Deciphered 4,500-Year-Old Pillar Shows First Known Record of a Border Dispute
A recently interpreted 4,500-year-old marble pillar from ancient Mesopotamia shows that even at the dawn of civilization, people were bickering about their borders. The pillar sat in British Museum for 150 years until Irving Finkel, a curator in the Middle East department, deciphered the Sumerian cuneiform writing on the cylinder this year. The object, now on view in an exhibit called No Mans Land, was erected to establish a border between the warring city states of Lagash and Umma, located in present-day southern Iraq.
According to the museum, the two cities were disputing over a fertile area called Guedina or the Edge of the Plain. Around 2400 B.C. Enmetena, king of Lagash, had the pillar erected to stake his claim to the territory.
The marble pillars glistening surface, which would have shone out brightly and assertively under the sun beating down on the plain, according to the museum, wasnt just a roadside sign marking Lagashs territory. It is a heavily inscribed object, telling the complete story of the war between the two cities over the land. It also includes what may be the earliest-known example of written word play. Whoever chiseled the pillar didnt just take pains to emphasize the name of the Lagash god Ningirsu, substituting some of the cuneiform marks in the name with the symbol for god, they also threw some shade on the rival god of Umma, writing the gods name in a messy, almost illegible script.
The fight between Umma and Lagash is one of the oldest known wars in human history and led to what may be the worlds first peace treaty and one of the oldest legal documents, the Treaty of Mesilim, signed around 2550 B.C. The peace did not last. Around 2400 B.C., the war between Enmetena and Gishakidu took place, and the boundary was reaffirmed. Eventually, Umma attacked Lagash and successfully destroyed its capital city of Girsu, not long before Sargon the Great took over all of Mesopotamia, paying no heed to even the snarkiest of boundary stones.
Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/pillar-first-evidence-neighbors-behaving-badly-180970969/#H2czscXSy1lDbsVj.99