Latest news with #Sippar
Yahoo
02-07-2025
- Science
- Yahoo
Babylonian text missing for 1,000 years deciphered with AI
A team of ancient literature experts have deciphered a Mesopotamain text that was missing for over 1,000 years. Etched on clay tablets, the Hymn to Babylon describes the ancient megacity in 'all of its majesty,' and gives new insights into the everyday lives of those who resided there. The text is detailed in a study published in the journal Iraq. Founded in Mesopotamia around 2,000 BCE, Babylon was once the largest city in the world. Babylon's ruins are a UNESCO World Heritage Site about 52 miles outside of the Iraqi capital of Baghdad. At its height, the city was a cultural hub that inspired written works that still form part of our global heritage today. A religious text called the Enuma elish or Babylonian Epic of Creation details the creation of the universe and the rise of Marduk, the city's chief god. The Code of Hammurabi is one of the oldest surviving legal frameworks, and includes the concept of 'innocent until proven guilty.'. Babylonian texts were primarily composed of an ancient writing system called cuniform on clay tablets. Most of these tablets have only survived in tiny fragments. One of the goals of a team from the University of Baghdad in Iraq and Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich in Germany has been to decipher and preserve hundreds of cuneiform tablets included in the Sippar Library. This collection of texts was uncovered in the Temple of Shamash in the ancient city of Sippar, Iraq. Legends also say that Old Testament hero Noah hid tablets in Sippar before boarding his ark when the floodwaters came. [ Related: 6,000-year-old Mesopotamian artifacts linked to the dawn of writing. ] In the Electronic Babylonian Library Platform, study co-author and Assyriologist Enrique Jiménez is digitizing all of the cuneiform text fragments that have been discovered around the world. With the help of artificial intelligence (AI), he is piecing together fragments that belong together. 'Using our AI-supported platform, we managed to identify 30 other manuscripts that belong to the rediscovered hymn – a process that would formerly have taken decades,' Jiménez said in a statement. With these additional texts, the team was able to completely decipher this ancient hymn of praise. In it, they found some new insights into Babylonian urban society and believe that the Hymn to Babylon was very widespread. 'The hymn was copied by children at school. It's unusual that such a popular text in its day was unknown to us before now,' Jiménez said. The song of triumph–or paean–likely dates back to the start of the first millennium before Christ and is made up of 250 lines. 'It was written by a Babylonian who wanted to praise his city,' said Jiménez. 'The author describes the buildings in the city, but also how the waters of the Euphrates bring the spring and green the fields. This is all the more spectacular as surviving Mesopotamian literature is sparing in its descriptions of natural phenomena.' One of the exciting new discoveries includes new information regarding Babylonian women–many were priestesses. The hymns also describe the inhabitants as being respectful to foreigners. The lines below are from a newly discovered hymn, describing the river Euphrates. The city was located on the riverbanks at the time. The Euphrates is her river—established by wise lord Nudimmud— It quenches the lea, saturates the canebrake, Disgorges its waters into lagoon and sea, Its fields burgeon with herbs and flowers, Its meadows, in brilliant bloom, sprout barley, From which, gathered, sheaves are stacked, Herds and flocks lie on verdant pastures, Wealth and splendor—what befit mankind— Are bestowed, multiplied, and regally granted. Continued advances could potentially lead to better translations of this ancient celebration of a great city.


Daily Mail
02-07-2025
- General
- Daily Mail
Hymn of Babylon is pieced together after 2,100 YEARS: Scientists use AI to reconstruct ancient song
A hymn dedicated to the ancient city of Babylon has been discovered after 2,100 years. Sung to the god Marduk, patron deity of the great city, the poem describes Babylon's flowing rivers, jewelled gates, and 'bathed priests' in stunning detail. Although the song was lost to time after Alexander the Great captured the city, fragments of clay tablets survived in the ruins of Sippar, a city 40 miles to the North. In a process that would have taken 'decades' to complete by hand, researchers used AI to piece together 30 different tablet pieces and recover the lost hymn. Originally 250 lines long, scientists have been able to translate a third of the original cuneiform text. These lines reveal a uniquely rich and detailed description of aspects of Babylonian life that had never been recorded before. Lead researcher Professor Enrique Jiménez, of Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU), told MailOnline that the hymn's literary quality is 'exceptional'. 'It's meticulously structured, with each section flowing seamlessly into the next,' he said. The hymn begins with grand praise to the god Marduk, calling him the 'architect of the universe'. The poem's author then turns to the city of Babylon, describing it as a rich paradise of abundance. The hymn writes: 'Like the sea, (Babylon) proffers her yield, like a garden of fruit, she flourishes in her charms, like a wave, her swell brings her bounties rolling in.' There are also descriptions of the river Euphrates, which still runs through modern-day Iraq, and its floodplains upon which 'herds and flocks lie on verdant pastures'. However, as Professor Jiménez points out, the hymn also gives a unique insight into Babylonian morality. Professor Jiménez: 'The hymn reflects ideals the Babylonians valued, such as respect for foreigners and protection of the vulnerable.' The hymn praises priests who do not 'humiliate' foreigners, free prisoners, and offer 'succor and favor' to orphans. Likewise, the poem gives some striking details about the lives of women in Babylon who are rarely mentioned elsewhere. 'For example, it reveals that one group of priestesses acted as midwives—a role unattested in other sources,' says Professor Jiménez. The poem describes these priestesses as 'cloistered women who, with their skill, nourish the womb with life'. What makes this discovery particularly exciting is how important the poem appears to have been to the Babylonians. Babylonians recorded information in a writing system called cuneiform, which involved pressing a sharpened reed into soft clay to make triangular marks. Even after Babylon was conquered in 331 BC, many of these clay tablets have survived until the present day. Excavations at the city of Sippar have yielded hundreds of clay tablets which, according to legends, were placed there by Noah to hide them from the floodwaters. These fragments show that the hymn was being used in Babylonian schools as an educational tool for around 1,000 years. Professor Jiménez believes that the poem was originally written sometime around 1500-1300, making it one of the earliest long poems from Babylon. The oldest surviving version of the text comes from a fragment belonging to a school dating to the seventh century BC. However, the tablets from Sippar show that the poem was still being copied out by children in schools right up to the last days of Babylon in 100 BC - 1,400 years after it was composed. That is the equivalent of children today learning about a poem written around 700 AD, such as the Old English poem Beowulf. The researchers say that this importance would have put the Hymn to Babylon alongside the Epic of Gilgamesh, the oldest known long-form poem in human history. Professor Jiménez says that, although the hymn was written later than the Epic of Gilgamesh, both would have 'circulated side by side for centuries'. Unlike the Epic of Gilgamesh, the researchers believe that the Hymn to Babylon was written by a single author rather than by collecting traditional texts over time. Although this author's name is currently unknown, Professor Jiménez remains hopeful that this may change in the future. He says: 'We have been digitising the British Museum's cuneiform collection over the last few years and discovered previously unknown author names, so we may yet identify the hymn's creator in the future.' Excerpts from The Hymn to Babylon Like the sea, (Babylon) proffers her yield, Like a garden of fruit, she flourishes in her charms, Like a wave, her swell brings her bounties rolling in. Marduk's star, delightful, precious sun, is her auspicious sign, Wherever the sun (is), is her gate, the distant heavens. Imgur-Enlil is her primeval wall - the mountain of the just, Alulu is her king - the father of all generations. The Euphrates is her river – established by wise lord Nudimmud - It quenches the lea, saturates the canebrake, Disgorges its waters into lagoon and sea, Its fields burgeon with herbs and flowers, Its meadows, in brilliant bloom, sprout barley, From which, gathered, sheaves are stacked, Herds and flocks lie on verdant pastures, Wealth and splendor - what befit mankind - Are bestowed, multiplied, and regally granted ... Bathed priests of Ištarān, pure priests of Šamaš, Buḫlû-priests of Šušinak, Nippureans of Enlil - The foreigners among them they do not humiliate. The humble they protect, their weak they support, Under their care, the poor and destitute can thrive. To the orphan they offer succor and favor, The prisoner they set free, the captive they release (even) at the cost of a silver talent, With the absent person they share the inheritance, Piously observing, they return kindness. ... (Their) women who have become masters in their duties: High priestesses who keep (their) vow to their bridegrooms, Cloistered women who, with their skill, nourish the womb with life Holy women who cleanse with pure water. hey keep the prohibitions and adhere to what is sacred, Kneeling in prayer, armed with a supplication, Reverent and vigilant, mindful of good works, They visit the sanctuaries, seeking life. Skilled in benevolence, they act with propriety. They (the women) are the cows of all Babylon, the herds of Ištar, They (the men) are the ones freed by Marduk.


Times
02-07-2025
- Science
- Times
Hymn of Babylon pieced together after 2,100 years — but how?
In the dying days of Babylon, about 100BC, as the remnants of the city's former splendour crumbled around them, its young scribes would study a thousand-year-old poem about the marvel that their civilisation had once been. Set at the dawn of creation, the hymn to the god Marduk described a verdant paradise of flowering meadows nourished by the River Euphrates, a sacred metropolis with jewelled gates 'flourishing in her charms like a garden of fruit'. This lost classic of Mesopotamian literature has now largely been reconstructed by scholars, who used artificial intelligence to piece together fragments of 30 ancient clay tablets. The hymn's origins are obscure but a fleeting reference to tolerance for foreign exiles suggests it may have been written before the 13th century BC. That would put it a little before the Trojan war and about the same time as the youngest parts of the Epic of Gilgamesh, the oldest long poem known to modernity. It vanished into the sands after Babylon was conquered by Alexander the Great in 331BC, yet numerous scattered fragments of it survived to the present in the ruins of Sippar, a city that was once about 40 miles to the north of Babylon. According to legend, Noah used the site to preserve a treasury of manuscripts from the great flood. Since the end of the 19th century, excavations at Sippar have yielded a vast library of thousands of tablets covered in cuneiform script. Those tablets are being digitised and reassembled with help from algorithms by researchers at Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU) in Munich and the University of Baghdad. The song of Marduk, which originally consisted of about 250 lines, has been restored to about two thirds of its original length. • Villa of the Mysteries digs expose Pompeii's tomb-raiding riddle Enrique Jiménez, a professor of ancient oriental languages at LMU, said it belonged to a handful of Babylonian poems that seemed to have been fixtures in the school curriculum, such as the national creation epic, Marduk's Address to the Demons and the Poem of the Righteous Sufferer. 'Very few texts qualify as 'classics' in the sense of being widely used for scribal education,' he said. 'What unites these texts is their focus on Babylon and its patron god Marduk — essentially, they were tools to teach or even indoctrinate students about the city's greatness and its divine centre.' In Jiménez's view, its carefully nested structure suggests it was the work of a single author, rather than a composite of accreted traditions like Gilgamesh. 'The hymn's structure is very attractive: a natural-feeling mise en abyme where each section elegantly contains the next,' he said. 'The rhythmic precision is also very sophisticated. Some manuscripts even show metrical scansion, which is uncommon.' • Did ancient sunscreen change human history? The poem opens with a lofty barrage of praise to Marduk, 'bright torch of the great gods' and 'architect of the universe', who commands the great floods in the distant mountains and brings life to the plains of the Euphrates. It then moves on to a description of spring floods that Jiménez said was unparalleled in its vividness, since Babylonian poets did not usually waste much breath on the wonders of nature. The city itself is portrayed as a paragon of almost social-democratic charity: 'The foreigners among them they do not humiliate. The humble they protect, the weak they support. Under their care, the poor and destitute can thrive. To the orphan they offer succour and favour.' By the time the last copies were written in the 1st or 2nd century BC, the poem would have been a bittersweet echo of everything the Babylonians had lost. 'Cuneiform documents from this period are scarce compared to earlier times, and the script eventually disappeared around the turn of the eras,' Jiménez said. 'This text must have served as a reminder of Babylon's past glories during its twilight.' The poem is published in an article by Jiménez and Anmar A Fadhil, an Iraqi colleague, in the journal Iraq.


Times
02-07-2025
- Science
- Times
Rediscovery of Babylon epic poem is a reason to cheer AI
An artist's impression of Babylon ALAMY 'Like the sea, Babylon proffers her yield / Like a garden of fruit, she flourishes in her charms / Like a wave, her swell brings her bounties rolling in.' These words, written around 3,000 years ago, were known by heart by people in the Babylonian empire for centuries. They have just been recovered with the help of AI. The words form part of a 250-line poem deciphered from fragments of hundreds of cuneiform tablets discovered in the library of Sippar, a lost city 40 miles north of Baghdad. Without AI, says Professor Enrique Jiménez, of Ludwig-Maximilians University, the joint Iraqi- German project would have taken decades. • Inside the library where cutting-edge tech is unlocking the secrets of ancient scrolls Dating from 300 years before the Iliad and the Odyssey, the poem was recovered from 30 separate manuscripts written over a 600-year period. This suggests that it was a work of great importance, possibly the Babylonian equivalent of Greece's Homeric hymns and Rome's Aeneid. Indeed, it appears to have been on the Babylonian school curriculum, some of the research sources being schoolchildren's tablets. Such texts were learned by heart at the time. That's partly why the find is so exciting: it's unusual for such a significant piece of literature to be lost and then to resurface. But the poem is also a powerful literary work, using vivid language reminiscent of the Psalms to bring the city and its fertile agricultural hinterland to life. And it reveals some fascinating features of Babylonian society, such as the importance of women priests and the respect accorded to foreigners. Humanity is understandably alarmed by AI's potential to shake contemporary civilisation to its foundations, and so tends to focus on the threats it may pose. But it is important also to remember its many upsides, such as its potential for revealing the lost cultural riches of ancient civilisation. Like fruitful Babylon, AI has much to yield.