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Sumer is a
region in the extreme south of ancient Mesopotamia (present-day Iraq), covering
a vast plain traversed by the Tigris and the Euphrates, bordered to the
southeast by the Persian Gulf. An important civilization developed there from
the end of the 4th millennium BC. J. C. and during the third millennium BC.
There are several major phases in the history of Southern Mesopotamia: the
final Uruk period (c. 3400-3100 BC), the period of the archaic dynasties (c.
2900 - 2340 BC). The empire of Akkad (c.2340-2190 BC) and the third dynasty of
Ur (c.21212 - 2004 BC). Sumer's recent syntheses tend, for these periods, to
cover the entire history of Lower Mesopotamia, without stopping in the Sumerian
country stricto sensu.
Completely
forgotten after the beginnings of our era, the civilization of Sumer was
rediscovered during the second half of the nineteenth century thanks to
excavations of archaeological sites of the southern Mesopotamian. These
continued before being stopped because of the wars that affected Iraq from the
1990s. In addition to often remarkable architectural and artistic works, they
have uncovered tens of thousands of writing tablets cuneiform, which constitute
the earliest written documentation known with that of ancient Egypt, and make of
Sumer one of the most ancient historical civilizations known. She developed her
writing system during the last centuries of the 4th millennium BC. J. C. The
Sumerian does not belong to any known language family. The speakers of this
language, mostly located in the country of Sumer, were called
"Sumerians" by the researchers who discovered it, but it does not
appear that an equivalent denomination existed in antiquity.
The analysis
of this documentation showed that the Sumerians had a great influence on the ancient
civilizations that followed theirs, especially those of Mesopotamia. Even
though they were not the only protagonists, the Sumerians played a decisive
role in the establishment of the Mesopotamian civilization. In particular, they
contributed to the emergence of the first States with their complex
institutions and administrations, to the development of the first urban
societies and to the development of different techniques in the fields of
agriculture, construction, metallurgy and trade. Finally, they participated in
the implementation of counting systems that influenced posterior cultures.
History
The history
of Sumer is divided into several successive periods:
• the period
of final Uruk (around 3400 - 3100 BC), which is very innovative, which sees the
characteristic elements of the ancient Mesopotamian civilization set up;
• the short
period of Djemdet Nasr (circa 3100 - 2900 BC);
• the period
of the archaic dynasties (around 2900 - 2340 BC), marked by the division of the
country of Sumer between several city-states;
• the empire
of Akkad (c. 2340 - 2190 BC), the first unification of Mesopotamia, by a
non-Sumerian dynasty;
• the
"neo-Sumerian" period, especially covered by the new unification
under the third Ur dynasty (circa 2112 - 2004 BC).
Political
history is especially well known from 2400 BC. Since the documentation is too
limited for earlier periods. Nevertheless, it is impossible to answer many
questions about the chain of events observed and their dating, which remains
very approximate.
The earliest
traces of settlement in Lower Mesopotamia date back to the second half of the
seventh millennium BC. J. C., and are attested on the site of Tell el-Oueilli.
This one presents the first developments of the culture of the Obeid period,
usually divided into five phases extending approximately on the 6th millennium
BC. J. C. and the fifth millennium BC. J. C. The most important site of this
period is Eridu, where several successive levels of a monumental building have
been identified. This period would see the emergence of chiefdoms dominating
farmer communities and practicing long-distance, albeit still limited,
exchanges27,28,29.
During the
period of Uruk (4th millennium BC), especially its final phase (around
3400-3100 BC), the evolution of society led to the appearance of the first
states and the first cities, 31. The monuments uncovered in Uruk illustrate the
richness and creativity of Lower Mesopotamia of this period, which exerted an
important influence on the neighboring regions and perhaps a first form of
imperialism (Writing appeared there during the last centuries of the period of
Uruk.
As things
stand, it is impossible to establish with certainty what role the Sumerians
played in these societies. The archaeological documentation does not allow to
attribute these phases to an ethnic group, and there is no consensus as to
whether the earliest written texts contain traces of Sumerian. The origin of
the Sumerians is thus the object of two opposite approaches:
• A first
hypothesis calls the Sumerians from a neighboring region of Lower Mesopotamia;
they would therefore be an element external to the latter, and would not
necessarily participate in the first periods of development of the societies of
the Mesopotamian delta. Several dates were then put forward for the arrival of
the Sumerians in the region. They could be present from the Obeid period, among
other groups of populations, or they could only have arrived at the beginning
of the third millennium. J. C., when the texts contain unambiguous possible
Sumerian grammatical elements34,35.
• An
opposite hypothesis situates the ethnogenesis of the Sumerians in the Lower
Mesopotamia of the beginnings of the Obeid period. The different heterogeneous
communities of the deltaic plain would have gradually merged to form an ethnic
group: the Sumerians36,37,38.
However, it
is generally accepted that the Sumerians were already present in Lower
Mesopotamia during the Uruk period. They would then have been a driving force
or at least would have participated in the creation of the first states, the
first cities, the first form of writing and settlement enterprises in
neighboring countries during the Uruk period. But in all likelihood it must be
admitted that Lower Mesopotamia was already a polyglot, and therefore
multi-ethnic, society in which the Sumerian, Semitic and other elements lived
in harmony. This is particularly evident from the presence in ancient texts of
terms apparently derived from unknown languages, notably in toponymy. Some saw
it as a "pre-Sumerian substratum" prior to the Sumerians' settlement
in the region, but this seems to have resulted from the linguistic diversity
and fluidity that existed from the earliest times.
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