Monday, February 6, 2012

First Known Word For Freedom





The cuneiform inscription that serves as our logo and a design element in Liberty Fund books is the earliest-known written appearance of the word "freedom" (amagi), or "liberty." It is taken from a clay document written about 2300 B.C. in the Sumerian city-state of Lagash.

Urukagina, the leader of the Sumerian city-state of Girsu/Lagash, led a popular movement that resulted in the reform of the oppressive legal and governmental structure of Sumeria. The oppressive conditions in the city before the reforms is described in the new code preserved in cuneiform on tablets of the period: "From the borders of Ningirsu to the sea, there was the tax collector."

During his reign (ca. 2350 B.C.) Urukagina implemented a sweeping set of laws that guaranteed the rights of property owners, reformed the civil administration, and instituted moral and social reforms. Urukagina banned both civil and ecclesiastical authorities from seizing land and goods for payment, eliminated most of the state tax collectors, and ended state involvement in matters such as divorce proceedings and perfume making. He even returned land and other property his predecessors had seized from the temple. He saw that reforms were enacted to eliminate the abuse of the judicial process to extract money from citizens and took great pains to ensure the public nature of legal proceedings.

In this important code is found the first written reference to the concept of liberty (amagi or amargi, literally, "return to the mother"), used in reference to the process of reform. The exact nature of this term is not clear, but the idea that the reforms were to be a return to the original social order decreed by the gods fits well with the translation.

Additional information: The translation of the inscription literally means “return to the mother,” but why this should be a reference to liberty has always been a matter of some interest.

Subsequent work to Kramer’s History Begins at Sumer (1958) has shed further light on the context in which amar-gi was used.

J. N. Postgate’s Early Mesopotamia: Society and Economy at the Dawn of History (1992), reveals that early Mesopotamians used the expression when referring to the freeing of one for debt. Early monarchs used indebtedness for taxes as a means of binding the people for service to the king. To release one back to one’s family was often literally to be returned to one’s mother.

When Urukagina assumed power in the Lagash region, following a revolt over the massive increases in taxes, he released large segments of the population from such compulsory service. The entire reform was designated as “amar-gi,” meaning that they were at liberty to return home, but it also included elimination of many unpopular restrictions and the return of seized property.

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Wednesday, August 24, 2011

First Known Literature


Sumerian Mythology: 

A Study of Spiritual and Literary Achievement in the Third Millennium B.C.

Samuel Noah Kramer


"No people has contributed more to the culture of mankind than the Sumerians, and yet it has been only in recent years that our knowledge of them has become at all accurate or extensive. [This book is] . . . our first authoritative sketch of the great myths of the Sumerians, their myths of origins, of creation, the nether world, and the deluge. The book . . . makes entrancing reading and for the general reader it opens up a whole new vista undreamed of before."

--Theophile J. Meek 

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Friday, June 17, 2011

First Known Divine Messenger






Myths of Enki, The Crafty God

Samuel Noah Kramer, John Maier

This ambitious and well-researched study brings together for the first time translations of the ancient literature concerning the Sumerian god Enki, one of four gods and goddesses who comprised the highest level of the Sumerian pantheon. The very existence of these writings, which date from the Third Millenium B.C., was unknown until about 100 years ago, when their cuneiform script was deciphered.

Since then, it has become apparent that Sumerian literature had a profound and enduring influence on both Biblical and classical Greek literature, and so on the literature of the western world as a whole.

Kramer, one of the world's leading sumerologists, has prepared these translations from among the scores of works he has published over the last fifty years; John Maier provides a full interpretive framework that places the translations in their broader comparative cultural context. This rare collection will be of interest to students and scholars in a wide range of disciplines from Near Eastern and Biblical Studies to Mythology and Comparative Literature.


Thursday, June 16, 2011

The Sumerians



The Sumerians, the pragmatic and gifted people who preceded the Semites in the land first known as Sumer and later as Babylonia, created what was probably the first high civilization in the history of man, spanning the fifth to the second millenniums B.C. This book is an unparalleled compendium of what is known about them.

Professor Kramer communicates his enthusiasm for his subject as he outlines the history of the Sumerian civilization and describes their cities, religion, literature, education, scientific achievements, social structure, and psychology. Finally, he considers the legacy of Sumer to the ancient and modern world.

"There are few scholars in the world qualified to write such a book, and certainly Kramer is one of them. . . . One of the most valuable features of this book is the quantity of texts and fragments which are published for the first time in a form available to the general reader. For the layman the book provides a readable and up-to-date introduction to a most fascinating culture. For the specialist it presents a synthesis with which he may not agree but from which he will nonetheless derive stimulation."—American Journal of Archaeology

"An uncontested authority on the civilization of Sumer, Professor Kramer writes with grace and urbanity."—Library Journal

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Tuesday, May 31, 2011

The Legacy




Description


This collection explores the spread of culture through literacy from Mesopotamia into Egypt, Palestine and Greece after a system of writing was developed. By gathering evidence from a vast range of material and literary sources from 3000 BC onwards, threads of influence and continuity are traced into the Middle Ages. The effect of recent rediscovery on European art is also explored.

Reviews

"Useful in pointing out the great reach of Mesopotamian culture...This book presents an enormous wealth of data from literature, art, religion and science. It also examines the various cultures- Judeo-Christian, Greek, Roman, Parthian, Sassanian, early Islamic and Indian- that were inheritors of the Mesopotamian legacy."

--Archaeology Odyssey

"The Legacy of Mesopotamia is a treasure chest of surprises....we are all in debt to Professor Dalley and her colleagues for providing us with so comprehensive and lucid a guide to the evidence and scholarship on cultural interaction between Mesopotamia and her neighbors."

--Ancient History Bulletin

Product Details 246 pages; 5 maps, 97 halftones & line illus.; ISBN13: 978-0-19-929158-8ISBN10: 0-19-929158-6

About the Author(s)

Stephanie Dalley, Shillito Fellow in Assyriology at the Oriental Institute; Senior Research Fellow, Somerville College, Oxford, A. T. Reyes, David Pingree, Professor of the History of Mathematics and Classics, Brown University, Alison Salvesen, teacher of Aramaic and Syriac, Oriental Institute, Oxford, and Henrietta McCall. Edited by Stephanie Dalley with drawings by Marion Cox

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Friday, September 10, 2010

Sunday, August 29, 2010

*Firsts*


Twenty-Seven "Firsts" in Man's Recorded History



The very beginnings of man's history are recorded in the strange wedge-shaped marks inscribed upon the tablets of Sumer. Unearthed about at century ago from the mounds in Mesopotamia where they had lain for more than three thousand years, and deciphered only after decades of painstaking work, the tablets tell the story of civilization long forgotten, where culture as we know it was born.

In this book, which won an award as the best foreign book of the year when it was published in France in 1957, Dr. Samuel Noah Kramer, America's foremost Sumerologist, describes twenty-seven "firsts" in human history and in this way constructs and intimate and vivid picture of everyday public and private life five thousand years ago.



Thirty-Nine Firsts in Recorded History

"Kramer ranked among the world's foremost Sumerologists. . . . The book will interest both the scholar and the general educated reader."
—Religious Studies Bulletin

Which civilization had the first system of law? The first formal educational system? The first tax cut? The first love song? The answers were found in excavations of ancient Sumer, a society so developed, resourceful, and enterprising that it, in a sense, created history. The book presents a cross section of the Sumerian "firsts" in all the major fields of human endeavor, including government and politics, education and literature, philosophy and ethics, law and justice, agriculture and medicine, even love and family.

History Begins at Sumer is the classic account of the achievements of the Sumerians, who lived in what is now southern Iraq during the third millennium B.C. They were the developers of the cuneiform system of writing, perhaps their greatest contribution to civilization, which allowed laws and literature to be recorded for the first time.

Samuel Noah Kramer was Clark Research Professor Emeritus of Assyriology at the University of Pennsylvania, where he was also Curator Emeritus of the Tablet Collections.

Chapter 1 Education: The First Schools

Chapter 2 Schooldays: The First Case of "Apple-Polishing"

Chapter 3 Father and Son: The First Case of Juvenile Delinquency

Chapter 4 International Affairs: The First "War of Nerves"

Chapter 5 Government: The First Bicameral Congress

Chapter 6 Civil War in Sumer: The First Historian

Chapter 7 Social Reform: The First Case of Tax Reduction

Chapter 8 Law Codes: The First "Moses"

Chapter 9 Justice: The First Legal Precedent

Chapter 10 Medicine: The First Pharmacopoeia

Chapter 11 Agriculture: The First "Farmer's Almanac"

Chapter 12 Horticulture: The First Experiment in Shade-Tree Gardening

Chapter 13 Philosophy: Man's First Cosmogony and Cosmology

Chapter 14 Ethics: The First Moral Ideals

Chapter 15 Suffering and Submission: The First "Job"

Chapter 16 Wisdom: The First Proverbs and Sayings

Chapter 17 "Aesopica": The First Animal Fables

Chapter 18 Logomachy: The First Literary Debates

Chapter 19 Paradise: The First Biblical Parallels

Chapter 20 A Flood: The First "Noah"

Chapter 21 Hades: The First Tale of Resurrection

Chapter 22 Slaying of the Dragon: The First ''St. George"

Chapter 23 Tales of Gilgamesh: The First Case of Literary Borrowing

Chapter 24 Epic Literature: Man's First Heroic Age

Chapter 25 To the Royal Bridegroom: The First Love Song

Chapter 26 Book Lists: The First Library Catalogue

Chapter 27 World Peace and Harmony: Man's First Golden Age

Chapter 28 Ancient Counterparts of Modern Woes: The First "Sick" Society

Chapter 29 Destruction and Deliverance: The First Liturgic Laments

Chapter 30 The Ideal King: The First Messiahs

Chapter 31 Shulgi of Ur: The First Long-Distance Champion

Chapter 32 Poetry The First Literary Imagery

Chapter 33 The Sacred Marriage Rite: The First Sex Symbolism

Chapter 34 Weeping Goddesses: The First Mater Dolorosa

Chapter 35 U-a A-u-a: The First Lullaby

Chapter 36 The Ideal Mother: Her First Literary Portrait

Chapter 37 Three Funeral Chants: The First Elegies

Chapter 38 The Pickaxe and the Plow: Labor's First Victory

Chapter 39 Home of the Fish: The First Aquarium

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All *asterisks* are *links* ~ enjoy!