of silver for the governor written in
Sumerian
Cuneiform on a
clay tablet. From Shuruppak, Iraq, circa 2500 BC.
British Museum, London.
Jemdet Nasr period The earliest excavated levels at Shuruppak date to the Jemdet Nasr period about 3000 BC. Several objects made of
arsenical copper were found in Shuruppak/Fara dating to the
Jemdet Nasr period (c. 2900 BC). Similar objects were also found at
Tepe Gawra (levels XII-VIII).
Early Dynastic II The city rose in importance and size, exceeding 40 hectares(0.4km2), during the Early Dynastic period. In the
Sumerian King List is a ruler,
Ubara-Tutu, the last ruler "before the flood". In some versions he is followed by a son,
Ziusudra. In later versions of the
Epic of Gilgamesh, a man named
Utnapishtim, son of Ubara-Tutu, is noted to be king of Shuruppak. This portion of Gilgamesh is thought to have been taken from another literary composition, the Myth of
Atrahasis.
Early Dynastic III The city expanded to its greatest extent at the end of the Early Dynastic III period (2600 BC to 2350 BC) when it covered about 100 hectares. Cuneiform tablets from the Early Dynastic III period show a thriving, military oriented economy with links to cities throughout the region. It has been proposed that Fara was part of a "hexapolis" with
Lagash,
Nippur,
Uruk,
Adab, and
Umma, possibly under the leadership of Kish. It has been proposed that in the Early Dynastic IIIa period Shuruppak had passed from the control of Kish to that of Uruk and was part of joint military operations against Kish (with Adab, Nippur, Lagaš, Umma) under the leadership of Uruk.
Akkadian period In the
Akkadian Period ( 2334–2154 BC), Shuruppak was ruled by a governor holding the title
patesi. Like most cities on the Euphrates, it declined during the Akkadian Empire. A clay cone from the Akkadian Empire period found at Shurappak read "Dada, governor of Suruppak: Hala-adda, gover[nor] of Suruppak, his son, laid the ... of the city gate of the goddess Sud". Governors: Dada; Hala-adda;
Ur III period During
Ur III period (c. 2112-2004 BC), the city was ruled by a governors (ensi2) appointed by Ur. One is known to be Ur-nigar, son of
Shulgi, first rulers of Ur III. One of the tablets found at the site is dated by a year name to the beginning of the reign of
Shu-Sin, next to last ruler of Ur III. A few governors of Shurappak under the Ur III Empire are known from contemporary epigraphic remains, Ku-Nanna, Lugal-hedu, Ur-nigin-gar, and Ur-Ninkura. In much later literary compositions several purported rulers are mentioned.
Middle Bronze I In the 2020s BC, the Ur III Empire was hit by a major drought. It is thought to have been abandoned shortly around 2000 BC. A Isin-Larsa
cylinder seal and several pottery plaques which may date to early in the second millennium BC were found at the site. Surface finds are predominantly Early Dynastic. In the 2nd year of
Enlil-bani ( 1860–1837 BC), ruler of Isin, a sage of Nippur is recorded as leaving an herbal medicine at Shurappak. == Flood Myth ==