Ancient Temples Explored at Sumerian City of Girsu

News December 8, 2023

SHARE:

GIRSU, IRAQ—Two temples, one built on top of the other, have been unearthed at the site of the Sumerian city of Girsu, which is located in southeastern Iraq, according to a Live Science report. The more recent temple, dated to the fourth century B.C. and dedicated to Hercules and his Sumerian equivalent, Ningirsu or Ninurta, contained a brick bearing an inscription in Aramaic and Greek referencing the rare Babylonian ceremonial name Adadnadinakhe, “the giver of two brothers.” A Greek drachm found beneath an altar bears images of a lightning bolt and an eagle, both symbols of Zeus, the Greek sky god. The Greek coin, minted during the rule of Alexander the Great, also features an image of Hercules that strongly resembles conventional representations of Alexander on one side, with Zeus on the other, explained Sebastien Rey of the British Museum. Zeus was said to have claimed Alexander as his son through the Ammon oracle, making Alexander and Heracles brothers, and thus Zeus became “the giver of two brothers,” Rey explained. The Sumerian temple situated directly beneath the Hellenistic temple had been constructed 1,500 years earlier. “It shows that the inhabitants of Babylonia in the [fourth] century B.C. had a vast knowledge of their history,” Rey explained. “The legacy of the Sumerians was still very vibrant.” To read about the discovery of a palace at Girsu, go to "The Palace on Tablet Hill."

  • Features November/December 2023

    Assyrian Women of Letters

    4,000-year-old cuneiform tablets illuminate the personal lives of Mesopotamian businesswomen

    Read Article
    (Attraction Art/Adobe Stock)
  • Letter from El Salvador November/December 2023

    Uneasy Allies

    Archaeologists discover a long-forgotten capital where Indigenous peoples and Spanish colonists arrived at a fraught coexistence

    Read Article
  • Artifacts November/December 2023

    Sculpture of a Fist

    Read Article
    (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston/Bridgeman Art Library)
  • Digs & Discoveries November/December 2023

    The Benin Bronzes’ Secret Ingredient

    Read Article