Who was the worlds first author Soraya Field Fiorio

4,300 years ago
in ancient Sumer,

the most powerful person in the city of Ur
was banished to wander the vast desert.

Her name was Enheduanna.

She was the high priestess of the moon god
and history’s first known author.

By the time of her exile, she had written
42 hymns and three epic poems—

and Sumer hadn’t heard the last of her.

Enheduanna lived 1,700 years
before Sappho,

1,500 years before Homer,

and about 500 years before
the biblical patriarch Abraham.

She was born in Mesopotamia, the land
between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers,

and the birthplace of the first cities
and high cultures.

Her father was King Sargon the Great,
history’s first empire builder,

who conquered the independent city-states
of Mesopotamia under a unified banner.

Sargon was a northern Semite
who spoke Akkadian,

and the older Sumerian cities in the south
viewed him as a foreign invader.

They frequently revolted to regain
their independence,

fracturing his new dynasty.

To bridge the gap between cultures,

Sargon appointed his only daughter,
Enheduanna, as high priestess

in the empire’s most important temple.

Female royalty traditionally
served religious roles,

and she was educated to read
and write in both Sumerian and Akkadian,

and make mathematical calculations.

The world’s first writing started in Sumer
as a system of accounting,

allowing merchants to communicate
over long distances with traders abroad.

Their pictogram system of record keeping
developed into a script

about 300 years
before Enheduanna’s birth.

This early writing style,
called cuneiform,

was written with a reed stylus pressed
into soft clay to make wedge-shaped marks.

But until Enheduanna,

this writing mostly took the form
of record keeping and transcription,

rather than original works attributable
to individual writers.

Enheduanna’s Ur was a city
of 34,000 people with narrow streets,

multi-storied brick homes, granaries,
and irrigation.

As high priestess, Enheduanna
managed grain storage for the city,

oversaw hundreds of temple workers,
interpreted sacred dreams,

and presided over the monthly
new moon festival

and rituals celebrating the equinoxes.

Enheduanna set about unifying
the older Sumerian culture

with the newer Akkadian civilization.

To accomplish this,
she wrote 42 religious hymns

that combined both mythologies.

Each Mesopotamian city
was ruled by a patron deity,

so her hymns were dedicated
to the ruling god of each major city.

She praised the city’s temple,
glorified the god’s attributes,

and explained the god’s relationship
to other deities within the pantheon.

In her writing,
she humanized the once aloof gods—

now they suffered, fought, loved,
and responded to human pleading.

Enheduanna’s most valuable
literary contribution

was the poetry she wrote to Inanna,
goddess of war and desire,

the divinely chaotic energy
that gives spark to the universe.

Inanna delighted in all forms
of sexual expression

and was considered so powerful that
she transcended gender boundaries,

as did her earthly attendants, who could
be prostitutes, eunuchs or cross-dressers.

Enheduanna placed Inanna at the top of
the pantheon as the most powerful deity.

Her odes to Inanna mark the first time
an author writes using the pronoun “I,”

and the first time writing is used
to explore deep, private emotions.

After the death of Enheduanna’s father,
King Sargon,

a general took advantage
of the power vacuum and staged a coup.

As a powerful member of the ruling family,
Enheduanna was a target,

and the general exiled her from Ur.

Her nephew,
the legendary Sumerian king Naram-Sin,

ultimately crushed the uprising
and restored his aunt as high priestess.

In total, Enheduanna served
as high priestess for 40 years.

After her death,
she became a minor deity,

and her poetry was copied, studied,
and performed throughout the empire

for over 500 years.

Her poems influenced
the Hebrew Old Testament,

the epics of Homer, and Christian hymns.

Today, Enheduanna’s legacy still exists,

on clay tablets that have
stood the test of time.

4300年前
的古苏美尔

,乌尔城最有权势的人
被放逐到广袤的沙漠中流浪。

她的名字叫恩赫杜安娜。

她是月神的大祭司,
也是历史上已知的第一位作家。

到她流放的时候,她已经写了
42 首赞美诗和三首史诗——

而苏美尔还没有听到她的最后一面。

恩赫杜安娜比萨福早 1700 年
,比荷马早

1500 年

,比圣经中的族长亚伯拉罕早 500 年。

她出生在美索不达米亚,
底格里斯河和幼发拉底河之间的土地

,是第一批城市
和高雅文化的发源地。

她的父亲是
历史上第一个帝国缔造者萨尔贡大帝,


在统一的旗帜下征服了独立的美索不达米亚城邦。

萨尔贡是一个说阿卡德语的北方闪米特
人,

而南方较古老的苏美尔城市则
视他为外来入侵者。

他们经常起义以
恢复独立,

破坏了他的新王朝。

为了弥合文化之间的鸿沟,

萨尔贡任命他唯一的女儿
恩赫杜安娜为

帝国最重要的神殿的高级女祭司。

女性皇室传统上
担任宗教角色

,她接受过用
苏美尔语和阿卡德语阅读和写作的教育,

并进行数学计算。

世界上第一个文字起源于苏美尔,
作为一种会计系统,

允许
商人与国外的商人进行远距离交流。 在 Enheduanna 出生前大约 300 年,

他们的象形记录系统
发展成为一种文字

这种早期的书写风格,
称为楔形文字,

是用芦苇笔压
入软粘土中形成楔形标记的。

但直到 Enheduanna,

这种写作大多采取
记录保存和转录的形式,

而不是归属
于个别作家的原创作品。

恩赫杜安娜的乌尔是一座
拥有 34,000 人的城市,拥有狭窄的街道、

多层砖房、粮仓
和灌溉设施。

作为高级女祭司,恩赫杜安娜
为城市管理粮食储存,

监督数百名寺庙工作人员,
解释神圣的梦想,

并主持每月的
新月节

和庆祝春分的仪式。

Enheduanna 着手
将古老的苏美尔文化

与较新的阿卡德文明统一起来。

为了做到这一点,
她写了 42 首

结合两种神话的宗教赞美诗。

每个美索不达米亚
城市都由一位守护神统治,

因此她的赞美诗
献给每个主要城市的统治神。

她赞美这座城市的神殿,
赞美神的属性,

并解释了神
与万神殿中其他神祇的关系。

在她的作品中,
她将曾经超然的众神人性化——

现在他们受苦、战斗、爱着
并回应人类的恳求。

恩赫杜安娜最有价值的
文学贡献

是她写给伊南娜的诗歌,
伊南娜是战争和欲望的女神,

是给宇宙带来火花的神圣混沌能量。

伊南娜喜欢各种形式
的性表达

,她被认为如此强大,以至于
她超越了性别界限

,她在世上的随从也是如此,他们可能
是妓女、太监或变装者。

恩赫杜安娜将伊南娜置于万神殿之巅,
成为最强大的神祇。

她对伊南娜的颂歌标志着
作者第一次使用代词“我”

写作,第一次写作被
用来探索深刻的私人情感。

恩赫杜安娜的父亲
萨尔贡国王死后,

一位将军
利用权力真空发动了一场政变。

作为统治家族的强大成员,
恩赫杜安娜是目标

,将军将她从乌尔放逐。

她的侄子
,传说中的苏美尔国王纳拉姆辛,

最终镇压了起义
,恢复了他的姑姑的大祭司身份。

恩赫杜安娜总共
担任了 40 年的高级女祭司。

在她死后,
她成为了一个小神

,她的诗歌在整个帝国被复制、研究
和表演

了 500 多年。

她的诗歌影响
了希伯来旧约

、荷马史诗和基督教赞美诗。

今天,Enheduanna 的遗产仍然存在

,在
经受住时间考验的泥板上。