|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: EMS-EUD |
|
|
ERECH (Uruk in the Babylonian inscriptions; Gr. Orchoe) , the Biblical name of an ancient city of Babylonia, situated E. of the present bed of the Euphrates, on the line of the ancient Nil canal, in a region of marshes, about 140 M. S.S.E. from Bagdad. It was one of the oldest and most important cities of Babylonia, and the site of a famous temple, called E-Anna, dedicated to the worship of Nana, or Ishtar. Erech played a very important part in the political history of the country from an early time, exercising hegemony in Babylonia at a period before the time of Sargon. Later it was prominent in the national struggles of the Babylonians against Elam (2000 B.C. and earlier), in which it suffered severely; recollections of these conflicts are embodied in the Gilgamesh epic, as it has come down to usthrough the library of Assur-bani-pal. Erech enjoyed much distinction in the later times, as a seat of learning and of the worship of Ishtar, and Assur-bani-pal drew largely on its literary stores for his library at Nineveh, from which we 'derive our principal information concerhing ancient Babylonian literature. The inscriptions found here show that it continued in existence through the Persian and Seleucid periods. The ruins of the ancient site, known as Warka, which are among the largest in all Babylonia, forming an irregular circle nearly 6 m. in circumference, bounded by a wall
standing
appearance the ruins of the ziggurat of the temple of Enlil at Nippur. Second to this in size was the ruin called Wuswas, a walled quadrangle, including an area of more than seven and a half acres, within which was an edifice 246 ft. long and 174 ft. wide, elevated on an artificial platform 50 ft. in height. The south-west facade, still standing
wall
great
inscriptions found by him, about one hundred in all, exclusive of the ancient Ur-Gur bricks from the temple, belong in general to the neo-Babylonian, Persian and Seleucid periods. The older remains are buried deep beneath the huge mass of later debris. Loftus also discovered at Erech, almost everywhere within and without the walls, great
Work
See W. K. Loftus, Chaldaea
Tigris (1900). Cf. also Nippua and authorities there quoted. (J. P. PE.)End of Article: ERECH (Uruk in the Babylonian inscriptions; Gr. Orchoe) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/EMS_EUD/ERECH_Uruk_in_the_Babylonian_i.html"> ERECH (Uruk in the Babylonian inscriptions; Gr.... </a> |
|
|
(Previous) EREBUS |
(Next) ERECHTHEUM |
|
Sponsored Advertisements