Ur was an ancient town in the East, now in today's Iraq, found in the Chaldees of Babylonia but also known as Ur of the Sumerians. It may even have been of the Cassites/Kassites.
This was the home of Abraham ( b: 1948 BCE) and his father, Terah and Terah's father, Nahor and family. Terah was also father to Nahor II and Haran. Haran died in Ur "Kasdim." Abraham was called Abram in those days, and Sarah was Sarai. He married Sarai and Nahor married Milcah, daughter of Haran. Sarai remained barren.
Terah, father of Abram |
When Abram was 75 years old, he left Haran with Sarai and Lot, all their wealth and people and traveled to the land of Canaan and went past Shechem until they came to the Plain of Moreh where they met up with Canaanites. There he was called "the Ivrim/ Hebrew." (Gen.14:13). A Hebrew meant one who was a descendant of Eber, grandson of Shem, or one who comes from the other side of the Euphrates River. He went on to the mountain east of Beth-el and pitched their tent situated with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east, and built an altar to G-d. They then journeyed on, going toward the south.
Finally they entered Egypt due to a famine in Canaan. Abraham had an encounter there due to the beauty of Sarai, but overcame it and saw that this was not to be his future, so returned to Canaan, of which the land was higher up, no doubt a little cooler. He was now traveling with his livestock, silver and gold. Lot also had his flocks, cattle and tents, and so since they were both men and headstrong, Lot and Abram parted as their herdsmen kept fighting each other. They were not alone here, for there were other people living here, the Canaanites and the Perizzites.
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob in route |
The Babylonian Empire takes in the land to become Israel later. They slowly gain power over the native inhabitants and gave their name to the entire area. They made attempts, led by Merodach-Baladan, to overthrow Assyria, and finally did so in the 7th century BCE under their leader, Nabopolassar and his son, Nebuchadnezzar who established an empire extending from Assyria to the Egyptian border.
Nebuchadnezzar was King of Babylon from 605-562 BCE. He won the battle over the Assyrian-Egyptian alliance at Carchemish in 605 BCE and then conquered all the lands from the Euphrates River to the Egyptian frontier which included Judah. In 597, after Judah revolted, her sent contingents which captured Jerusalem and replaced the young king Jehoiachin with his own choice of Zedekiah, and exiled 8,000 of the local aristocracy to Babylon. Thus our trip there.
Eight years later, Zedekiah rebelled. Nebuchadnezzar and his forces again invaded Judah, captured Jerusalem again in 586 BCE and destroyed the Temple, laying waste the cities and exiling masses of the population again. The king was taken to Riblah where he was killed.
This empire was conquered by the Persians in 539 BCE. The fame of the Chaldeans as astrologers made the terms synonymous long after their empire had vanished. The Aramaic language has been called Chaldaic or Chaldee, but this is a misnomer.
Excavations in the ruins led by Sir Leonard Woodley in the 1920s and 30s revealed the highly civilized nature of the city in Abraham's time as well as showing evidence of an extensive flood at an earlier date. He saw the Ziggurat of Ur in Iraq that was built over 4,000 years ago. It is a huge huge huge edifice with steps going up and up the sides. He dug up 35,000 artifacts.
Now Iraq and American Archaeologist have been digging at Ur for 10 weeks supported by National Geographic, and have found a cuneiform tablet, one of many that have been found there.
"Ur emerged as a settlement more than 6,000 years ago and grew to prominence in the Early Bronze Age that began about a thousand years later. Some of the earliest known writing—called cuneiform—has been uncovered at Ur, including seals that mention the city. "
Abraham and Terah lived there during the 2nd millennium BCE, at Ur's height in "2000 B.C., when Ur dominated southern Mesopotamia after the fall of the Akkadian Empire. "Akkad existed during the Babylonian period in the northern region of the valley between the Euphrates and the Tigris Rivers, which contained Babylon, Sippar and other important cities.
Akkad was the residence of Sargon the Great."
The sprawling city of Ur was home to more than 60,000 people, and included quarters for foreigners as well as large factories producing wool clothes and carpets exported abroad. Traders from India and the Persian Gulf crowded the busy wharves, and caravans arrived regularly from what is now northern Iraq and Turkey."
Did they leave because Abraham wanted to leave such a culture of polytheism and start fresh with his wife and have room to allow his own thought on a G-d grow? Quite possibly. He would know his ideas couldn't thrive in Ur. Besides that, he had the presence of
G-d directing him into his travels.
A small clay mask unearthed represented Humbaba, a scary deity believed to protect the cedar forests of Lebanon. It figures in the ancient Sumerian epic of Gilgamesh that was popular during Ur's height of culture around 2000 BCE.
Below is the queen's Lyre found in the tomb at Ur. The craftsmanship is remarkable. A lyre is musical instrument belonging to the family of harps, usually played in Greece. Does this show trading going on? Ur was a great town of trading.
The Sumerians originally practiced a polytheistic religion, with anthropomorphic deities representing cosmic and terrestrial forces in their world. The earliest Sumerian literature of the third millennium BCE identifies four primary deities: An, Enlil, Ninhursag, and Enki.
Another dig was done by a 6 member British team who worked with 4 Iraqi archaeologists to dig in the Tell Khaiber in the southern province of Thi Qar some 200 miles south of Baghdad. War has kept international archaeologists away from Iraq.
The last stages of Mesopotamian polytheism, which developed in the 2nd and 1st millenniums, introduced greater emphasis on personal religion and structured the gods into a monarchical hierarchy with the national god being the head of the pantheon. Abraham was a real break-away from this concept to adhere to a single G-d force, unseen at that.
In helping out Lot, his nephew, he had to fight against Chedorlaomer king of Elam, Amraphel, king of Shinar, and their allies. When Sarah, his wife and niece died, he bought the cave of Machpelah for a family burial place.
Abraham was called a prophet, the founder of monotheism, the repository of all wisdom and science, the prototype of humility and kindness, famed for his hospitality. He introduced circumcision as the covenant of Abraham our Father. According to hellenistic legends much later on, he was even the king of Damascus.
Resource:
The New Standard Jewish Enyclopedia
Tanach, the Stone Edition (Bible)
http://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2015/08/land-of-abrahams-father-aram-naharaim.html
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2016/03/160311-ur-iraq-trade-royal-cemetery-woolley-archaeology/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Cemetery_at_Ur
https://www.csmonitor.com/Science/2013/0404/Home-of-Abraham-Ur-unearthed-by-archaeologists-in-Iraq
https://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=1787272385367494897#editor/target=post;postID=1027589388625377276;onPublishedMenu=posts;onClosedMenu=posts;postNum=0;src=link
https://www.livescience.com/62954-human-sacrifices-mesopotamia.html#:~:text=Eight%20human%20sacrifices%20were%20found,year%2Dolds%20from%20ancient%20Mesopotamia.&text=The%20team%20determined%20the%20age,11%20to%2020%20years%20old.
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