The rise and fall of historys first empire Soraya Field Fiorio

History’s first empire rose
out of a hot, dry landscape,

without rainfall to nourish crops,
without trees or stones for building.

In spite of all this, its inhabitants
built the world’s first cities,

with monumental architecture
and large populations—

and they built them
entirely out of mud.

Sumer occupied the southern part
of modern Iraq

in the region called Mesopotamia.

Mesopotamia means “between two rivers”—

the Tigris and the Euphrates.

Around 5000 BCE, early Sumerians used
irrigation channels, dams, and reservoirs

to redirect river water and farm
large areas of previously bone-dry land.

Agricultural communities like this
were slowly springing up around the world.

But Sumerians were the first
to take the next step.

Using clay bricks made from river mud,

they began to build multi-storied
homes and temples.

They invented the wheel—

a potter’s wheel, for turning mud
into household goods and tools.

Those clay bricks gave rise
to the world’s first cities,

probably around 4500 BCE.

At the top of the city’s social ladder
were priests and priestesses,

who were considered nobility,

then merchants, craftspeople,
farmers, and enslaved people.

The Sumerian empire
consisted of distinct city-states

that operated like small nations.

They were loosely linked
by language and spiritual belief

but lacked centralized control.

The earliest cities were Uruk,
Ur, and Eridu,

and eventually there were a dozen cities.

Each had a king who served a role
somewhere between a priest and a ruler.

Sometimes they fought against
each other to conquer new territories.

Each city was dedicated to a patron deity,
considered the city’s founder.

The largest and most important building
in the city was this patron god’s home:

the ziggurat, a temple designed
as a stepped pyramid.

Around 3200 BCE, Sumerians began
to expand their reach.

The potter’s wheel found a new home
on chariots and wagons.

They built boats out of reeds
and date palm leaves,

with linen sails that carried
them vast distances by river and sea.

To supplement scarce resources,
they built a trade network

with the rising kingdoms in Egypt,
Anatolia, and Ethiopia,

importing gold, silver,
lapis lazuli, and cedar wood.

Trade was the unlikely impetus

for the invention
of the world’s first writing system.

It started as a system of accounting
for Sumerian merchants

conducting business with traders abroad.

After a few hundred years,
the early pictogram system

called cuneiform turned into a script.

The Sumerians drafted up the first
written laws

and created the first school system,
designed to teach the craft of writing—

and pioneered some less exciting
innovations, like bureaucracy and taxes.

In the schools, scribes studying
from dawn to dusk,

from childhood well into adulthood.

They learned accounting, mathematics,
and copied works of literature—

hymns, myths, proverbs, animal fables,
magic spells,

and the first epics on clay tablets.

Some of those tablets told
the story of Gilgamesh,

a king of the city of Uruk who was
also the subject of mythical tales.

But by the third millennium BCE, Sumer
was no longer the only empire around,

or even in Mesopotamia.

Waves of nomadic tribes poured
into the region from the north and east.

Some newcomers looked up to the Sumerians,
adopting their way of life

and using the cuneiform script
to express their own languages.

In 2300 BCE, the Akkadian king Sargon
conquered the Sumerian city-states.

But Sargon respected Sumerian culture,

and Akkadians and Sumerians
existed side-by-side for centuries.

Other invading groups focused
only on looting and destruction.

Even as Sumerian culture spread,

a steady onslaught of invasions killed
off the Sumerian people by 1750 BCE.

Afterward, Sumer disappeared
back into the desert dirt,

not to be rediscovered
until the 19th century.

But Sumerian culture lived
on for thousands of years—

first through the Akkadians,
then the Assyrians, then the Babylonians.

The Babylonians passed Sumerian
inventions and traditions through

along Hebrew, Greek, and Roman cultures.

Some persist today.

历史上的第一个帝国诞生
于炎热干燥的

土地上,没有降雨来滋养庄稼,也
没有树木或石头可供建造。

尽管如此,它的居民还是
建造了世界上第一座城市,

拥有巨大的建筑
和庞大的人口——

而且他们
完全是用泥土建造的。

苏美尔占领
了现代

伊拉克南部称为美索不达米亚的地区。

美索不达米亚的意思是“两条河流之间”

——底格里斯河和幼发拉底河。

大约在公元前 5000 年,早期的苏美尔人使用
灌溉渠道、水坝和水库

来重新引导河水和耕种
大片以前极度干燥的土地。

像这样的农业社区
正在世界各地慢慢兴起。

但苏美尔人是
第一个迈出下一步的人。

他们使用河泥制成的粘土砖

,开始建造多层
房屋和寺庙。

他们发明了

轮子——陶轮,用于将泥土
变成家庭用品和工具。

这些粘土砖
造就了世界上第一座城市,

大概在公元前 4500 年左右。

在城市社会阶梯的顶端
是祭司和女祭司,

她们被认为是贵族,

然后是商人、工匠、
农民和被奴役的人。

苏美尔帝国
由不同的城邦组成,它们

像小国一样运作。

它们在
语言和精神信仰上松散地联系在一起,

但缺乏集中控制。

最早的城市是乌鲁克、
乌尔和埃里都

,最终有十几个城市。

每个人都有一个国王,他的角色
介于牧师和统治者之间。

有时他们
为了征服新的领土而互相争斗。

每个城市都献给一位守护神,
被认为是城市的创始人。

这座城市最大、最重要的
建筑就是这位守护神的家

:金字形神塔,一座设计
成阶梯式金字塔的寺庙。

大约在公元前 3200 年,苏美尔人
开始扩大他们的势力范围。

陶轮
在战车和马车上找到了新家。

他们用芦苇
和枣椰树的叶子造船,

用亚麻帆载着
他们驶过河流和海洋很远的地方。

为了补充稀缺资源,
他们

与新兴的埃及、
安纳托利亚和埃塞俄比亚王国建立了贸易网络,

进口黄金、白银、
青金石和雪松木。

贸易是

世界上第一个书写系统发明的不太可能的推动力。

它最初是作为

与国外贸易商开展业务的苏美尔商人的会计系统。

几百年后,称为楔形文字
的早期象形文字系统

变成了文字。

苏美尔人起草了第一部
成文法律

并创建了第一个学校系统,
旨在教授写作技巧——

并开创了一些不那么令人兴奋的
创新,比如官僚主义和税收。

在学校里,文士
从黎明学习到黄昏,

从童年到成年。

他们学习会计、数学,
并抄写文学作品——

赞美诗、神话、谚语、动物寓言、
魔法

和第一部泥板上的史诗。

其中一些石板
讲述了乌鲁克城的国王吉尔伽美什的故事,


也是神话故事的主题。

但是到了公元前第三个千年,
苏美尔不再是唯一的帝国,

甚至在美索不达米亚。

游牧部落的浪潮
从北部和东部涌入该地区。

一些新来者仰慕苏美尔人,
采用他们的生活方式,

并使用楔形文字
来表达他们自己的语言。

公元前 2300 年,阿卡德国王萨尔贡
征服了苏美尔城邦。

但萨尔贡尊重苏美尔文化

,阿卡德人和苏美尔人
并存了几个世纪。

其他入侵团体
只专注于抢劫和破坏。

即使苏美尔文化传播开来,

到公元前 1750 年,持续不断的入侵也
杀死了苏美尔人。

之后,苏美尔
消失在沙漠的泥土中,

直到 19 世纪才被重新发现。

但苏美尔文化延续
了数千年——

首先是通过阿卡德人,
然后是亚述人,然后是巴比伦人。

巴比伦人将苏美尔人的
发明和传统

沿希伯来、希腊和罗马文化传播。

有些人今天坚持。