. The 4th millennium BC saw a new stage in the political development of Near Eastern society after the Neolithic: political power grew stronger, more organized, more centralized, and more visible in the use of space and in art, culminating in the development of a true
state by the end of the period. This development came with other major changes: the appearance of the first cities and of administrative systems capable of organizing diverse activities. The causes and means by which these developments occurred and their relationship to one another are the subject of extensive debate.
State formation The Uruk period provides the earliest signs of the existence of states in the Near East, a process of "
state formation," at least during the Late Uruk. This phenomenon is observed in Lower Mesopotamia, especially at Uruk, but can also be identified in Susiana and northern Mesopotamia. For these periods, a 'state' can be understood as a form of government controlling a territory, defending it, and sometimes attempting to expand it, an authority acting as a mediator between the various societal forces under its power. It is also organizing labor, mostly agricultural (or, in a pessimistic view, extorting it and alienating dependent workers). According to modern standards, the degree of control of the population and the territory is relatively weak, in contrast to what the official ideology proclaims. In the documentation, these first states can be identified by: their social stratification, making it possible to distinguish a ruling elite, visible in particular in archeology by the presence of monumental architecture (and also in general imposing tombs, but this is not the case in Mesopotamia); an art reflecting its ideology; a hierarchical settlement network, dominated by a main city, implying a form of centralization of activities; the existence of a specialization of activities and an organization of production, storage and exchanges ; ritual practices and worship organized by elites. The kind of political organization that existed in the Uruk period is debated, and its internal organization (monarchy? oligarchy? assembly? heterarchy?) is virtually unknown. No evidence supports the idea that this period saw the development of a kind of 'proto-empire' centered on Uruk. It may be best to understand an organization in 'city-states' like those that existed in the 3rd millennium BC. This is corroborated by the existence of 'city seals' from the Jemdet Nasr period and the beginning of the Early Dynastic period, which bear symbols of the Sumerian cities of Uruk, Ur, Larsa, etc. The fact that these symbols appeared together might indicate a kind of league or confederation uniting the cities of southern Mesopotamia (and potentially southwestern Iran), perhaps for religious purposes (cult of Inanna?), perhaps under the authority of one of them (Uruk?). Research into the causes of the emergence of these political structures has not produced any theory that is widely accepted. Research into explanations is heavily influenced by evolutionist frameworks and is, in fact, more interested in the period before the appearance of the state, which was the product of a long process and preceded by the appearance of 'chiefdoms.' This process was not a linear progression but was marked by phases of growth and decline (like the 'collapse' of archaeological cultures). Among the main causes proposed by proponents of the functionalist model of the state are a collective response to practical problems (particularly following serious crises or a deadlocks), like the need to better manage the demographic growth of a community or to provide it with resources through agricultural production or trade, alternatively others suggest that it was driven by the need to soothe or direct conflicts arising from the process of securing those resources. Other explanatory models place greater emphasis on competition, rivalry, and individuals' personal interests in their quest for power and prestige. It is likely that several of these explanations are relevant. This phenomenon was characterized by
Gordon Childe at the beginning of the 1950s as an '
urban revolution', linked to the
Neolithic Revolution and inseparable from the appearance of the first states. This model, which is based on material evidence, has been heavily debated ever since. The causes of the emergence of cities have been widely discussed. Some scholars explain the development of the first cities by their role as ceremonial religious centers, others by their role as hubs for long-distance trade, but the most widespread theory is that developed largely by
Robert McCormick Adams which considers the appearance of cities to be a result of the appearance of the state and its institutions, which attracted wealth and people to central settlements, and encouraged residents to become increasingly specialized. This theory thus leads the problem of the origin of cities back to the problem of the origin of the state and of inequality. In the Late Uruk period, the urban site of Uruk far exceeded all others. Its surface area, the scale of its monuments, and the importance of the administrative tools unearthed there indicate that it was a key center of power. This transformation was the outcome of a process that began many centuries earlier and is largely attested outside Lower Mesopotamia (aside from the monumental aspect of Eridu). The emergence of important proto-urban centers began at the beginning of the 4th millennium BC in southwest Iran (
Chogha Mish, Susa), and especially in the
Jazirah (Tell Brak, Hamoukar, Tell al-Hawa,
Grai Resh). Excavations in the latter region tend to contradict the idea that urbanization began in Lower Mesopotamia and then spread to neighboring regions; the appearance of an urban center at Tell Brak appears to have resulted from a local process with the progressive aggregation of village communities that had previously lived separately, and without the influence of any strong central power (unlike what seems to have been the case at Uruk). Early urbanization should therefore be thought of as a phenomenon that occurred simultaneously in several regions of the Near East in the 4th millennium BC, though further research and excavation are still required to clarify this process for us. A similar king-priest also
appears standing on a ship. It is clear that there were major changes in the political organization of society in this period. The emergence of the first states and cities is often linked to the increase in
social inequalities and
social differentiation. As usual for the Uruk period, its Early stages are not documented; it is only possible to study this phenomenon for the Middle and Late periods The most prominent figure in the Uruk iconography is the so-called "Priest-King" or "Ruler-Priest," an archetypal figure wearing a brimmed cap and a long kilt, with his hair bound up into a bun, which appears in the Uruk V period (ca. 3500-3350 BC). He is mostly found in the Uruk documentation, also in Susa, and even in Egypt on the Gebel el-Arak knife. On the 'Uruk Vase,' he leads a procession and offering towards the goddess Inanna; on the 'Stele of the Hunt,' he defeats lions with his bow. In other cases, he is shown feeding animals, which suggests the king as a shepherd who gathers his people, protects them, and looks after their needs, ensuring the prosperity of the kingdom. These motifs match the functions of the subsequent Sumerian kings: war-leader, chief priest, and builder. In the administrative texts, this ruler may be the person designated by the title of EN.
Tell Brak in Upper Mesopotamia is also representative of this phenomenon, but with a different iconography: here the lion seem to be a representation of the royal figure. The lists of professions and offices of the Late Uruk period provide information on social stratification, as they appear to follow a hierarchical order, and may also be lists of people ruling in an assembly. The people on these lists, who are also attested in administrative documents, probably include high-ranking officials of the administration, such as the one called NAMEŠDA (the 'king'? a ritual leader?); many of them have a title including the word GAL 'Big'/'Chief,' and may therefore be supervisors of various sectors of the administration. This social and political order relies on ideological foundations, as reflected once again in the art. As the key figure of the "Priest-king" indicates, the elites served as religious intermediaries between the divine and human worlds, notably through sacrificial ritual and festivals they organized, which fulfilled their symbolic function as the foundation of social order. This reconstruction is apparent from the friezes on the great
alabaster vase of Uruk, from several cylinder seals, and from administrative texts that mention the transport of goods for ritual use. In fact, according to the Mesopotamian worldview that prevailed in the following period, the gods created human beings to serve them, and the goodwill of the latter was necessary to ensure the prosperity of society. The workers employed by the institutions were fully or partially dependent, receiving commands and rations from the administrators, as documented in the Late Uruk tablets, which sometimes describe them with detail (age, sex). Some of these workers are probably slaves, designated in the administrative documents by the signs SAL and KUR. They could be war prisoners, but it is impossible to ascertain. What is clear is that they are tightly controlled, described by G. Algaze as 'domesticated' humans, equivalent to domestic animals in the minds of the administrators. Regarding the relationship between men and women, these developments could have been detrimental to women. With a more stratified society based on patriarchal kinship groups, reproduction would become a more acute problem, resulting in increasing control over women. This could be reflected in art, with the disappearance of the female figurines common during the earlier stages of the Late Neolithic and Chalcolithic (Halaf, Ubayd), as well as anything related to female sexuality and reproduction. Even elite women are rare in the iconographic repertoire, while official art clearly highlights a virile figure, the "Ruler-Priest," associated in the Uruk vase with the goddess Inanna, which empowers this masculine authority. Cylinder seals depict women performing craft activities, especially weaving and churning, which could indicate that they were already particularly involved in these economic activities in domestic and institutional settings, as was the case in Sumer in later periods. But other interpretations are possible, such as the fact that these are representations of high-society women specialized in quality craftsmanship, intended for the production of prestige goods.
Development of administration The Uruk period, particularly in its late phase, is characterized by the explosion of "symbolic technology": signs, images, symbolic designs, and abstract numbers are used in order to manage a more complex human society efficiently. The emergence of institutions and households with some important economic functions was accompanied by the development of administrative, and later accounting, tools. This was a true managerial and labor 'revolution.' The development of bookkeeping instruments and accounting techniques was accompanied by that of instruments for dividing up time, weights and measures, prices, and therefore various practices of standardization and even planning, formalizing economic relationships, and establishing a "technology of social control" enabling Urukean institutions to better coordinate the use of their resources, and the control of the workers. Seals were used since the Late Neolithic (ca. 6500-6000 BC) to secure merchandise that had been stocked or exchanged, to secure storage areas, or to identify an administrator or merchant. With the development of institutions and long-distance trade, their use became widespread. In the course of the Middle Uruk period (ca. 3500 BC),
cylinder seals (cylinders engraved with a motif that could be rolled over clay to impress a symbol) were invented and replaced simple seals. They were used to seal clay envelopes and tablets, and to authenticate objects and goods, because they functioned like a signature for the person who applied the seal or for the institution which they represented. Sealing became important in many areas of the Near East in the 4th millennium. On the periphery of “Greater Mesopotamia”,
Arslantepe witnessed the elaboration of a complex administrative system based on the sealing of
cretulae, clay seals applied to close doors and containers. (Iran), ca. 3500-3350 BC?
Louvre Museum. The Uruk period also saw the development of various accounting tools by the middle of the 4th millennium (Middle Uruk period). Accounting tokens (also referred to as
calculi), representing goods that were moved and stored and had to be accounted for, already existed during the Late Neolithic. They improved during the Uruk period to produce more goods, including "complex tokens" of various forms: balls, cones, rods, discs, etc. Spherical clay envelopes (or bullae) containing tokens were created around this period: these are clay balls that contain tokens and could have numerical signs inscribed on their exterior, indicating their contents; the
bullae could be broken to verify, with the tokens, the veracity of the numbers inscribed on them. This led slightly later to the creation of numerical tablets, a simplification of the bullae with only the inscription and no tokens, which served as an "aide-mémoire", and then to "numero-ideographical" tablets, adding ideographic signs for goods, a decisive step towards the invention of writing. seems to designate a person or office in charge of a brewery, because it is found on other tablets accounting for beer and products used in its production.
Louvre Museum. Indeed, "proto-cuneiform", which appeared ca. 3350-3300 BC, probably derived from these older bookkeeping practices, which are often labeled its "precursors". It represented a new management tool that enabled more precise, long-term recording: most of the tablets from the Uruk and Jemdet Nasr periods are administrative, used to record the economic operations of the institutions. The development of these administrative practices necessitated the development of a system of
measurement which varied depending on what they were to measure (animals, workers, wool, grain, tools, pottery, surfaces, etc.). They are very diverse: some use a
sexagesimal system (base 60), which would become the universal system in subsequent periods, but others employ a
decimal system (base 10) or even a mixed system called 'bisexagesimal', all of which makes it more difficult to understand the texts. The system for counting time was also developed by the scribes of institutions in the Late Uruk period. The high degree of division and control of labor within the Urukean institutions is also reflected in the widespread presence of
beveled-rim bowls at sites from this period. These crude, mass-produced vessels have a standardized volume and were probably used to distribute food en masse to workers, whether in the form of grain rations or bread molded inside. == Intellectual and symbolic expressions ==