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  2. Architecture of Mesopotamia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architecture_of_Mesopotamia

    Temples often predated the creation of the urban settlement and grew from small one room structures to elaborate multiacre complexes across the 2,500 years of Sumerian history. Sumerian temples, fortifications, and palaces made use of more advanced materials and techniques, such as buttresses, recesses, and half columns.

  3. Ziggurat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ziggurat

    An example of a simple ziggurat is the White Temple of Uruk, in ancient Sumer. The ziggurat itself is the base on which the White Temple is set. Its purpose is to get the temple closer to the heavens, [citation needed] and provide access from the ground to it via steps. The Mesopotamians believed that these pyramid temples connected heaven and ...

  4. Tower of Babel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tower_of_Babel

    There are similar stories to the Tower of Babel Sumerian myth similar to that of the Tower of Babel, called Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta, [33] where Enmerkar of Uruk is building a massive ziggurat in Eridu and demands a tribute of precious materials from Aratta for its construction, at one point reciting an incantation imploring the god Enki ...

  5. Esagila - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esagila

    The Esagila tablet hold Babylonian calculating methods considered to be sacred as they read in the back "let the initiate show the initiate, the non-initiate must not see this". On the front, the tablet explains the history and engineering of the 7-floor high Etemenanki temple (often thought to have inspired the Tower of Babel in the Bible). [3]

  6. Eridu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eridu

    In Sumerian mythology, Eridu was the home of the Abzu temple of the god Enki, the Sumerian counterpart of the Akkadian god Ea, god of deep waters, wisdom and magic. Like all the Sumerian and Babylonian gods, Enki/Ea began as a local god who, according to the later cosmology, came to share the rule of the cosmos with Anu and Enlil.

  7. Etemenanki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etemenanki

    The city's central feature was the temple of Marduk , with which the Etemenanki ziggurat was associated. Fenollós et al. note that, "The 'Tower of Babel' was not built in a single moment, but rather was the result of a complex history of successive constructions, destruction and reconstruction.

  8. History of Sumer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Sumer

    The history of Sumer spans through the 5th to 3rd millennia BCE in southern Mesopotamia, and is taken to include the prehistoric Ubaid and Uruk periods. Sumer was the region's earliest known civilization and ended with the downfall of the Third Dynasty of Ur around 2004 BCE.

  9. Sumer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumer

    Sumerian written history reaches back to the 27th century BC and before, ... (Sumerian temples) ... The city was provided with towers and stood on an artificial ...