UR: light, or the moon city, a city of the Chaldees, the largest city of SHINAR or Northern CHALDEA, and the principal commercial centre of the country as well as the centre of political power. It stood near the mouth of the Euphrates River, on its western bank, and is represented by the mounds (of bricks cemented by bitumen) of El-Mugheir, i.e., "The Bitumined," or "The Town of Bitumen," now 150 miles from the sea and some 6 miles from the Euphrates River, a little above the point where it receives the Shat el-Hie, an affluent from the Tigris River. It was formerly a maritime city, as the waters of the
Chaldean
Gulf
(mistakenly called
Persian Gulf
) reached thus far inland.
Urwas the
port
of
CHALDEA
(Babylonia), whence trade was carried on with the dwellers on the gulf, and with the distant countries of
India
,
Ethiopia
, and
Egypt
. It was abandoned about B.C. 500, but long continued, like Erech, to be a great sacred cemetery city, as is evident from the number of tombs found there. [i]
Urof the Chaldee's
I. Site
Some 350 km (220 mi) South East of Baghdad, covering an oval area approximately 910 by 730 m (1000 by 800 yards), are the ruins of ancient Ur, known in antiquity as Urim. The major mound was called Tell el-Muqayyar ("mound of pitch") by the Arabs because of the bitumen used here and there as mortar for the bricks. Other sites have been suggested as the location of the biblical "
Ur
of the Chaldeans" (AV "Ur
of the Chaldees") but the present site is accepted by almost all scholars, especially because of its association with the southern Babylonian Chaldeans.
The chief deity of the city was Nanna, the Sumerian and Chaldean moon-god; for him and his consort Nin-gal several temples and the great ziggurat were built. It is noteworthy that at
Haran
, Abraham's ancestral home, the Semitic moon-god Sin was the chief deity worshiped.
Today, and for centuries past, the area of
Ur
has presented a most unprepossessing aspect. From the top of the ziggurat one looks out in every direction upon a flat barren plain virtually devoid of plant life or human habitation. But four thousand years ago, when the city and its environs encompassed about 10 sq km (4 sq mi) and had a population of 300,000 to 400,000, the vast plain must have been a patchwork of irrigated fields, orchards, and gardens.
Twice in its history, during its 1st and 3rd dynasties,
Ur
was "Capital of the World." Doubtless the end came when the
Euphrates
, which originally flowed along the western side of the city in a bed several feet above the level of the plain, broke through its banks and ultimately assumed its present course 19 km (12 mi) to the east. If this catastrophe occurred during the declining years of
Ur'
s history, when the inhabitants of the city were either too poor or too weak to remedy the situation, oblivion would have been swift and sure.
Earlier excavations were carried out at
Ur
and nearby Tell el-Ubaid by J. E. Taylor (1854), H. R. Hall (1918 - 19), and R. Campbell Thompson (1918); their finds were minor but provided evidence of the importance of the ruins. A joint expedition of the
British
Museum
and the
University
Museum
of the
University
of
Pennsylvania
, under the direction of C. L. Woolley, excavated at
Ur
for twelve seasons between 1922 and 1934. In addition to the ziggurat and royal tombs (see III and IV below), the excavators recovered the palaces of Ur-Nammu and ulgi of the 3rd Dynasty, the palace of the Chaldean king Nabonidus, temples from various historic periods for Nanna, Ningal, and Enki, and many private houses from both the Old Babylonian and Neo-Babylonian periods.
II. Prehistory and History
Urwas one of the oldest and most important cities in the Chaldean and Sumerian era of Mesopotamian history. Its occupation goes back, however, to the prehistoric Ubaid period. Sedentary occupation in what is now southern
Iraq
seems to have begun ca 4000 B.C., when Eridu was first inhabited. The prehistoric Ubaid culture gradually developed in Eridu and at several other sites, including
Ur
. Although no buildings from this period have been uncovered at
Ur
, the number and variety of Ubaid pottery types found there indicate a sizable population. The next prehistoric periods, Uruk and Jemdet Nasr, are also represented at
Ur
by pottery and fragmentary walls.
At the very dawn of recorded history there were three important centres in the part of Mesopotamia known as
Sumer
:
Kish
,
Ur
, and Uruk (biblical Erech). From the Early Dynastic I period several hundred archaic cuneiform tablets have been recovered at
Ur
.
One document relates that Mes-anne-pada of Ur defeated Agga of Kish and thus established the 1st Dynasty of Ur ca 2600 B.C. Mes-anne-pada and his son Mes-kiag-nunna are both mentioned in later chronicles as kings of this dynasty, and the former name has been found on several seal impressions at Ur. This
Ur
dynasty is the first historical dynasty in Mesopotamian history known from both later chronicles and contemporaneous archaeological materials (see IV below). After about a century of hegemony, however, the 1st Dynasty of Ur fell to the superior power of Gilgamesh of Uruk. There followed a long period in Sumerian history, including a 2nd Dynasty of Ur, for which no names or events survive.
For an illustrious period of nearly a century the kings (or governors) of
Lagash
and Girsu, of whom Gudea is best known, ruled
Ur
. Gutian invaders cut this period short, but Utu-hegal of Uruk eventually repulsed them ca 2120 B.C. A few years later Ur-Nammu of
Ur
defeated Utu-hegal to found the 3rd Dynasty of Ur, which lasted until ca 2000 B.C. An able general and administrator, Ur-Nammu conquered
Lagash
and extended his power over
Nippur
, Uruk, Adab, and Larsa. He also built or rebuilt temples and ziggurats all over
Sumer
, repaired canals, and restored
Ur
âs foreign trade. He is credited with the first known law code in history. Unfortunately the extant text of this code is brief, containing only a large part of the prologue and five short paragraphs of law.
From a broken tablet describing Ur-Nammuâs arrival in the underworld it appears that he died defending
Ur
against the Guti. In any event, his sixteen-year reign was followed by the forty-eight-year reign of his son Å ulgi. Å ulgi extended the royal power of
Ur
over
Elam
to the east and even over Asshur to the far north. His queen, an able woman with the Semitic name of Abisimti, continued as dowager under Å ulgiâs successors. Å ulgi, like Ur-Nam-mu undertook many building projects throughout his realm.
A shell-inlay mosaic set in bitumen on the end of a lyre sound-box. Celebratory scenes (from top to bottom) show: a bull-man wrestling with two bulls, a lion and a dog acting as servants, a bear dancing to a lyre played by a donkey, and a scorpion-man walking in front of a gazelle who carries two drinking glasses (25th cent B.C., from the kingâs grave) (courtesy of the University Museum, University of Pennsylvania)
Å ulgi was succeeded by his two sons Amar-Sin and Å u-Sin, each of whom reigned for nine years. They both served apprenticeships as governors of lesser cities during Å ulgiâs reign. Both Amar-Sin and Å u-Sin faced increasing migrations of Amorites, which virtually amounted to invasions of whole tribes. Abrahamâs ancestors probably came to
Ur
from their original home in
Haran
at this time. During the rule of Ibbi-Sin, who followed Å u-Sin, droves of Elamites joined the Amorites. Although Ibbi-Sin held on to his throne for twenty-four years, the power of
Ur
waned, and the cities that it once controlled were forced one by one to fend for themselves. With the downfall of the 3rd Dynasty of Ur came the rise of the Amorite city-states, which soon led to the 1st Dynasty of Babylon and its illustrious king Hammurabi. His accession marks the end of Sumerian political control of
Mesopotamia
.
The 3rd Dynasty of Ur was the most prosperous and most literate of the Sumerian period, if not of the entire history of
Mesopotamia
. A century of relative peace allowed business, agriculture, and the arts to develop.
Ur
âs population is conservatively estimated at about 300,000. Roughly fifteen thousand cuneiform tablets have been published of the approximately 100,000 excavated from many cities during this period. They contain information regarding every conceivable aspect of life; family affairs, government, religion, business, agriculture, medicine, law procedures, arts and crafts, building, mathematics, and various types of literature.
Urwas never again a leading city, although the cult of the tutelary deity, the moon-god Nanna, always retained an important place in the life of
Sumer
and later
Babylonia
. Records indicate building in
Ur
by Old Babylonian, Kassite, Assyrian, Chaldean, and even Persian monarchs. And the city must have had a sizable population down to the time of Cyrus. The latest dated tablet found there is from the twelfth year of Alexander the Great. Afterward, and possibly largely because the river shifted its course, the region disappeared from history.
III. Ziggurat
The ziggurat of
Ur
is the best-preserved example in
Mesopotamia
. The various levels of the terrace indicate that it had antecedents during the Uruk and Early Dynastic periods, but they remain buried beneath the core of the Ur III structure. Ur-Nammu began and Å ulgi finished the Ur III ziggurat (2100 B.C.), which was the prototype of many built at this time in other major cities controlled by the kings of the 3rd Dynasty of Ur. A stele celebrating the construction of this ziggurat was restored from many broken pieces found in the debris at its base. It pictures Ur-Nammu receiving instructions (or authorization) for the project from the moon-god Nanna and his consort Nin-gal.
The Ur-Nammu ziggurat apparently consisted of three stages, with a temple to Nanna on the top. The overall measurements were 62 by 43 by 20 m (203 by 141 by 66 ft). A long central staircase and two long flanking staircases led to a gatehouse on the first stage. Smaller staircases led to the temple.
The function of the ziggurat is by no means clearly understood. It was neither a tomb nor an observatory. The separation between the temple at the top and that at the base might have represented the distance between the heavenly and earthly residences of the deity.
IV. Royal Tombs
Perhaps the best-known discoveries at
Ur
are the treasures from the royal and private graves and tombs. Surely they are among the richest finds in the history of archaeology. These burials span the Early Dynastic and Sargonid periods, including the 1st Dynasty of Ur. A team found them during the first season in 1922 while searching for the
Nin-Mah
Temple
. But digging was suspended until 1926, when the workmen were better trained and more information was available.
By Woolleyâs reckoning there were over eighteen hundred private graves and tombs and sixteen royal tombs, including six âdeath pitsâ that contained mass burials of retainers. Several of the so-called private tombs, however, rivalled even the royal tombs in the wealth of their funerary furniture. Three of the royal tombs are identified with specific persons (Mes-anne-pada, A-kalam-dug, and Å ubad) by inscribed seals and vessels. Nearly all the royal tombs were plundered by robbers in antiquity, but the quantity of the remaining gold and silver vessels, jewellery, and other richly inlaid furniture testifies both to the skill of the ancient craftsmen and to the wealth and power of the aristocracy, since excellent techniques of working stone and metal were employed, and the raw materials were imported from great distances.
The mass burials of the death pits pose intriguing questions. Some of them contained chariots and oxen as well as humans, and one contained seven men and sixty-eight women. At first it was thought that these burials were related to the celebration of the âSacred Marriageâ at the annual New Year Festival. Now, however, they are thought to reflect a time when the servants of the deceased monarch were put to death and buried with him so that he would be properly equipped in the next world. In this respect the burials have parallels in
Egypt
, where the furniture was customarily included even in private graves; profuse wall reliefs and paintings are also common to the tombs of both
Ur
and
Egypt
. In fact, excavations at Saqqârah from the 1st Dynasty of Egypt have shown sacrificial customs similar to those at
Ur
.
V. Relationship of
Ur
to Abraham
Since the discovery and excavation of Tell el-Muqayyar, particularly by Sir Leonard Woolley, it has popularly been identified with
Ur
of the Chaldees. According to the tradition which Stephen accepted, Abraham was in Mesopotamia before he lived in
Haran
(Acts 7:2), further described as âthe land of the Chaldeansâ (v 3). In Gen. 12:1 God said to Abram, âGo from your country and your kindred and your fatherâs house.â The word translated âcountryâ is more accurately rendered âland of your birthâ (so RSV in
). This is followed by the statement, âAbram was seventy-five years old when he departed from
Haran
â (v 4). Accordingly, some scholars have held that the call of Abraham, therefore his origin, was in
Harran
. Hence the connection with
Ur
of the Chaldeans is a later tradition.
But Gen. 11:28 indicates that
Haran
(or Terah?) was born in
Ur
of the Chaldeans, as were Abram and Nahor. Abrahamâs wife Sarah came from the same place, and Abraham and Sarah accompanied Terah and his family from Ur of the Chaldeans âto go into the land of Canaan,â but they settled at Harran, possibly because of Terahâs ill-health, which eventuated in his death (11:31f). The call of Abraham, it would seem, preceded the decision to leave
Ur
of the Chaldeans, since the goal was Canaan, not
Harran
(cf. Gen. 15:7).
Some scholars (e.g., Gordon) have questioned whether â
Ur
of the Chaldeansâ was in southern Mesopotamia, since the Sumerian city of
Ur
, identified with Tell el-Muqayyar, is never called â
Ur
of the Chaldeansâ in ancient texts. It is simply â
Ur
â. Therefore, it is reasoned, â
Ur
of the Chaldeansâ must have been used to distinguish it from the better-known
Ur
in southern
Mesopotamia
. But if not there, then where? A Sumerian word Uru, written with another logogram, means âcity,â and was used of a number of cities (much as we might say, âIâm going to the city,â meaning any nearby city not named but understood by the hearer). â
Ur
of the Chaldeansâ could mean a city occupied by or in the region of the Chaldeans.
A region in eastern
Turkey
, in the general vicinity of
Lake Van
, was occupied by the Khaldi (or Chaldians; other scholars claim that this was the name of the deity, not of the people, who are more properly called Urartians. The route from this region to Canaan by way of Harran would be reasonable, whereas the most likely route from the Sumerian Ur, it is claimed, would not go by way of
Harran
. An older identification of
Ur
was
Urfa
, a city 35 km (20 mi) NW of Harran, but, as has been pointed out, the linguistic problems in equating
Ur
with
Urfa
are formidable. It should also be noted that Khaldi was an Indo-Aryan deity and the Urartians were not Semites; Terah and his family were clearly Semites (Gen. 11:10).
The Kaldu, on the other hand, are well known from antiquity, and while it is true that the name often refers to the Neo-Babylonian (or Chaldean) kings, it also can refer to the people of the Sea-Land at least as early as the 10th cent B.C. Ashurnasirpal II (883â859 B.C.) placed the Kaldu South of Babylonia (ARAB, I, § 470), and Shalmaneser III spoke of the sea of Kaldu, âwhich they call Bitter Sea,â i.e., the Persian Gulf (ARAB, I § 641).
Thus the biblical evidence strongly favours the location of
Ur
of the Chaldeans in a region such as Sumerian Ur, although to claim that this identification is certain would be going beyond the evidence. [ii]
[ii] Geoffrey W. Bromiley, The International Standard Bible Encyclopaedia, (electronic edition.;
Grand Rapids
: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2001, c1979-1988). http://www.gracenotes.info/topics/Chaldea.html
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