Dear Dick:
I have your note of the 19th. Thanks for the encouragement! I needed
that.
Sometimes I get annoyed with my whiny attitude and wonder why you
bother. But
I'm grateful nonetheless.
I went by the Metropolitan museum when I was in New York. They had a
special
exhibit on Sumeria. It was interesting. Tiny stone stamps for making
wax seals, and
great sculpted lions. Fine green pottery, better than I could ever
make with my
college degree! It gave me some ideas on how to research the
Mesopotamian flood.
I had most of the day off Thursday so I went to the NYC public library
and looked
up some background material for you. On the way back I stopped at a
bookstore
called the Strand -- have you heard of it? You'd like it I'm sure. I
found a book on
the excavations at Ur, by Sir Leonard Woolley. Anyway, right now I'm
back in my
hotel room and I'll summarize my notes on what I found.
Both the history itself but perhaps more so, the history of
discovering the history (or
should we say creating it?) are interesting. So I'm not sure when to
start, with Sir
Leonard in 1929 or with Upnapishtem in 3500 B.C.!
Maybe a couple of comments on 3500 B.C. to start. Good Judeo Christians
that we
are, we all remember from high school that when the curtain of history
rises we are
in the fertile crescent, specifically in Mesopotamia ("between the
rivers") in the
floodplains of the Tigris-Euphrates, in what is now southern Iraq. According to the archaeologists earliest
signs of
settlement on the floodplain are around 5000 B.C.though there were
towns to the
north, up past Bagdad, much earlier. It seems that some interesting
things were
happening in the lower valley at least by 4000 B.C., a few little
villages, some of
them coalescing into towns where they made exquisitiely beautiful
painted pottery
of the exqusite Ubaid style; outside the towns a culture of nomads and
cattle raiding;
the burials are interesting in the light of the grave on San
Francisquito Creek; one
archeologist, a Sir Leonard Woolley (more on him later) described them
this way:
Then something happens. Somewhere around 2700 B.C. we have substatntial
Sumerian walled cities, writing, the rise of earthly rulers (in
Sumerian, "lugar",
literally translated "big man"!) Obviously the beginning of male
oppression!
Between the two active rivers we find that the villages have grown, so
we have
ancient cities of Uruk, Shurrupah, Jemdet Nasr, Kish, upstream on the
rivers, 100
miles from the present shoreline. But as I mentioned to you when we
talked, the old
way of looking at history was that while this early Sumerian
civilization was mildly
interesting nothing really interesting came out of this
culturally until later,
with the Bible and the Greeks. Now at the typical university "Western
Civ" course
they have the curtain go up at Sumer. This is disturbing a lot of
people, rich alums
and conservative parents, but the disturbance is more than a century
old now, as I
will try to show.
Now to the Flood. You will be happy to hear that there may actually
have been
such an historical event. For a long time of course the "original"
flood story was
taken to be the Genesis flood but this idea
received a
serious blow on the evening of December 3, 1872. On that evening a
young banker's
clerk and archeology enthusiast named George Smith lectured to an
audience of
members of London's Biblical Archaeological Society. Prime Minister
Gladstone
sat in the audience. Smith had translated a tablet that he had found
in a great pile of
debris that had been delivered from Iraq to the British Museum in which
the seer
Upnapishtim survives a flood sent by the gods to punish mankind by
building an ark
onto which he put his family along with all "the beasts of the field."
According to
the story, six days and nights of rain "destroyed all life from the
face of the earth."
Smith was said to be an excitable man and there was a rumor that when
he first
discovered the fragment, he took off his clothes and ran around the
room. I have
been unable to find a published explanation of this particular
response. The
Victorians did odd things. Perhaps he felt that he had somehow regained
a glimpse
of the Garden of Eden.
Now this early flood story dating from at least 1900 BC and probably
much earlier
is supposed to be a myth. According to the out-of-date NYPL shelf
version of the
Cambridge Ancient History says, "from what reality this famous story
derives it is
vain to enquire" though the same book says thatt an exceptional flood
is noted to
have occurred at the end of Dynasty I.
Now the scene shifts to the 1920's when the British archeologist Sir
Leonard
Woolley was in charge of a joint U.S. - British team that was excavating
at Ur, or
what remained of that ancient city, that being a huge forlorn mound of
dried up
adobe bricks and "rubbish" (surely Sir Leonard's favorite word)
remaining from
ancient occupation and now baking in the sun and "infested" (as the
Brits would
say) with lions and scorpions, more than ten miles from the nearest
navigable river.
The place is said now to be occupied by an Iraq military airfield.
Woolley's
expedition had been mostly funded by the Americans but Woolley was a
dashing
adventurer and an excellent publicist and was selected as the leader.
Woolley dug
down into the bottom of Sumerian civilization, through the ruins of the
so-called
Early Dynasty (2900 - 2800 B.C.) In 1929, he amazed the world with his
discovery
of a gold- filled royal cemetery that had been overlooked by past grave
robbers. It
was a discovery comparable to Carter's discovery of undisturbed tombs
in the Nile.
A few words on Woolley himself. Dashing in the Victorian style, given
to colorful
pronouncements. He had been a spy and a war prisoner in Turkey. He
could tell
stories of getting out of jams by pointing his pistol at the temple of
difficult officials.
He could write and speak in an entertaining way to a popular audience.
He believed
that archeology was relevant to the twentieth century because he
thought people
thought and acted fundamentally the same in 3000 B.C. as they do now.
He had
spent time with Lawrence of Arabia and Agatha Christie, ending up as a
character in
one of her novels. Interestingly these qualities were mixed with a
tendency toward
shyness. In many ways Woolley was a loner. He didn't care for honors
and he
hated cars! His wife was a difficult woman, a snob, a "walking
catalogue of obscure
ailments."
I've enclosed a photo of her. Why do I think that you would like her?
Would you
have enjoyed meeting her at the creek instead of me? (And why am I
asking these
ridiculous questions?)
Though Woolley was a severe and domineering classical scholar, he had a
talent for
interpreting his shards and runes in a vivid way. He could look at a
small clay shard
and feel the fading humid heat of an ancient summer afternoon, hear an
underpaid
schoolmaster criticizing his quaking students' progress in learning the
difficult art of
writing; see outside in the crowded alley the patriarch Abraham jostled
by a braying
ass carrying sticks of firewood.
Well, I think I'm beginning to go on here more than I should! Anyway,
I've got
some more material but I'll write again.
They buried their dead in the earth lying on one side with
the knees
bent, and as they placed with them offerings of food, personal
ornaments, tools, etc.,
we may suppose that they had some kind of belief in the continuation of
life after
death" (fnC. Leonard Woolley, The Sumerians.)