CAIN KILLED ABEL and the Destruction of Ur
CAIN KILLED ABEL and the Destruction of Ur
Destruction of Ur
The entire song is marked by sorrowful refrains: me-li-e-a uru-mu nu-me-a, Oh woe is me, my city is no more.242 a-uru-mu im-me, How long? oh my city I cry.243 me-li-e-a uru-ta è-a-mèn, Oh woe is me, from the city I depart.244 dingir ga-ša-an-gal-mèn é-ta è-a-mèn, Great divine queen am I, [pg 281]from the temple I depart.245 er-gig ni-šéš-šéš, She weeps bitterly
The
historical event referred to in this liturgy is undoubtedly the
destruction of Ur in the time of Ibi-Sin, last of the kings of the Ur
dynasty. This calamity left many traces in the temple songs of Sumer,
Ur was one of the
first village settlements founded (circa 4000 BC) by the so-called
Ubaidian inhabitants of Sumer. Before 2800 BC, Ur became one of the most
prosperous Sumerian city-states. According to ancient records, Ur had
three dynasties of rulers who, at various times, extended their control
over all of Sumer. The founder of the 1st Dynasty of Ur was the
conqueror and temple builder Mesanepada (reigned about 2670 BC)
the earliest
Mesopotamian ruler described in extant contemporary documents. His son
Aanepadda (reigned about 2650 BC) built the temple of the goddess
Ninhursag, which was excavated in modern times at Tell al-Obeid, about 8
km (about 5 mi) northeast of the site of Ur.
Ur-Nammu (reigned
2113-2095 BC), the first king of the 3rd Dynasty of Ur, who revived the
empire of Sumer and Akkad, won control of the outlet to the sea about
2100 BC and made Ur the wealthiest city in Mesopotamia. His reign marked
the beginning of the so-called renaissance of Sumerian art and
literature at Ur. Ur-Nammu and his son and successor Shulgi (reigned
2095-2047 BC) built the ziggurat of Nanna (about 2100 BC)
Rebuilt shortly
thereafter, Ur became part of the kingdom of Isin, later of the kingdom
of Larsa, and finally was incorporated into Babylonia. During the period
when Babylonia was ruled by the Kassites, Ur remained an important
religious center. It was a provincial capital with hereditary governors
during the period of Assyrian rule in Babylonia
After the
Chaldean dynasty was established in Babylonia, King Nebuchadnezzar II
initiated a new period of building activity at Ur. The last Babylonian
king, Nabonidus (reigned 556-539 BC), who appointed his eldest daughter
high priestess at Ur, embellished the temples and entirely remodeled the
ziggurat of Nanna, making it rival even the temple of Marduk at
Babylon. After Babylonia came under the control of Persia, Ur began to
decline. By the 4th century BC, the city was practically forgotten,
possibly as a result of a shift in the course of the Euphrates River
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