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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Ancient History, Middle East > Mesopotamia
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Mesopotamia, Ancient History, Middle East

Related Category: Ancient History, Middle East

Mesopotamia[mes´´uputA´mEu] Pronunciation Key - The Proto-Literate and Early Dynastic Phases

During the next period (called the proto-literate phase) the south was the important region, and the transformation of the village culture into an urban civilization took place. Uruk (modern Tall al Warka), the foremost site at the beginning of this period, has yielded such monumental architecture as the temple of Inanna and the ziggurat of Anu. Also found at Uruk were tablets including the earliest pictographic writing. At the same time and apparently independently, smaller organized settlements arose at sites such as Tell Hamoukar and Tell Brak in NE Syria and Hacinebi and Arslantepe in SE Turkey.

The early dynastic phase that followed saw the development of city-states all over the Middle East as far as N Syria, N Mesopotamia, and probably Elam. The famous sites of this period are Tell Asmar, Kafaje, Ur, Kish, Mari, Farah, and Telloh (Lagash). The Sumerians (see Sumer), the inhabitants of these city-states of S Mesopotamia, were unified at Nippur, where they gathered together to worship Enlil, the wind god. The famous first dynasty of Ur came at the end of the early dynastic period.

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Assyria
Babylonia
Bronze Age
Farah
Iraq
Kish, ancient city, Mesopotamia
Lagash
Larsa
Mari
Nineveh
Nippur
Sargon, king of Akkad
Sumer
Sumerian and Babylonian art
Tepe Gawra
Ur
Uruk

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History > Asia and Africa


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