The Ancient City of Uruk: Where the First Cities Began
The ancient city of Uruk, located in present-day
southern Iraq near modern Warka, is widely considered one of the world’s first
true cities. Historians believe that the name “Iraq” may even be linked to
Uruk, which was known as Erech in ancient texts.
Uruk is important because it helped shape many of the
things we now associate with civilization. It was one of the first places where
people lived in large cities, created systems of government, developed
organized trade, and invented writing.
Unlike many myths and legends, Uruk is supported by
archaeological discoveries. The city is mentioned in the Book of Genesis and is
also the setting of the famous Epic of Gilgamesh, one of the oldest literary
works ever discovered.
Where Was
Uruk Located?
Uruk was built in southern Mesopotamia, in the fertile
land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. This region, often called the
Fertile Crescent, provided rich soil, water, and ideal conditions for farming.
As agriculture improved, people no longer needed to
move from place to place. Villages slowly became towns, and over time, some of
these towns developed into large cities. Uruk became the most successful of
them all.
By around 3200 BCE, Uruk covered nearly 250 hectares
and may have been home to between 25,000 and 50,000 people. For its time, this
was an enormous population.
The Growth
of Uruk
Historians divide the development of Uruk into several
phases:
- Early Uruk Period (4000–3500 BCE)
- Middle Uruk Period (3500–3300 BCE)
- Late Uruk Period (3300–3100 BCE)
- Transitional Period or Jemdet Nasr (3100–2900
BCE)
During the Early Uruk Period, life in the city still
looked similar to the older Ubaid culture. Pottery, architecture, and farming
methods changed slowly.
In the Middle Uruk Period, the city expanded quickly.
Larger buildings appeared, trade increased, and Uruk began influencing nearby
regions.
The Late Uruk Period was the most important stage.
During this time, people in Uruk built large public buildings, created one of
the earliest forms of writing, and developed systems for managing trade and
government.
The First
True City
Uruk is often called the world’s first city because it
had features that earlier settlements did not.
The city contained:
- Public buildings
- Organized neighborhoods
- Religious centers
- Administrative systems
- Specialized workers
- Large-scale trade
Uruk was divided into two main districts.
The western part was known as the Anu District. It
contained a temple dedicated to Anu, the Mesopotamian sky god. One of the most
famous buildings there was the White Temple, built on a raised platform.
The eastern district was called Eanna. This area was connected
to the goddess Inanna, who was associated with love, fertility, and war.
Over time, the two districts became part of one large
city.
Temples and
Public Buildings
The temples of Uruk were more than places of worship.
They also acted as centers of government, trade, and storage.
Archaeologists discovered many buildings in the Eanna
district. Some were large halls that could hold hundreds of people. Others were
smaller buildings with decorated walls and columns.
Many experts believe these buildings were used to
organize food, goods, and workers. They may also have been places where leaders
met to make decisions.
One building included a large basin, which may have
been used for rituals. Another had walls decorated with colorful clay cone
mosaics, showing that the people of Uruk cared about art and design.
The
Invention of Writing
Perhaps the most important achievement of Uruk was the
invention of writing.
Before writing existed, people used simple methods to
keep records. They counted objects using clay tokens and marks. Over time,
these methods became more advanced.
By around 3200 BCE, the people of Uruk began writing
on clay tablets using a reed stylus. This early system is called
proto-cuneiform.
Most of these early records were used for practical
purposes. They recorded:
- Food supplies
- Animals
- Trade goods
- Taxes
- Payments
- Workers and jobs
Around 80 percent of the tablets found in Uruk deal
with economic matters. This shows that writing was first created to help manage
the growing city.
The writing system later developed into cuneiform, one
of the oldest writing systems in history.
How Ancient
Record Keeping Worked
The people of Uruk carefully recorded information on
clay tablets.
For example, if a group of animals arrived at a temple
or storehouse, scribes would write down:
- The type of animal
- The number of animals
- The place where they were delivered
- The person responsible
The tablets often used number systems based on 10 and
60. The base-60 system is especially important because it still influences the
modern world. We still divide an hour into 60 minutes and a minute into 60
seconds.
The tablets also included lists of jobs, goods,
animals, and cities. These lists may have been used to teach scribes and
organize society.
Social
Structure in Uruk
Uruk had a highly organized society.
At the top were rulers and powerful officials. Below
them were priests, scribes, craftsmen, traders, and workers.
Archaeologists have found evidence that people worked
in organized groups. Metalworkers, potters, and builders often worked under
supervisors.
Ancient texts and artworks suggest that Uruk may have
had more than one type of leadership. Instead of a simple monarchy, there may
have been rulers, city assemblies, and religious leaders sharing power.
One important figure in Uruk art is the ruler-priest.
He is usually shown wearing a special cap and long clothing. He appears in
ceremonies, religious processions, hunting scenes, and battles.
This suggests that political and religious authority
were closely connected.
The Uruk
Vase and Ancient Art
One of the most famous objects discovered in Uruk is
the Uruk Vase, also called the Cult Vase.
The vase is made from limestone and decorated with
carved scenes.
At the bottom are symbols of water and plants. Above
them are animals and workers carrying food and goods. At the top is a ruler
bringing offerings to the goddess Inanna.
The vase shows that the people of Uruk believed
society had a clear order:
1.
Nature provided food and resources.
2.
Workers produced goods.
3.
Leaders ruled and offered thanks to the gods.
This artwork also shows how important religion was in
everyday life.
Pottery and
Daily Life
Pottery changed greatly during the Uruk period.
One major invention was the potter’s wheel, which
allowed people to make pottery faster and in larger quantities.
The most common object from this period is the
bevel-rim bowl. These simple bowls were mass-produced and may have been used to
distribute food or grain to workers.
Archaeologists have found thousands of these bowls in
Uruk and other nearby sites.
Other pottery included jars, decorated vessels, and
containers for storage. Some stone vessels copied the same shapes as pottery
and were probably used in religious ceremonies.
Cylinder
Seals: The First Official Signatures
Another major invention from Uruk was the cylinder
seal.
These small carved stone cylinders were rolled across
wet clay to leave an image.
Each seal had a unique design. They worked like
signatures and were used to:
- Mark goods
- Seal containers
- Protect documents
- Identify ownership
The scenes carved on cylinder seals often showed
animals, religious rituals, or important leaders.
Because every seal was different, they helped prevent
theft and confusion in trade.
Trade and
Expansion
Uruk did not have many natural resources. Southern
Mesopotamia lacked large amounts of stone, metal, and timber.
Because of this, the people of Uruk built
long-distance trade networks.
They imported:
- Copper
- Gold
- Silver
- Timber
- Precious stones
- Building materials
Trade connected Uruk with distant regions such as:
- Northern Mesopotamia
- Syria
- Iran
- Anatolia
- The Persian Gulf
Archaeologists have discovered Uruk-style pottery,
seals, and buildings far from southern Iraq. This suggests that Uruk had a
strong cultural influence across the ancient Near East.
Some historians describe these distant settlements as
“Uruk colonies.” Others believe they were trade centers where merchants lived
and worked.
Why Did Uruk
Spread?
There are several reasons why Uruk became so powerful:
1.
Agriculture
The land around Uruk was fertile and supported a large
population.
2. Trade
The city controlled important trade routes and
imported valuable goods.
3.
Government
Uruk created systems for keeping records, organizing
workers, and collecting resources.
4.
Technology
The people of Uruk invented writing, improved pottery,
and developed better building methods.
5. Religion
Temples helped unite the population and gave rulers
greater authority.
Together, these factors allowed Uruk to become one of
the most influential cities in history.
Conflict and
Warfare
Trade brought wealth, but it may also have caused
conflict.
Some archaeological sites connected to Uruk show
evidence of walls, weapons, and destruction.
At Tell Hamoukar in modern Syria, researchers found
signs of a violent battle that may have happened around 3500 BCE.
Although there is not enough evidence to say exactly
who fought there, the discovery suggests that competition over trade routes and
resources may have played a role.
The Decline
of Uruk
By the end of the fourth millennium BCE, Uruk began to
lose its influence.
Several factors may have caused this decline:
- Climate change
- Changes in river systems
- Population movements
- Competition from other cities
At the same time, new cultures and writing systems
began to appear in nearby regions.
Even though Uruk’s political power faded, its ideas
survived.
Writing, administration, trade systems, and city
planning continued to influence later civilizations across Mesopotamia.
Conclusion
Uruk was much more than an ancient settlement. It was
one of the first places where humans built a true city.
The people of Uruk created many of the foundations of
civilization, including writing, organized government, trade networks, social
structure, and monumental architecture.
Today, archaeologists still study Uruk because it
helps us understand how the modern world began.
The story of Uruk is not only the story of one ancient
city. It is the story of how human civilization itself first took shape.
Introduction
Long
before the rise of famous civilizations such as ancient Egypt, Greece, or Rome,
a remarkable city emerged in southern Mesopotamia. That city was Uruk. Located
in present-day Iraq near the modern site of Warka, Uruk is widely considered
one of the first true cities in human history.
Uruk
was far more than a large settlement. It was a place where some of humanity’s
most important ideas first appeared. Writing, organized government, large-scale
trade, social classes, monumental temples, and systems of administration all
developed there.
Because
of these achievements, many historians describe Uruk as the place where
civilization itself began.
Unlike
legendary cities that survive only in myths, Uruk is supported by extensive
archaeological evidence. Thousands of clay tablets, tools, seals, pottery
fragments, temples, and public buildings have been discovered by
archaeologists. These discoveries provide a detailed picture of how the
earliest urban society functioned.
Uruk
is also deeply connected to literature and religion. The city appears in the
Book of Genesis as Erech, and it is the home of Gilgamesh, the legendary king
featured in the Epic of Gilgamesh, one of the oldest surviving literary works
in the world.
Where Was Uruk Located?
Uruk
stood in southern Mesopotamia, between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. This
fertile region is often called the Fertile Crescent because its rich soil and
reliable water supply made farming possible.
For
thousands of years, people in Mesopotamia lived in small villages and farming
communities. As agriculture improved, food production increased. This meant
that not everyone needed to spend their time growing crops. Some people became
potters, builders, merchants, priests, or craftsmen.
Over
time, villages expanded into towns, and eventually some of these towns became
cities. Uruk became the largest and most successful of them.
By
around 3200 BCE, Uruk covered nearly 250 hectares. Historians estimate that
between 25,000 and 50,000 people may have lived there. At a time when most
settlements contained only a few hundred inhabitants, Uruk was enormous.
Its
location gave the city several advantages:
- Access
to fertile farmland
- Nearby
rivers for water and transport
- Easy
movement of goods by boat
- Connections
to trade routes across Mesopotamia
These
natural advantages helped Uruk grow into a major center of power.
The Different Stages of Uruk’s Growth
Archaeologists
divide the history of Uruk into several periods. Each stage shows how the city
changed from a simple settlement into the first urban civilization.
Early
Uruk Period (4000–3500 BCE)
During
this period, Uruk still resembled the earlier Ubaid culture. Houses were built
from mud brick, farming remained the most important activity, and pottery was
handmade.
However,
important changes were beginning to appear:
- Villages
grew larger
- More
people lived close together
- Public
buildings started to emerge
- Farming
became more organized
Although
the city was still small by later standards, this period laid the foundation
for future growth.
Middle
Uruk Period (3500–3300 BCE)
The
Middle Uruk Period marked a time of rapid expansion.
Uruk
became larger, wealthier, and more powerful. Monumental buildings appeared,
trade increased, and social differences became more visible.
Important
changes during this period included:
- Construction
of large temples
- Development
of organized labor
- Expansion
of trade with nearby regions
- Greater
use of pottery and tools
At
this stage, Uruk began influencing other settlements across Mesopotamia.
Late
Uruk Period (3300–3100 BCE)
The
Late Uruk Period is often considered the high point of the city.
This
was the period when many of Uruk’s most important achievements appeared:
- The
invention of writing
- The
construction of massive public buildings
- The
creation of organized systems of government
- The
growth of long-distance trade
- The
spread of Uruk culture into distant regions
By
the end of this period, Uruk had become the largest and most advanced city in
the ancient world.
Jemdet
Nasr or Transitional Period (3100–2900 BCE)
After
the Late Uruk Period, the city entered a transitional stage often called the
Jemdet Nasr period.
During
this time, writing became more advanced, administration improved, and other
cities began to rise.
Although
Uruk remained important, its dominance slowly began to decline as new urban
centers appeared across Mesopotamia.
Why Historians Call Uruk the First True City
Earlier
settlements existed before Uruk, but historians often call Uruk the world’s
first true city because it possessed features that earlier communities did not.
A
city is more than a place where many people live. A true city has systems that
organize society.
Uruk
included:
1. Large public buildings
2. Distinct neighborhoods
3. Religious centers
4. Administrative offices
5. Specialized workers
6. Trade networks
7. Social classes
8. Systems of record keeping
These
features transformed Uruk into something entirely new in human history.
For
the first time, thousands of people who did not know each other personally
could live and work together in an organized society.
The Two Great Districts of Uruk
Uruk was divided into two main
areas.
The
Anu District
The
western part of the city was called the Anu District. It was named after Anu,
the Mesopotamian god of the sky.
The
most famous structure in this district was the White Temple. Built on top of a
raised platform, the temple stood high above the surrounding city.
The
White Temple was important for several reasons:
- It
symbolized religious authority
- It
demonstrated the city’s wealth and engineering skill
- It
could be seen from far away, making it a powerful landmark
The
raised platform beneath the White Temple may have been an early form of the
ziggurat, the stepped temple structure that later became common in Mesopotamia.
The
Eanna District
The
eastern district of Uruk was known as Eanna. This area was associated with the
goddess Inanna, one of the most important deities in Mesopotamian religion.
Inanna
was the goddess of:
- Love
- Fertility
- War
- Political
power
The
Eanna district contained large ceremonial buildings, temples, courtyards,
storage areas, and meeting halls.
Archaeologists
believe that this district served as both a religious center and an
administrative center. It was here that officials may have organized trade,
collected goods, and directed workers.
Over
time, the Anu and Eanna districts merged into one large urban center.
Temples: More Than Places of Worship
In
Uruk, temples played a much larger role than churches, mosques, or temples do
in most societies today.
The
temples of Uruk were not only religious buildings. They were also:
- Centers
of government
- Storehouses
for grain and goods
- Places
where workers received food
- Offices
for administrators and scribes
- Meeting
places for leaders
The
temple system helped control the economy of the city.
Farmers
brought grain, animals, and supplies to the temples. In return, the temples
redistributed food and goods to workers, priests, builders, and craftsmen.
This
system allowed the city to support large numbers of people.
Some
of the public buildings discovered in Eanna are enormous. Archaeologists have
found:
- Large
halls that could hold hundreds of people
- Buildings
with thick mud-brick walls
- Decorative
cone mosaics made from colored clay
- Basins
that may have been used for rituals
These
buildings reveal that the people of Uruk valued both practical organization and
artistic beauty.
The Invention of Writing
One
of Uruk’s greatest contributions to human history was the invention of writing.
Before
writing existed, people kept records using clay tokens and simple marks. Small
clay shapes represented goods such as animals, grain, or jars of oil.
As
the city became larger and trade became more complex, these simple methods were
no longer enough.
By
around 3200 BCE, scribes in Uruk began pressing signs into clay tablets using a
reed stylus.
This
early form of writing is called proto-cuneiform.
Most
of the earliest tablets were not stories or poems. They were practical records
dealing with:
- Food
supplies
- Trade
goods
- Animals
- Taxes
- Payments
- Land
- Workers
and jobs
Archaeologists
estimate that nearly 80 percent of the earliest tablets found at Uruk deal with
economic matters.
This
shows that writing was originally created to solve a practical problem: how to
manage a growing city.
As
the system developed, the symbols became more organized. Eventually
proto-cuneiform evolved into cuneiform, one of the oldest writing systems in
history.
Cuneiform
would later be used to write:
- Laws
- Religious
texts
- Scientific
observations
- Literature
- Historical
records
Without
Uruk’s invention of writing, much of recorded human history might never have
existed.
How Record Keeping Worked in Uruk
The
people of Uruk created one of the first systems of bureaucracy.
When
goods entered a temple or storehouse, scribes recorded important information on
clay tablets.
For
example, if sheep were delivered to a temple, a scribe might record:
- The
number of sheep
- The
person delivering them
- The
date
- The
destination
- The
official responsible
This
may seem simple today, but it represented a major breakthrough.
For
the first time, people could store information outside the human mind. They no
longer needed to rely entirely on memory.
The
people of Uruk also developed numerical systems. They used counting methods
based on both 10 and 60.
The
base-60 system became especially important. Even today, modern societies still
use it:
- 60
seconds in a minute
- 60
minutes in an hour
- 360
degrees in a circle
The
influence of Uruk’s mathematical ideas is still present in everyday life.
Society and Social Classes in Uruk
Uruk
had a highly organized society with clear social divisions.
At
the top were rulers, priests, and powerful officials. These individuals controlled
religion, government, and major economic activities.
Below
them were:
- Scribes
- Craftsmen
- Merchants
- Farmers
- Builders
- Potters
- Metalworkers
At
the bottom were laborers and workers who performed much of the physical work.
The existence of these different groups shows that Uruk had specialized labor. People no longer needed to do everything themselves.
Discussion
0 Comments