Ziggurats Of Mesopotamia

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Associated with Mesopotamia are ancient cultures like the Sumerians, Assyrians, Akkadians, and Babylonians. Learning about this time period can be a little confusing because these cultures interacted with and ruled over each other over the course of several thousand years.

noun

  • (in ancient Mesopotamia) a rectangular stepped tower, sometimes surmounted by a temple. Ziggurats are first attested in the late 3rd millennium BC and probably inspired the biblical story of the Tower of Babel (Gen. 11:1–9).

    • ‘Stepped pyramids known as ziggurats survive from the 3rd millennium BC in Mesopotamia.’
    • ‘The Mesopotamians built massive temples or ziggurats which housed the priestly class, the human representatives of the gods.’
    • ‘The Tower of Babel, the great ziggurat beside Babylon's temple of Marduk, dates to this era.’
    • ‘In its heyday, the city was enclosed by a wall some 8km in circumference, enclosing at one corner a citadel that contained a ziggurat, temples, and palaces.’
    • ‘This view, modelled upon ancient ziggurats, is probably very similar to how it actually appeared.’
    • ‘In the pre-dynastic period, it was Mesopotamia and its ziggurats that provided the model for the Egyptians.’
    • ‘Kiln-fired bricks were invented by the Mesopotamians to create the complex towering ziggurats of the Sumerian and Babylonian empires.’
    • ‘Tall yellow candles towered like ziggurats over a city of dishes stacked with onion pies, potato dumplings, mettwurst and weisswurst.’
    • ‘This piece evokes ancient architecture, in particular the ziggurat of the Assyrians.’
    • ‘Dispensing with his ‘prairie style’, he peppered the scheme with domes, spires and ziggurats.’
    • ‘I'm doing an ambient-metal installation in a Greek art gallery and writing about ziggurats.’
    • ‘I've seen the wax ziggurats, the elevated boats and spare architecture.’
    • ‘The nearby floating stairs are cast concrete bolstered by steel ziggurats tied into floor joists.’
    • ‘Cartons of bottled water for rescue workers rose in charitable ziggurats outside police stations and schools.’
    • ‘West Sacramento has a giant ziggurat on the river.’
    • ‘Opposite the ziggurat of technology was a single unmade cot.’
    • ‘Shellfire damaged the brickwork of the ziggurat at Ur, which was constructed in 2100 B.C.’
    • ‘He guided Tennyson and Clara to a stepped display that looked rather like Tennysons' model of a ziggurat from History class.’
    • ‘The ziggurat occupies the center, surrounded by a city wall.’
    • ‘Just beyond the bridge is a little park, too rocky to develop, that rises in the middle to a rounded granite ziggurat.’

Origin

Pronunciation

ziggurat

/ˈzɪɡʊrat/
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Partially reconstructed facade and access staircase of the Ziggurat of Ur

A ziggurat (/ˈzɪɡʊˌræt/ZIG-uu-rat; Akkadian: ziqqurat, D-stem of zaqāru 'to build on a raised area') is a type of massive structure built in ancient Mesopotamia. It has the form of a terraced compound of successively receding stories or levels. Notable ziggurats include the Great Ziggurat of Ur near Nasiriyah, the Ziggurat of Aqar Quf near Baghdad, the now destroyed Etemenanki in Babylon, Chogha Zanbil in Khūzestān and Sialk.

Description[edit]

Ziggurats were built by ancient Sumerians, Akkadians, Elamites, Eblaites and Babylonians for local religions. Each ziggurat was part of a temple complex that included other buildings. The precursors of the ziggurat were raised platforms that date from the Ubaid period[1] during the sixth millennium. The ziggurats began as a platform (usually oval, rectangular or square), the ziggurat was a mastaba-like structure with a flat top. The sun-baked bricks made up the core of the ziggurat with facings of fired bricks on the outside. Each step was slightly smaller than the step below it. The facings were often glazed in different colors and may have had astrological significance. Kings sometimes had their names engraved on these glazed bricks. The number of floors ranged from two to seven.

Elamite Ziggurat of Dur Untash in Persian Choqa Zanbil in Khuzestan, Iran

According to archaeologist Harriet Crawford, 'It is usually assumed that the ziggurats supported a shrine, though the only evidence for this comes from Herodotus, and physical evidence is nonexistent. It has also been suggested by a number of scholars that this shrine was the scene of the sacred marriage, the central rite of the great new year festival. Herodotus describes the furnishing of the shrine on top of the ziggurat at Babylon and says it contained a great golden couch on which a woman spent the night alone. The god Marduk was also said to come and sleep in his shrine. The likelihood of such a shrine ever being found is remote. Erosion has usually reduced the surviving ziggurats to a fraction of their original height, but textual evidence may yet provide more facts about the purpose of these shrines. In the present state of our knowledge it seems reasonable to adopt as a working hypothesis the suggestion that the ziggurats developed out of the earlier temples on platforms and that small shrines stood on the highest stages..'[2][citation needed] Access to the shrine would have been by a series of ramps on one side of the ziggurat or by a spiral ramp from base to summit. The Mesopotamian ziggurats were not places for public worship or ceremonies. They were believed to be dwelling places for the gods and each city had its own patron god. Only priests were permitted on the ziggurat or in the rooms at its base, and it was their responsibility to care for the gods and attend to their needs. The priests were very powerful members of Sumerian and Assyro-Babylonian society.

One of the best-preserved ziggurats is Chogha Zanbil in western Iran.[3] The Sialk ziggurat, in Kashan, Iran, is the oldest known ziggurat, dating to the early 3rd millennium BCE.[4][5] Ziggurat designs ranged from simple bases upon which a temple sat, to marvels of mathematics and construction which spanned several terraced stories and were topped with a temple.

An example of a simple ziggurat is the White Temple of Uruk, in ancient Sumer. The ziggurat itself is the base on which the White Temple is set. Its purpose is to get the temple closer to the heavens,[citation needed] and provide access from the ground to it via steps. The Mesopotamians believed that these pyramids temples connected heaven and earth. In fact, the ziggurat at Babylon was known as Etemenankia or 'House of the Platform between Heaven and Earth'.

An example of an extensive and massive ziggurat is the Marduk ziggurat, of Etemenanki, of ancient Babylon. Unfortunately, not much of even the base is left of this massive 91-meter tall structure, yet archeological findings and historical accounts put this tower at seven multicolored tiers, topped with a temple of exquisite proportions. The temple is thought to have been painted and maintained an indigo color, matching the tops of the tiers. It is known that there were three staircases leading to the temple, two of which (side flanked) were thought to have only ascended half the ziggurat's height.

Etemenanki, the name for the structure, is Sumerian and means 'temple of the foundation of heaven and earth'. The date of its original construction is unknown, with suggested dates ranging from the fourteenth to the ninth century BCE, with textual evidence suggesting it existed in the second millennium.[6]

Interpretation and significance[edit]

According to Herodotus, at the top of each ziggurat was a shrine, although none of these shrines has survived.[1] One practical function of the ziggurats was a high place on which the priests could escape rising water that annually inundated lowlands and occasionally flooded for hundreds of kilometers, for example, the 1967 flood.[7] Another practical function of the ziggurat was for security. Since the shrine was accessible only by way of three stairways,[8] a small number of guards could prevent non-priests from spying on the rituals at the shrine on top of the ziggurat, such as initiation rituals like the Eleusinian mysteries, cooking of sacrificial food and burning of carcasses of sacrificial animals. Each ziggurat was part of a temple complex that included a courtyard, storage rooms, bathrooms, and living quarters, around which a city spread.[9]

List of ziggurats[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ abCrawford, p. 73. sfn error: no target: CITEREFCrawford (help)
  2. ^Crawford, p. 85. sfn error: no target: CITEREFCrawford (help)
  3. ^'Tchogha Zanbil'. UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved July 15, 2017. It is the largest ziggurat outside of Mesopotamia and the best preserved of this type of stepped pyramidal monument.
  4. ^Matthews, R; Nashli, H. F., eds. (2013). The Neolithisation of Iran: the formation of new societies. Oxford: British Association for Near Eastern Archaeology and Oxbow Books. p. 272.
  5. ^Fazeli, H.; Beshkani A.; Markosian A.; Ilkani H.; Young R. L. (2010). 'The Neolithic to Chalcolithic Transition in the Qazvin Plain, Iran: Chronology and Subsistence Strategies'. Archäologische Mitteilungen Aus Iran and Turan (41): 1–17.
  6. ^George, Andrew R. (2007). 'The Tower of Babel: Archaeology, history, and cuneiform texts'(PDF). Archiv für Orientforschung. 2005/2006 (51): 75–95.
  7. ^Aramco World Magazine, March–April 1968, pp. 32–33
  8. ^Crawford, p. 75. sfn error: no target: CITEREFCrawford (help)
  9. ^Oppenheimer 1977, pp. 112, 326–328.

Sources[edit]

  • Oppenheimer, A. Leo (1977). Ancient Mesopotamia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN0-226-63187-7.
  • Tillison, Malachi (1993). Sumer and the Sumerians. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN0-521-38850-3.

Further reading[edit]

  • Black, J.A.; Green, A. 'Ziggurat'. In Bienkowski, P.; Millard, A. (eds.). Dictionary of the Ancient Near East. London: British Museum. pp. 327–328.
  • Beck, Roger B.; Black, Linda; Krieger, Larry S.; Naylor, Phillip C.; Dahia Ibo Shabaka (1999). World History: Patterns of Interaction. Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell. ISBN0-395-87274-X.
  • Busink, T. (1970). 'L´origine et évolution de la ziggurat babylonienne'. Jaarbericht van het Vooraziatisch-Egyptisch Genootschap Ex Oriente Lux. Vol. 21: 91–141.
  • Chadwick, R. (November 1992). 'Calendars, Ziggurats, and the Stars'. The Canadian Society for Mesopotamian Studies Bulletin. Toronto. Vol. 24: 7–24.
  • Killick, R.G. 'Ziggurat'. In Turner, J. (ed.). The Dictionary of Art. Vol. 33. New York & London: Macmillan. pp. 675–676.
  • Leick, Gwendolyn (2002). Mesopotamia: The Invention of the City. Penguin Books. ISBN0-14-026574-0.
  • Lenzen, H.J. (1942). Die Entwicklung der Zikurrat von ihren Anfängen bis zur Zeit der III. Dynastie von Ur. Leipzig.
  • Roaf, M. (1990). Cultural Atlas of Mesopotamia and the Ancient Near East. New York. pp. 104–107.
  • Stone, E.C. (1997). 'Ziggurat'. In Meyers, E.M. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East. Vol. 5. New York & Oxford: Oxford. pp. 390–391.
Mesopotamia

External links[edit]

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