention here. Eridu had all the things we ordinarily associate with an ancient city: temples, administrative buildings, housing, agriculture, markets, art, and, of course, walls to keep out unsavoury characters.The elusive aspect is we have absolutely no idea where they acquired their language, and bizarre language it is, we have no idea what they originally looked like. Their language, which we call Sumerian, and the subsequent Akkadian derivative were linguistic isolates. Sumerian is the oldest known written language on Earth, and any languages it might have derived from or developed alongside have been lost to time. Figuring out what their baffling ethnic identity based on their art is a doomed effort, because their art was so stylized that a good case could be made that it portrays people of any ethnicity, or the people they encountered. The Sumerian language was not Semitic, and the Akkadian conquests of 2334 BCE disrupted the ethnic and cultural isolation of the Sumerian people.

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Ur : The History and Legacy of the Ancient Sumerian Capital

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Nineveh : History of the Ancient Assyrian City

The Amorites: The History and Legacy of the Nomads Who Conquered Mesopotamia and Established the Babylonian Empire

Ancient Egypt : Their Pyramids, Obelisks, Irrigation Systems, and Culture

The Kingdom of Judah: The History and Mystery of the Ancient Jewish Kingdom

Mesopotamia : The Meaning and History of the Ancient Region

Babylon : Its Dynasty, Kings, and Downfall

Kalibangan: The History of the Indus Valley Civilization’s Provincial Capital in Ancient India

Qatna: The History and Legacy of the Ancient Syrian Kingdom during the Bronze Age

The Lost City of Mari: The History and Legacy of an Ancient Mesopotamian Power Center
Sumerian Origins : Lifting the Veil on Ancient Mesopotamia Mysteries

Language and Writing in Ancient Mesopotamia: The History and Legacy of the Languages and Scripts Used across the Region in Antiquity

Ur : The History and Legacy of the Ancient Sumerian Capital

Think : Why You Should Question Everything

Nineveh : History of the Ancient Assyrian City

The Amorites: The History and Legacy of the Nomads Who Conquered Mesopotamia and Established the Babylonian Empire

Ancient Egypt : Their Pyramids, Obelisks, Irrigation Systems, and Culture

The Kingdom of Judah: The History and Mystery of the Ancient Jewish Kingdom

Mesopotamia : The Meaning and History of the Ancient Region

Babylon : Its Dynasty, Kings, and Downfall

Kalibangan: The History of the Indus Valley Civilization’s Provincial Capital in Ancient India

Qatna: The History and Legacy of the Ancient Syrian Kingdom during the Bronze Age

The Lost City of Mari: The History and Legacy of an Ancient Mesopotamian Power Center
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A Mysterious Group of People came to settle in southern Mesopotamia, sometime around 5400BC. What is now the modern state of Iraq, the first city of Mesopotamia was founded named Eridu. Although historians have generally regarded this as the world’s first city, we have seen this challenged on numerous occasions by recent discoveries too numerous to mention here. Eridu had all the things we ordinarily associate with an ancient city: temples, administrative buildings, housing, agriculture, markets, art, and, of course, walls to keep out unsavoury characters.The elusive aspect is we have absolutely no idea where they acquired their language, and bizarre language it is, we have no idea what they originally looked like. Their language, which we call Sumerian, and the subsequent Akkadian derivative were linguistic isolates. Sumerian is the oldest known written language on Earth, and any languages it might have derived from or developed alongside have been lost to time. Figuring out what their baffling ethnic identity based on their art is a doomed effort, because their art was so stylized that a good case could be made that it portrays people of any ethnicity, or the people they encountered. The Sumerian language was not Semitic, and the Akkadian conquests of 2334 BCE disrupted the ethnic and cultural isolation of the Sumerian people.
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