Gudea Statues
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Discovery of Statues in Lagash
Lagash was one of the oldest cities in Sumer and
Babylonia. Today it is represented by a long line of
ruin mounds, which are rather low, now known as Tello
al-Hiba in Iraq. Located northwest of the junction of
the Euphrates and Tigris rivers, and east of the
ancient city of Uruk, it is positioned on the dry bed
of an ancient canal, approximately 10 miles north of
the modern town of Shatra.#
The ruins of Lagash were discovered in 1877 by Ernest
de Sarzec, a Frenchman, who was allowed by the
Montefich chief, Nasir Pasha, to excavate the site at
his pleasure in the territories under the governing of
Nasir Pasha. Ernest de Sarzec continued excavations at
this site with various interludes, at first on his own
account and later as a representative of the French
government, until his death in 1901. The smaller
mounds had apparently been comprised mostly of storage
houses, in which vessels, weapons, sculptures, and
other objects that were used by the administration of
palace and temple. However, the primary excavations
were made in two larger mounds, which later were found
to be the site of the temple known as E-Ninnu, a
shrine to the patron god of Lagash, Nin-girsu.
The temple had long been destroyed and a
fortification was built on what remained of the
temple, during the Seleucid period. It was underneath
this fortification that numerous statues of Gudea were
discovered, which make up the heart of the Babylonian
collection at the Louvre Museum#. Overall the statues
had been damaged, some decapitated and others broken
in various ways, having been put into the foundation
of the new fortification. Also in this section came a
mixture of fragments of basic artifacts including
various objects made from bronze and stone, of high
artistic excellence. Some of these objects have been
dated to the earliest Sumerian period enabling
historians to trace Babylonian art and it’s history to
a date some hundreds years prior. Excavations in the
other mound resulted in the uncovering of the remains
of various buildings. In these outlying buildings de
Sarzec discovered about thirty thousand inscribed
clay tablets, the record archives of the temple. The
tablets contained the business records, the nature of
its property, the methods used to cultivate the land,
methods on herding its animals, and its commercial and
industrial dealings. The ancient temple was a great
industrial, commercial, agricultural and stock-raising
institution of the time.
From the objects and inscriptions uncovered at Tello
it seems that Lagash, the city ruled by Gudea, was one
of great importance during the Sumerian period. During
this time independent kings (Ur-Nina and his
successors) ruled Sumer, but with the Semitic conquest
its rulers became dependant, forced to listen to
Sargon of Akkad and his successors. However, the city
remained Sumerian and continued