The Ziggurat of Ur was a monumental mudbrick temple built around 2100 BCE, rising above the city as a lasting symbol of devotion to the Mesopotamian moon god and the power of early urban civilization.
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Ziggurats were mudbrick temples designed to bridge heaven and earth, anchoring religion, power, and architecture in the ancient Near East for thousands of years.
A ziggurat (also spelled ziqqurat) was a raised structure with four sloping sides, shaped like a stepped pyramid.
These monumental buildings were widespread in ancient Mesopotamia, roughly corresponding to modern-day Iraq, from about 4,000 to 500 BCE.
Unlike the pyramids of Egypt, ziggurats were not used as royal tombs. Instead, they functioned as temples devoted to the patron god of a city.
How were they made?
Because stone was scarce in Mesopotamia, builders relied primarily on sun-dried mudbricks. These bricks were often coated with limestone and bitumen (a sticky, tar-like substance) to improve durability.
The exterior walls were typically decorated with grooved patterns and finished with layers of lime mortar or gypsum. Many were also glazed in different colors, giving the structures a striking visual appearance.
Unlike the pyramids, they had no internal chambers. The actual shrine was at the top of the structure where the god resided. It was accessible by steps and was believed to be a meeting point between heaven and earth.
Ziggurats towered over the center of ancient Mesopotamian cities; as archaeological evidence indicates, they were typically built next to the palace or the temple of a city’s patron god to stress the role of the god in supporting the king.
How the Anu ziggurat became the White Temple
The Anu ziggurat, the oldest known, was built at Uruk (modern-day Warka, about 250 kilometers south of Baghdad) by the Sumerians around 4,000 BCE. (The Sumerians were an ancient people, among the first known to have established cities, who lived roughly in the area of modern Iraq, between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers.)
This ziggurat was dedicated to Anu, their sky god. Sometime between 3,500 and 3,000 BCE, the so-called White Temple was built on top of it.
The White Temple, approximately 12 meters high, was so named because it was entirely whitewashed inside and out. It must have shone dazzlingly in the sun.
The Sumerian culture was eventually taken over by the Akkadian Empire, followed by the Babylonian and Assyrian Empires. Throughout the rise and fall of empires, ziggurats continued to be built in the Ancient Near East.
In fact, the word ziggurat comes from the Akkadian verb zaqâru, meaning “to build high”.
Other famous ziggurats
Assyrian kings built an impressive ziggurat in their capital, Nimrud (about 30 kilometers south of Mosul). This ziggurat was dedicated to Ninurta, a Sumerian and Akkadian god of war and victory.
Ninurta’s father, the god Enlil, was worshipped at the ziggurat of the sacred city Nippur, in modern-day Iraq.
The Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar II dedicated the ziggurat Etemenanki to the Babylonian king of gods, Marduk. The name Etemenanki means the Temple of the Foundation of Heaven and Earth.
Etemenanki was located north of a different temple called the Esagil, which was Marduk’s main temple in Babylon.
Etemenanki likely inspired the story of the Tower of Babel in the Old Testament. Genesis 11 refers to a “tower” built of mud bricks instead of stone, which was intended to reach the heavens.
The building, perceived as an act of human pride, angered God, who caused the people to speak different languages and scatter them across the Earth.
According to the Greek historian Herodotus, Marduk often chose a woman to spend the night with him in the top-most shrine of his ziggurat.
The text has been often understood to refer to a “sacred marriage” rite involving the sexual union of a woman with the god.
However, it seems more likely to have been an incubation rite, when the god’s will is revealed to someone sleeping in a sacred place.
Constant preservation
Because of the relative lack of durability of mud bricks, ziggurats required constant preservation.
Etemenanki in Babylon had to be rebuilt several times until Alexander the Great ordered his soldiers to destroy it in 323 BCE so as to rebuild it from scratch.
However, Alexander’s premature death (historians continue to debate what he died of) meant the task had to be completed by his successors. But whether the rebuilding task was ever completed is uncertain.
Better preserved ziggurats include the Ziggurat of Ur (in the region of modern-day Tell el-Muqayyar in Iraq). The powerful king, Ur-Nammu, dedicated this ziggurat to the moon god, Nanna or Sîn, around 2100 BCE.
Another example is the ziggurat of Chogha Zanbil in modern Iran, which was built around 1250 BCE. It now stands only 24.5 meters tall, instead of the original estimated 53 metres.
A lasting influence on architecture
Ziggurats influenced architecture long after their demise, including the new tiered “skyscrapers” of the art deco era in the 20th century.
Modern ziggurats ended up dotting the New York skyline.
And, if you look closely, you’ll see that there’s a fair amount of ziggurat about the Empire State Building.
The Empire State Building is quite ziggurat-like.
Credit: Shutterstock
These modern examples serve as a fascinating reminder of a design and construction language that goes back to the Middle East over six millennia ago.
The birth of modern Man
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