Flashcards

Study guide

1) Learn the basics about the Sumerians and their environment. Who were they? Where and when did they live? What sort of language did they use? Why did cities develop in their region?

2) What is the importance of Uruk during the Protoliterate period?  Describe the city’s architectural features from this period, especially its religious architecture: the “high temple” (the White Temple) and the “ground-level temples” (found in the Eanna Precinct).

3) How does pictorial imagery give evidence about religious beliefs and practices in the Sumerian cities? Illustrate your answer by referring to the Uruk Vase, the Stele of the Vultures, and the stone figurines of worshippers from Tell Asmar.

4) Where was Habuba Kabira located?  Who built it, and why? When was it inhabited? Describe its architecture: the city layout and streets, fortifications, and houses.

5) What evidence do the Royal Tombs at Ur give about Early Dynastic burial practices?

6) Describe the architecture of the Royal Tombs at Ur. What kind of roofing was used?  Do you clearly understand the differences between a corbelled arch and a true arch, between a barrel vault and a groin vault?  What is a dome? What is the pitched brick technique of roofing?

Useful websites

Images

Figure 2.1

Figure 2.1

Mesopotamia: Bronze Age cities

Figure 2.2

Figure 2.2

Overall site plan, Uruk

Figure 2.3

Figure 2.3

Plan, White Temple, Uruk

Figure 2.4

Figure 2.4

White Temple (reconstruction), Uruk

Figure 2.5

Figure 2.5

Plan, Eanna Precinct, Uruk

Figure 2.6

Figure 2.6

Uruk Vase, alabaster, from the Eanna Precinct, Uruk. Iraq Museum, Baghdad

Figure 2.7

Figure 2.7

Uppermost register, Uruk Vase

Figure 2.8

Figure 2.8

Head of a woman, limestone, from the Eanna Precinct, Uruk. Iraq Museum, Baghdad.

Figure 2.9

Figure 2.9

Rolling out a cylinder seal

Figure 2.10

Figure 2.10

City plan, Habuba Kabira

Figure 2.11a

Figure 2.11a

Obverse, Stele of the Vultures, ED III. from Telloh (Girsu). Louvre Museum, Paris.

Figure 2.11b

Figure 2.11b

Reverse, Stele of the Vultures

Figure 2.12

Figure 2.12

The Temple Oval (reconstruction), Khafajeh

Figure 2.13

Figure 2.13

Bronze Lintel with Imdugud (Anzu) and stags, from Ubaid. British Museum, London

Figure 2.14

Figure 2.14

Worshippers, stone figurines, from Tell Asmar. Iraq Museum, Baghdad; and Oriental Institute, University of Chicago

Figure 2.15

Figure 2.15

City plan, Ur

Figure 2.16

Figure 2.16

Lyre (reconstructed), from Ur. University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Philadelphia

Figure 2.17

Figure 2.17

“Peace,” the obverse of the “Royal Standard,” inlaid panel, from Ur. British Museum, London

Figure 2.18

Figure 2.18

Diagram: (a) true arch; (b) barrel vault; (c) groin vault; and (d) corbelled arch

Figure 2.19

Figure 2.19

Diagram: The pitched brick vault: (a) view from below; and (b) in cross section