Watch: An introduction to Ancient Sumer
When was Ancient Sumer?
Ancient Sumer civilisation began in around 5300BC and ended around 1940BC.
Ancient Sumer lasted from the late Neolithic period to the early Bronze Age.
The civilisation weakened when city rulers began fighting with each other.
Flooding meant that crops weren't growing as well. Cities began to struggle.
In the end, Sumer was invaded by the Elamites who came from modern-day Iran.
Where was Ancient Sumer?
Ancient Sumer was in the southern part of a place called Mesopotamia.
Most of the area now falls in modern-day Iraq.
Cities were along the rivers Tigris and Euphrates.
People used the rivers to travel and transport goods and to help grow crops.
Some of the famous cities were called: Ur, Uruk, Eridu, and Larsa.
What were cities like?
- Each city had its own ruler.
- Cities were surrounded by walls to protect them from attack.
- Each city had a temple in its centre called a Ziggurat. They were tall so people could be closer to the gods in the sky.
- Houses were made from Mud-brick with a central courtyard where children could play.
- Sumerian people were some of the first to have schools.
- The wheel, writing, and the 60 minute clock are all thought to have been invented by the Sumerians.
How do we know about Ancient Sumer?
Archaeologists have found objects that tell us about Ancient Sumer life, rulers and beliefs.
The Epic of Gilgamesh is a collection of stories written about a superhuman king called Gilgamesh.
They were written thousands of years ago on clay tablets.
The Sumerian King List is a group of clay prisms with names of Sumerian cities and rulers on them.
The prisms are an important record of the Sumerian language.
- The Royal Standard of Ur was found buried in a royal grave.
- It shows the king of Ur as a warrior on one side and him enjoying a banquet on the other.
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