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Sumer

Overview

Sumer was the earliest known civilization in southern Mesopotamia (modern-day southern Iraq), emerging ~4500 BCE and flourishing during the 3rd millennium BCE. It is credited with foundational innovations including writing (cuneiform), urbanization, and codified law. @t[~4500 BCE]

Key Facts

  • Region: Southern Mesopotamia, between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers
  • Period: ~45001900 BCE @t[4500 BCE..1900 BCE]
  • Major cities: Ur, Uruk, Eridu, Lagash, Nippur, Kish
  • Language: Sumerian (language isolate)
  • Writing system: Cuneiform, developed ~3400 BCE @t[~3400 BCE]
  • Government: City-states ruled by lugal (kings) and ensi (governors)

Major Periods

  • Ubaid period (~55004000 BCE): Proto-urban settlements @t[5500 BCE..4000 BCE]
  • Uruk period (~40003100 BCE): First true cities, invention of writing @t[4000 BCE..3100 BCE]
  • Early Dynastic period (~29002350 BCE): Competing city-states @t[2900 BCE..2350 BCE]
  • Third Dynasty of Ur (~21122004 BCE): Final Sumerian renaissance under Ur-Nammu @t[2112 BCE..2004 BCE]

Achievements

  • Invented cuneiform writing ~3400 BCE @t[~3400 BCE] 1
  • Built ziggurats as temple complexes
  • Developed the sexagesimal (base-60) number system
  • Created the earliest known legal code (Code of Ur-Nammu, ~2100 BCE) @t[~2100 BCE]
  • Established irrigation agriculture at scale, initially enabled by predictable tidal surges from the Persian Gulf before large-scale canal systems were required
  • Produced the Epic of Gilgamesh, among the earliest literary works @t[~2100 BCE] 2

Decline

Sumer was absorbed by the Akkadian Empire under Sargon of Akkad ~2334 BCE, briefly revived under the Third Dynasty of Ur, and finally eclipsed by the rise of Babylon ~1900 BCE. @t[~2334 BCE]

Environmental Foundations

Recent research (2025) has revised understanding of how Sumer's agriculture and urbanization emerged. Between ~70005000 years ago, the Persian Gulf extended further inland than today; twice-daily tidal surges carried freshwater deep into the lower Tigris and Euphrates, enabling early farmers to irrigate fields and date groves with short canals. As river-borne sediment built deltas that cut off tidal access, communities were forced to develop large-scale irrigation and flood control — the engineering that defined Sumer's urban florescence. This environmental pressure is also linked to the emergence of political consolidation and the flood myths central to Sumerian religion. 3



  1. Schmandt-Besserat, D. Before Writing (1992) ↩︎

  2. George, A. The Epic of Gilgamesh (Penguin Classics, 2003) ↩︎

  3. Giosan, L. & Goodman, R. "Morphodynamic Foundations of Sumer." PLOS ONE 20(8): e0329084 (2025). Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution / Lagash Archaeological Project (Penn Museum). ↩︎