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See also: oldest centres of Sumerian See also: civilization in Babylonia
.
It is represented by a rather low, long See also: line of ruin mounds, along the dry See also: bed of an See also: ancient canal, some 3 M
.
E. of the Shatt-el-See also: Hal and a little less than 10 m
.
N. of the See also: modern See also: Turkish See also: town of Shatra
.
These ruins were discovered in 1877 by Ernest de Sarzec, at that See also: time French See also: consul at Basra, who was allowed, by the Montefich chief, Nasir See also: Pasha, the first Wali-Pasha, or governor-general, of Basra, to excavate at his pleasure in the territories subject to that official
.
At the outset on his own account, and later as a representative of the French See also: government, under a Turkish firman, de Sarzec continued excavations at this site, with various intermissions, until his See also: death in 1901, after which the See also: work was continued under the supervision of the Commandant Cros
.
The See also: principal excavations were made in two larger mounds, one of which proved to be the site of the See also: temple, E-Ninnu, the shrine of the See also: patron godof See also: Lagash, Nin-girsu or See also: Ninib
.
This temple had been razed and a fortress built upon its ruins, in the See also: Greek or Seleucid See also: period, some of the bricks found bearing the inscription in Aramaic and Greek of a certain See also: Hadad-nadin-akhe, See also: king of a small Babylonian
See also: kingdom
.
It was beneath this fortress that the numerous statues of Gudea were found, which constitute the See also: gem of the Babylonian collections at the Louvre
.
These had been decapitated and otherwise mutilated, and thrown into the See also: foundations of the new fortress
.
From this stratum came also various fragments of bas reliefs of high See also: artistic excellence
.
The excavations in the other larger See also: mound resulted in the See also: discovery of the remains of buildings containing See also: objects of all sorts in See also: bronze and See also: stone, dating from the earliest Sumerian period onward, and enabling us to trace the
See also: art See also: history of Babylonia to a date some hundreds of years before the time of Gudea
.
Apparently this mound had been occupied largely by store houses, in which were stored not only grain,See also: figs, &c., but also vessels, weapons, sculptures and every possible See also: object connected with the use and administration of palace and temple
.
In a small outlying mound de Sarzec discovered the archives of the temple, about 30,000 inscribed See also: clay tablets, containing the business records, and revealing with extraordinary minuteness the administration of an ancient Babylonian temple, the character of its See also: property, the method of farming its lands, herding its flocks, and its commercial and See also: industrial dealings and enter-prises; for an ancient Babylonian temple was a See also: great industrial, commercial, agricultural and stock-raising establishment
.
Unfortunately, before these archives could be removed, the galleries containing them were rifled by the See also: Arabs, and large numbers of the tablets were sold to antiquity dealers, by whom they have been scattered all over See also: Europe and See also: America
.
From the inscriptions found at Tello, it appears that Lagash was a city of great importance in the Sumerian period, some time probably in the 4th millennium B.C
.
It was at that time ruled by See also: independent See also: kings, Ur-Nina and his successors, who were engaged in contests with the Elamites on the See also: east and the kings of Kengi and Kish on the See also: north
.
With the Semitic See also: conquest it lost its independence, its rulers becoming patesis, dependent rulers, under See also: Sargon and his successors; but it still remained Sumerian and continued to be a city of much importance, and, above all, a centre of artistic development
.
Indeed, it was in this period and under the immediately succeeding supremacy of the kings of Ur, Ur-Gur and Dungi, that it reached its highest artistic development
.
At this period, also, under its patesis, Ur-bau and Gudea, Lagash had extensive commercial communications with distant realms
.
According to his own records, Gudea brought cedars from the Amanus and See also: Lebanon mountains in See also: Syria, diorite or dolorite from eastern See also: Arabia, copper and gold from central and See also: southern Arabia and from See also: Sinai, while his armies, presumably under his over-See also: lord, Ur-Gur, were engaged in battles in See also: Elam on the east
.
His was especially the era of artistic development
.
Some of the earlier See also: works of Ur-Nina, En-anna-turn, Entemena and others, before the Semitic conquest, are also extremely interesting, especially the famous See also: stele of the vultures and a great See also: silver See also: vase ornamented with what may be called the coat of arms of Lagash, a See also: lion-headed eagle with wings outspread, grasping a lion in each talon
.
After the time of Gudea, Lagash seems to have lost its importance; at least we know nothing more about it until the construction of the Seleucid fortress mentioned, when it seems to have become See also: part of the Greek kingdom of Characene
.
The objects found at Tello are the most valuable art treasures up to this time discovered in Babylonia . See E. de Sarzec, Decouvertes en See also: Chaldee (1887 See also: foil.)
.
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