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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,270 --> 00:00:04,970 Narrator: Deep in the iraqi desert, 2 00:00:06,374 --> 00:00:09,241 A huge structure rises from the sands, 3 00:00:10,611 --> 00:00:13,178 The great ziggurat of ur. 4 00:00:17,051 --> 00:00:18,717 Narrator: It towers over the remains 5 00:00:18,819 --> 00:00:20,986 Of the first civilization ever known, 6 00:00:22,490 --> 00:00:24,590 The sumerians of mesopotamia, 7 00:00:26,427 --> 00:00:30,562 Rulers of what the bible calls the garden of eden. 8 00:00:30,664 --> 00:00:34,133 The ziggurat symbolizes the dawn of civilization. 9 00:00:34,235 --> 00:00:36,835 Narrator: Long off limits in a violent war zone, 10 00:00:38,739 --> 00:00:40,672 Now our cameras have exclusive 11 00:00:40,775 --> 00:00:43,876 Access to explore this extraordinary structure 12 00:00:45,246 --> 00:00:48,313 And follow experts as they solve the great ziggurat's 13 00:00:48,416 --> 00:00:51,050 4,000-year-old mysteries. 14 00:00:51,152 --> 00:00:55,054 Incredibly exciting -- there's a lot more to discover. 15 00:00:55,156 --> 00:00:57,623 Narrator: Where is the lost city that ancient 16 00:00:57,725 --> 00:01:00,426 Writings say once surrounds the great ziggurat? 17 00:01:02,296 --> 00:01:05,230 What does it take to forge a civilization here? 18 00:01:06,867 --> 00:01:10,402 In a quest for answers, we digitally rebuild 19 00:01:10,504 --> 00:01:13,072 The city at the height of its glory. 20 00:01:13,174 --> 00:01:16,708 We unearth the treasure of lost kings 21 00:01:16,811 --> 00:01:20,813 And reveal the real marvels of engineering that made this 22 00:01:20,915 --> 00:01:24,283 One of the first and greatest cities on the planet. 23 00:01:32,193 --> 00:01:33,725 Nasiriyah, iraq, 24 00:01:35,463 --> 00:01:38,163 200 miles south of baghdad, 25 00:01:40,067 --> 00:01:42,000 A huge ancient pyramid-like 26 00:01:42,103 --> 00:01:44,436 Structure looms over the barren desert. 27 00:01:45,539 --> 00:01:47,639 This is a ziggurat, 28 00:01:47,741 --> 00:01:51,076 A massive 210-foot-wide brick monument, 29 00:01:52,947 --> 00:01:55,881 Constructed centuries before the ancient egyptians 30 00:01:55,983 --> 00:01:58,317 Build their greatest temples and tombs. 31 00:02:00,121 --> 00:02:01,720 Today, it lies abandoned. 32 00:02:02,790 --> 00:02:05,290 But 4,000 years ago, this is 33 00:02:05,392 --> 00:02:07,926 The heart of the world's first civilization, 34 00:02:09,296 --> 00:02:11,230 The sumerians of mesopotamia. 35 00:02:15,903 --> 00:02:19,805 In 2100 b.C., the great ziggurat towers over 36 00:02:19,907 --> 00:02:22,708 A complex of temples and grand palaces. 37 00:02:25,279 --> 00:02:28,580 Ancient writings say this inner sanctum is surrounded 38 00:02:28,682 --> 00:02:31,583 By a sprawling maze of workshops and houses, 39 00:02:34,989 --> 00:02:37,489 All ringed by a defensive city wall. 40 00:02:39,193 --> 00:02:41,793 This is ur, a place believed to be 41 00:02:41,896 --> 00:02:44,863 One of the world's first great cities. 42 00:02:44,965 --> 00:02:48,734 Is ur a pioneering metropolis, a vast city, 43 00:02:48,836 --> 00:02:50,736 As the legends say? 44 00:02:50,838 --> 00:02:54,473 How do the sumerians create a blueprint for urban life here? 45 00:02:58,245 --> 00:03:01,146 For over 40 years, the dangers of war have 46 00:03:01,248 --> 00:03:02,748 Restricted the hunt for the truth 47 00:03:02,850 --> 00:03:04,316 About this legendary city. 48 00:03:06,020 --> 00:03:08,687 But today, our cameras have been granted exclusive 49 00:03:08,789 --> 00:03:11,957 Access to follow abdulameer hamdani and his team 50 00:03:13,294 --> 00:03:15,928 As they explore this remarkable complex. 51 00:03:18,332 --> 00:03:20,232 Abdulameer thinks this ziggurat is 52 00:03:20,334 --> 00:03:23,001 The epicenter of one of the world's oldest cities. 53 00:03:24,872 --> 00:03:26,905 At the base of the ziggurat, 54 00:03:27,007 --> 00:03:29,441 The team discovers traces of ancient pottery 55 00:03:29,543 --> 00:03:31,643 That can be used to date the site. 56 00:03:46,560 --> 00:03:48,193 Narrator: If the legends are true, 57 00:03:48,295 --> 00:03:51,797 Traces of a vast metropolis should surround the ziggurat. 58 00:03:53,634 --> 00:03:56,969 Abdulameer has been given exclusive permission to fly 59 00:03:57,071 --> 00:04:00,739 A drone to investigate the desert landscape 60 00:04:00,841 --> 00:04:02,341 Encircling the great monument. 61 00:04:09,617 --> 00:04:12,985 Narrator: As the drone flies further from the ziggurat, 62 00:04:13,087 --> 00:04:17,189 An incredible lost urban landscape comes into view. 63 00:04:17,291 --> 00:04:20,993 Destroyed temples and palaces are exposed on the surface. 64 00:04:22,396 --> 00:04:26,832 A huge cemetery lurks beneath the desert sands, 65 00:04:26,934 --> 00:04:28,967 And at the edges of the city, 66 00:04:29,069 --> 00:04:32,237 The remains of grand public buildings stand near 67 00:04:32,339 --> 00:04:34,740 A sprawling labyrinth of workers' quarters 68 00:04:34,842 --> 00:04:36,742 And private houses, 69 00:04:36,844 --> 00:04:39,077 Stretching for thousands of square feet. 70 00:04:40,581 --> 00:04:43,682 This is a true city, buried in the dirt. 71 00:04:46,587 --> 00:04:49,488 Beyond, the ruins of the city wall, 72 00:04:49,590 --> 00:04:52,991 The team spots a crater in the ground, 73 00:04:53,093 --> 00:04:57,029 Evidence of catastrophic damage caused by explosive 74 00:04:57,131 --> 00:05:01,133 Fighting here back when saddam hussein rules iraq. 75 00:05:10,144 --> 00:05:13,211 Narrator: The crater exposes archaeological evidence almost 76 00:05:13,314 --> 00:05:15,614 A mile away from the ziggurat, 77 00:05:15,716 --> 00:05:18,517 Revealing the true scale of the ancient city. 78 00:05:33,667 --> 00:05:37,169 Narrator: The rare finds here support the legend. 79 00:05:37,271 --> 00:05:40,405 By 2100 b.C., the ziggurat is 80 00:05:40,507 --> 00:05:42,874 The epicenter of the world's largest city. 81 00:05:43,977 --> 00:05:46,545 Why are the sumerians the first 82 00:05:46,647 --> 00:05:50,082 To build an urban landscape like this? 83 00:05:50,184 --> 00:05:52,517 Abdulameer thinks they are pioneers of 84 00:05:52,619 --> 00:05:54,386 Ancient construction. 85 00:05:54,488 --> 00:05:56,722 To prove it, he wants to explore how 86 00:05:56,824 --> 00:06:01,093 The night sky could be used to orient their buildings. 87 00:06:01,195 --> 00:06:04,196 He returns to the ziggurat at dusk 88 00:06:04,298 --> 00:06:06,765 To plot its position within the landscape. 89 00:06:13,707 --> 00:06:15,741 Narrator: When the sumerians rule ur, 90 00:06:15,843 --> 00:06:18,310 The moon rises to its highest and fullest 91 00:06:18,412 --> 00:06:20,212 At 56 degrees north. 92 00:06:21,648 --> 00:06:24,649 This is what's known as a major lunar standstill. 93 00:06:25,886 --> 00:06:28,220 At this moment, after 18 years 94 00:06:28,322 --> 00:06:30,922 Of rising higher in the night sky, 95 00:06:31,024 --> 00:06:33,792 The moon appears to stand still 96 00:06:33,894 --> 00:06:37,462 Before it begins a cycle of lower orbits. 97 00:06:37,564 --> 00:06:40,565 Abdulameer uses a compass to investigate if 98 00:06:40,667 --> 00:06:42,901 This phenomenon inspires the construction 99 00:06:43,003 --> 00:06:44,202 Of the great ziggurat. 100 00:07:07,928 --> 00:07:10,495 Narrator: 4,000 years ago, 101 00:07:10,597 --> 00:07:12,564 A structure coated in glistening 102 00:07:12,666 --> 00:07:14,966 White lime plaster crowns the summit. 103 00:07:16,603 --> 00:07:21,039 At 100 feet, this is the highest point for hundreds of miles. 104 00:07:22,209 --> 00:07:25,343 Archaeologists believe it is a sacred shrine room 105 00:07:26,814 --> 00:07:29,114 Where priests worship the night sky. 106 00:07:31,318 --> 00:07:34,920 And every 18 years, the great staircase leading 107 00:07:35,022 --> 00:07:36,721 To its entrance aligns 108 00:07:36,824 --> 00:07:39,391 Perfectly with the moon as it reaches 109 00:07:39,493 --> 00:07:41,126 Its highest point in the sky. 110 00:07:42,496 --> 00:07:45,096 Why do the sumerians build this monumental 111 00:07:45,199 --> 00:07:46,097 Ziggurat temple 112 00:07:46,200 --> 00:07:47,799 Around the movement of the moon? 113 00:07:52,673 --> 00:07:55,507 Abdulameer searches for clues among layers of 114 00:07:55,609 --> 00:07:59,578 Ancient bricks used to build the great staircase. 115 00:07:59,680 --> 00:08:03,014 Inscribed on the bricks is the first writing system 116 00:08:03,116 --> 00:08:04,416 Ever known. 117 00:08:12,759 --> 00:08:16,428 Narrator: Cuneiform is a script invented by the sumerians. 118 00:08:16,530 --> 00:08:19,297 For the first time, humans can record the world 119 00:08:19,399 --> 00:08:20,465 As they see it. 120 00:08:21,902 --> 00:08:24,135 Abdulameer thinks it can reveal why 121 00:08:24,238 --> 00:08:27,305 The people of ur build this gigantic monument. 122 00:08:38,018 --> 00:08:41,419 Narrator: Unlike the ancient egyptians who worship the sun, 123 00:08:41,522 --> 00:08:43,788 For the people of ur, the moon god, 124 00:08:43,891 --> 00:08:46,892 Nanna, is one of the most powerful deities. 125 00:08:46,994 --> 00:08:49,928 The great ziggurat is constructed in his honor. 126 00:08:52,399 --> 00:08:55,033 At the shrine room on top of the great ziggurat, 127 00:08:55,135 --> 00:08:58,370 Priests observe the moon and stars. 128 00:08:58,472 --> 00:09:00,772 They predict their movements and read 129 00:09:00,874 --> 00:09:02,707 Them as signs from the gods. 130 00:09:04,044 --> 00:09:07,112 A lunar eclipse is a sinister omen 131 00:09:07,214 --> 00:09:09,714 Spelling disaster for the king, 132 00:09:09,816 --> 00:09:11,583 Forcing him into hiding. 133 00:09:15,556 --> 00:09:18,557 A substitute king takes his place, 134 00:09:18,659 --> 00:09:21,059 Dressing and behaving like the real king 135 00:09:21,194 --> 00:09:23,562 To fool the moon god. 136 00:09:26,934 --> 00:09:30,335 When the danger has passed, the substitute king 137 00:09:30,437 --> 00:09:33,838 Is sacrificed to placate the moon god. 138 00:09:54,895 --> 00:09:58,196 Narrator: 4,000 years ago, the great ziggurat is built as 139 00:09:58,298 --> 00:10:01,333 A giant temple to worship the almighty moon god. 140 00:10:02,669 --> 00:10:08,073 With it at ur, the sumerians change civilization forever. 141 00:10:08,175 --> 00:10:09,841 They build a great metropolis, 142 00:10:09,943 --> 00:10:13,778 Develop astronomy, and invent the first writing. 143 00:10:15,182 --> 00:10:17,349 But shocking evidence could reveal how 144 00:10:17,451 --> 00:10:19,718 All this comes at a gruesome cost. 145 00:10:21,388 --> 00:10:23,989 Who are the rulers of ur, 146 00:10:24,091 --> 00:10:26,191 And what does it take to keep them in power? 147 00:10:35,068 --> 00:10:38,870 Narrator: 4,000 years ago, the world's first civilization, 148 00:10:38,972 --> 00:10:42,273 The sumerians, build a city called ur. 149 00:10:42,376 --> 00:10:44,909 It's the largest, most important city in 150 00:10:45,012 --> 00:10:46,478 The world. 151 00:10:46,580 --> 00:10:48,680 At its core, the great ziggurat is 152 00:10:48,782 --> 00:10:50,982 A pyramid-like structure, 153 00:10:51,084 --> 00:10:53,652 The sacred nucleus of power built 154 00:10:53,754 --> 00:10:55,754 To honor the almighty moon god. 155 00:10:57,257 --> 00:10:59,557 Who are the rulers of ur? 156 00:10:59,660 --> 00:11:02,861 What does it take to sustain their growing civilization? 157 00:11:07,334 --> 00:11:10,201 Buried 20 feet beneath the sand, 158 00:11:10,303 --> 00:11:13,438 Archaeologists unearth a gigantic graveyard. 159 00:11:14,775 --> 00:11:16,374 Inside the mud tombs, 160 00:11:16,476 --> 00:11:19,110 They find royal burials with golden treasure, 161 00:11:20,614 --> 00:11:22,914 Hoards of silverware, 162 00:11:23,016 --> 00:11:24,649 And elaborate headdresses. 163 00:11:26,620 --> 00:11:28,820 Surrounding these regal burial chambers, 164 00:11:28,922 --> 00:11:32,090 They discover hundreds of other skeletons 165 00:11:32,192 --> 00:11:35,827 Neatly lined up with damage to their skulls. 166 00:11:37,197 --> 00:11:39,330 Who are these people? 167 00:11:40,867 --> 00:11:42,367 Why are they buried here? 168 00:11:51,978 --> 00:11:54,079 Abdulameer thinks identifying 169 00:11:54,181 --> 00:11:57,282 The mysterious bodies discovered here 170 00:11:57,384 --> 00:11:59,517 Can reveal how sumerian royalty 171 00:11:59,619 --> 00:12:02,053 Builds and sustains this great city. 172 00:12:04,024 --> 00:12:07,358 He hunts for clues inside the tomb of king shulgi, 173 00:12:08,562 --> 00:12:11,563 The man responsible for completing the great ziggurat. 174 00:12:29,216 --> 00:12:30,648 Narrator: These chambers would have been 175 00:12:30,751 --> 00:12:34,119 As lavish as the tombs of egypt's great pharaohs, 176 00:12:34,221 --> 00:12:35,720 Built around the same time. 177 00:12:38,091 --> 00:12:39,858 But opposite the king's tomb is 178 00:12:39,960 --> 00:12:43,328 A structure unlike anything found in egypt, 179 00:12:43,430 --> 00:12:47,098 Another monumental brick chamber that, when discovered, 180 00:12:47,167 --> 00:12:50,869 Is packed with mysterious human skeletons. 181 00:12:50,971 --> 00:12:53,004 Abdulameer thinks he can shed light on 182 00:12:53,106 --> 00:12:54,472 The mystery of their identities 183 00:12:54,574 --> 00:12:56,775 By figuring out how they died. 184 00:12:58,478 --> 00:13:01,379 He's convinced they are brutally murdered in 185 00:13:01,481 --> 00:13:04,249 The same way as the bodies in the death pits. 186 00:13:11,825 --> 00:13:14,959 Narrator: Holes puncturing the victims' skulls are gruesome 187 00:13:15,061 --> 00:13:18,229 Evidence of fatal blows to their heads. 188 00:13:18,331 --> 00:13:22,700 This is shocking proof of human sacrifice. 189 00:13:22,803 --> 00:13:25,470 Abdulameer thinks these skeletons could 190 00:13:25,572 --> 00:13:27,539 Be the remains of important people. 191 00:13:28,608 --> 00:13:31,109 He searches for clues on excavation maps 192 00:13:31,211 --> 00:13:33,511 That show the location of royal treasure 193 00:13:35,382 --> 00:13:38,516 And each of the 2,000 bodies in the death pits. 194 00:13:55,802 --> 00:13:58,236 Narrator: Intricately-designed instruments 195 00:13:58,338 --> 00:14:02,307 Suggest the king's entertainers are entombed here, 196 00:14:02,409 --> 00:14:03,541 Together with soldiers, 197 00:14:03,643 --> 00:14:06,644 Weaponry, and even a warrior's chariot. 198 00:14:08,849 --> 00:14:12,183 These are high-ranking members of sumerian society. 199 00:14:13,653 --> 00:14:17,422 Why are they all murdered and buried here? 200 00:14:17,524 --> 00:14:19,991 Abdulameer searches for clues on the walls 201 00:14:20,093 --> 00:14:21,960 Inside the cemetery. 202 00:14:31,304 --> 00:14:33,071 Narrator: Royal inscriptions cover 203 00:14:33,173 --> 00:14:35,306 The walls of this structure. 204 00:14:35,408 --> 00:14:39,077 These clues lead abdulameer to believe this building is 205 00:14:39,179 --> 00:14:42,447 A funerary chapel where the victims are sacrificed 206 00:14:42,549 --> 00:14:44,883 During a mysterious ritual ceremony. 207 00:15:10,644 --> 00:15:13,278 Narrator: When the king or queen dies, 208 00:15:13,380 --> 00:15:15,446 The royal household honors the death 209 00:15:15,548 --> 00:15:18,650 With days of feasting and revelry. 210 00:15:22,355 --> 00:15:25,223 But then the killing starts. 211 00:15:25,325 --> 00:15:28,660 The entire royal household staff is sacrificed. 212 00:15:33,633 --> 00:15:36,801 Their bodies are doused with mercury to slow them rotting. 213 00:15:38,705 --> 00:15:41,639 Then they are dressed for their roles in the underworld. 214 00:15:43,109 --> 00:15:45,777 Musicians are buried with lyres, 215 00:15:45,879 --> 00:15:48,413 Charioteers with mummified oxen, 216 00:15:49,582 --> 00:15:52,550 And fully armed soldiers guard the entrance. 217 00:15:54,721 --> 00:15:56,854 Why does the king order the deaths 218 00:15:56,957 --> 00:16:00,191 Of so many of his closest subjects? 219 00:16:00,293 --> 00:16:03,594 To hunt for clues, sumerian specialist 220 00:16:03,697 --> 00:16:07,365 George heath-whyte examines an ancient cylindrical stamp 221 00:16:08,702 --> 00:16:11,602 That contains an image of sumerian royalty. 222 00:16:11,705 --> 00:16:15,139 They would be used to seal or authenticate 223 00:16:15,241 --> 00:16:17,475 A document, just like a signature might be today. 224 00:16:21,147 --> 00:16:22,647 Narrator: He rolls out the image, 225 00:16:22,749 --> 00:16:24,716 Pressing it into wet clay, 226 00:16:24,818 --> 00:16:26,651 Just as the sumerians would have done, 227 00:16:28,154 --> 00:16:31,522 To reveal a 4,000-year-old scene. 228 00:16:31,624 --> 00:16:35,026 Heath-whyte: We see two goddesses leading the owner 229 00:16:35,128 --> 00:16:38,396 Of the seal towards this seated person, and this seated 230 00:16:38,498 --> 00:16:42,233 Figure is the king, ur-nammu, and here, 231 00:16:42,335 --> 00:16:44,535 Ur-nammu has put himself there with the moon god 232 00:16:44,637 --> 00:16:45,837 Next to him, saying, 233 00:16:45,939 --> 00:16:48,606 "I am a god, worship me," and that's exactly what 234 00:16:48,708 --> 00:16:50,742 The goddesses are shown doing in this scene. 235 00:16:52,112 --> 00:16:53,444 Narrator: Ur-nammu is one of 236 00:16:53,546 --> 00:16:56,614 The most powerful mesopotamian kings ever known. 237 00:16:58,118 --> 00:17:00,585 Behind him are symbols, 238 00:17:00,687 --> 00:17:03,621 Ancient cuneiform writing that helps george 239 00:17:03,723 --> 00:17:05,890 Unlock the hidden messages in the scene. 240 00:17:07,060 --> 00:17:13,197 The text reads, "ur-nammu... " 241 00:17:13,299 --> 00:17:16,334 And that translates as, "ur-nammu, 242 00:17:16,436 --> 00:17:19,837 Powerful man, king of ur, 243 00:17:19,939 --> 00:17:22,774 The governor of ishkun-sin, your servant." 244 00:17:24,477 --> 00:17:27,311 Narrator: This ancient writing reveals the king's desire 245 00:17:27,414 --> 00:17:30,948 To project an image of power and dominance. 246 00:17:31,051 --> 00:17:34,318 George thinks these texts serve the same function 247 00:17:34,421 --> 00:17:37,688 As the mass sacrifices discovered in the royal tombs. 248 00:17:38,925 --> 00:17:39,991 Heath-whyte: Both could have been a way of 249 00:17:40,093 --> 00:17:41,359 Controlling the population. 250 00:17:41,461 --> 00:17:43,494 It's an immense display of power. 251 00:17:43,596 --> 00:17:45,730 When the king dies, you may well die, as well, 252 00:17:45,832 --> 00:17:49,033 As a sacrifice, so you better obey the king. 253 00:17:49,102 --> 00:17:50,768 Narrator: Through sinister rituals, 254 00:17:50,870 --> 00:17:53,304 The god kings of ur rule thousands 255 00:17:53,406 --> 00:17:56,140 Of obedient citizens without fear of rebellion. 256 00:17:57,911 --> 00:17:59,911 But in order to survive here, 257 00:18:00,013 --> 00:18:01,579 They need to build a city 258 00:18:01,681 --> 00:18:04,015 Without access to stone or wood. 259 00:18:05,885 --> 00:18:09,220 How do the sumerians construct a huge metropolis in 260 00:18:09,322 --> 00:18:11,889 The middle of what today is a barren desert? 261 00:18:22,502 --> 00:18:24,702 Narrator: In the deserts of southern iraq, 262 00:18:24,804 --> 00:18:28,005 Archaeologists reveal a lost world -- 263 00:18:28,108 --> 00:18:31,609 The city of ur, unlike anything seen before. 264 00:18:32,812 --> 00:18:36,314 A dominant royal regime rules a growing civilization, 265 00:18:37,817 --> 00:18:41,486 But without access to stone, timber, or metal, 266 00:18:41,588 --> 00:18:43,888 How do the sumerians construct a bustling 267 00:18:43,990 --> 00:18:45,022 Metropolis here? 268 00:18:46,993 --> 00:18:49,393 The secrets of the sumerian engineers could 269 00:18:49,496 --> 00:18:52,230 Lie within the greatest structure they ever build, 270 00:18:53,700 --> 00:18:56,000 The towering ziggurat. 271 00:18:59,272 --> 00:19:01,439 The first temple on this site 272 00:19:01,541 --> 00:19:04,442 Is a much smaller mud brick structure. 273 00:19:04,544 --> 00:19:06,077 Exposed to the elements, 274 00:19:06,179 --> 00:19:08,246 Within decades, it crumbles. 275 00:19:09,649 --> 00:19:12,350 But the sacred ruins are used as foundations 276 00:19:12,452 --> 00:19:13,818 For a new temple, 277 00:19:13,920 --> 00:19:16,387 Slightly bigger and taller than the last. 278 00:19:18,725 --> 00:19:21,526 Over centuries, the mound of ruins grows 279 00:19:22,996 --> 00:19:25,363 Until it's a 100-foot colossus 280 00:19:27,433 --> 00:19:29,834 Made from hundreds of thousands of bricks. 281 00:19:32,705 --> 00:19:36,140 How does this massive mud brick monument survive 282 00:19:36,242 --> 00:19:37,642 For millennia? 283 00:19:42,315 --> 00:19:43,314 To investigate, 284 00:19:43,416 --> 00:19:46,217 Abdulameer examines the 4,000-year-old 285 00:19:46,319 --> 00:19:48,986 Bricks used to build the original ziggurat. 286 00:20:02,168 --> 00:20:04,368 Narrator: Kiln-fired mud bricks encase 287 00:20:04,470 --> 00:20:07,138 The ancient ziggurat to give it a tough exterior. 288 00:20:10,276 --> 00:20:13,578 But mud bricks alone can't keep a structure this size 289 00:20:13,680 --> 00:20:15,680 Standing for thousands of years. 290 00:20:17,083 --> 00:20:19,984 Abdulameer thinks the sumerians developed new ways 291 00:20:20,086 --> 00:20:22,887 To hold the giant banks of mud in place. 292 00:20:35,935 --> 00:20:37,969 Narrator: Bitumen is a tar-like substance 293 00:20:38,071 --> 00:20:40,738 That wells up naturally from the ground. 294 00:20:40,840 --> 00:20:44,008 The sumerians import tons of it from hundreds of miles away 295 00:20:44,110 --> 00:20:46,077 And use it as an ancient form of cement 296 00:20:46,179 --> 00:20:49,547 To lock the fired mud brick walls in place. 297 00:20:51,651 --> 00:20:54,352 But abdulameer is convinced the ziggurat engineers 298 00:20:54,454 --> 00:20:57,655 Develop a final innovation to keep the structure standing. 299 00:21:01,995 --> 00:21:05,062 He searches among the ziggurat's ancient brick work for 300 00:21:05,164 --> 00:21:08,733 Traces of a material put down in between the layers. 301 00:21:18,177 --> 00:21:21,779 Narrator: The organic material decomposed long ago, 302 00:21:21,881 --> 00:21:24,315 But abdulameer finds evidence of reeds 303 00:21:24,417 --> 00:21:26,050 On ancient pieces of bitumen. 304 00:21:43,403 --> 00:21:46,304 Narrator: This innovative use of plant life is key 305 00:21:46,406 --> 00:21:49,006 To how the ziggurat stands the test of time. 306 00:21:53,046 --> 00:21:55,646 Without the reed mats, the walls would 307 00:21:55,748 --> 00:21:58,382 Strain under their own weight and collapse. 308 00:22:04,057 --> 00:22:08,192 The reeds act like steel in reinforced concrete, 309 00:22:08,294 --> 00:22:09,994 Strengthening the mud, 310 00:22:10,096 --> 00:22:13,130 Allowing the sumerian engineers to build tall. 311 00:22:14,667 --> 00:22:18,169 Bitumen waterproofs the exterior when it rains, 312 00:22:18,271 --> 00:22:21,672 But the mud core sucks up water from the ground, 313 00:22:21,774 --> 00:22:23,374 Expanding like a water balloon. 314 00:22:25,378 --> 00:22:29,080 The sumerians build hundreds of holes into their brickwork. 315 00:22:29,182 --> 00:22:31,615 They expose the core to the air 316 00:22:31,718 --> 00:22:35,419 And allow any water inside to evaporate. 317 00:22:46,232 --> 00:22:47,665 Narrator: The ziggurat is the pinnacle 318 00:22:47,767 --> 00:22:49,166 Of sumerian architecture, 319 00:22:50,536 --> 00:22:52,503 But to build a civilization, 320 00:22:52,605 --> 00:22:56,073 Ur needs more than just huge temples. 321 00:22:56,175 --> 00:23:00,044 They need homes for the city's tens of thousands of people. 322 00:23:00,113 --> 00:23:03,981 Abdulameer explores the remains of the building in 323 00:23:04,083 --> 00:23:05,282 The shadow of the ziggurat 324 00:23:05,385 --> 00:23:08,652 To investigate how the sumerians construct 325 00:23:08,755 --> 00:23:10,121 Their smaller structures. 326 00:23:23,736 --> 00:23:25,603 Narrator: The arch is revolutionary. 327 00:23:26,773 --> 00:23:28,939 It's used all over the world to help 328 00:23:29,041 --> 00:23:31,909 Create some of the most iconic structures ever known. 329 00:23:33,379 --> 00:23:35,679 From the gates of babylon 330 00:23:35,782 --> 00:23:38,449 To rome's coliseum, here, 331 00:23:38,551 --> 00:23:41,719 The remains of a temple preserve one of the first ever 332 00:23:41,821 --> 00:23:43,754 Uses of an arch. 333 00:23:43,856 --> 00:23:48,092 But 4,000 years ago, the sumerian architects use this 334 00:23:48,194 --> 00:23:49,693 Feature across the city 335 00:23:49,796 --> 00:23:53,030 To expand the number of people that can live and work 336 00:23:53,132 --> 00:23:55,065 Within ur's city limits. 337 00:24:12,018 --> 00:24:14,452 Narrator: Groundbreaking ancient building technology 338 00:24:14,554 --> 00:24:16,520 Helps ur grow huge. 339 00:24:19,091 --> 00:24:21,659 Tens of thousands of people arrive here in search 340 00:24:21,761 --> 00:24:23,461 Of a new way of life in the city's 341 00:24:23,563 --> 00:24:25,296 Pioneering urban landscape. 342 00:24:27,867 --> 00:24:30,468 How do so many people survive here in what 343 00:24:30,570 --> 00:24:33,003 Today is in the middle of a barren desert? 344 00:24:34,173 --> 00:24:38,342 Could the answers make ur the richest city in the world 345 00:24:38,411 --> 00:24:41,579 And inspire the bible's garden of eden? 346 00:24:51,624 --> 00:24:53,691 Narrator: 4,000 years ago, 347 00:24:53,793 --> 00:24:56,727 Pioneering technological innovation helps 348 00:24:56,829 --> 00:24:57,928 The sumerians build 349 00:24:58,030 --> 00:25:01,732 A vast metropolis here in the desert of southern iraq. 350 00:25:03,035 --> 00:25:05,069 Today, the landscape is dominated 351 00:25:05,171 --> 00:25:07,805 By endless dirt and sand. 352 00:25:07,940 --> 00:25:10,975 When you go to ur now, it looks very desolate, 353 00:25:11,077 --> 00:25:13,878 But we know from the size of ur that literally tens of 354 00:25:13,980 --> 00:25:16,146 Thousands of people lived there. 355 00:25:16,249 --> 00:25:18,349 Narrator: How does the city of ur thrive here 356 00:25:18,451 --> 00:25:19,984 Thousands of years ago? 357 00:25:21,454 --> 00:25:24,588 In its prime, ur is a bustling metropolis. 358 00:25:24,690 --> 00:25:29,193 65,000 people live, work, and worship here. 359 00:25:30,329 --> 00:25:33,931 Legend says he surrounding landscape is a lush paradise. 360 00:25:35,034 --> 00:25:37,968 The bible calls it the garden of eden. 361 00:25:38,070 --> 00:25:39,970 Is there any truth to these stories? 362 00:25:43,809 --> 00:25:46,043 Abdulameer thinks that long ago, the city 363 00:25:46,145 --> 00:25:48,846 Of ur stands in a radically different landscape. 364 00:25:50,116 --> 00:25:51,148 To investigate, 365 00:25:51,250 --> 00:25:53,584 He hunts for traces of how the sumerians could 366 00:25:53,686 --> 00:25:55,486 Have produced food for thousands 367 00:25:55,588 --> 00:25:57,922 In this remote location. 368 00:25:58,024 --> 00:26:01,425 Buried in the dirt, he finds the evidence he needs. 369 00:26:20,279 --> 00:26:23,447 Narrator: These shells are deposited here 370 00:26:23,549 --> 00:26:26,450 After an ancient waterway dries up. 371 00:26:26,552 --> 00:26:28,452 It's evidence that the sumerians 372 00:26:28,554 --> 00:26:31,255 Could grow vital vegetation here. 373 00:26:31,357 --> 00:26:34,558 But how do they produce food on an industrial scale? 374 00:26:36,262 --> 00:26:38,329 Abdulameer believes they turned the land 375 00:26:38,431 --> 00:26:42,032 Surrounding ur into a natural food factory. 376 00:26:42,134 --> 00:26:44,468 He searches for evidence of a massive ancient 377 00:26:44,570 --> 00:26:47,204 Landscaping project at the edge of the city. 378 00:26:57,216 --> 00:26:59,717 Narrator: These are traces of manmade canals 379 00:26:59,819 --> 00:27:02,386 Created in antiquity. 380 00:27:02,488 --> 00:27:05,389 Plants still grow here, 381 00:27:05,491 --> 00:27:07,691 All that remains of a lush landscape that 382 00:27:07,793 --> 00:27:10,494 Could have inspired stories of the garden of eden. 383 00:27:13,499 --> 00:27:16,667 But crops alone can't fuel the rise of ur's 384 00:27:16,769 --> 00:27:18,669 Powerful metropolis. 385 00:27:18,771 --> 00:27:24,308 At England's cambridge university, sumerian specialist 386 00:27:24,410 --> 00:27:26,243 Augusta mcmahon 387 00:27:26,345 --> 00:27:29,046 Investigates a tablet discovered in the landscape 388 00:27:29,148 --> 00:27:30,514 Surrounding the ziggurat. 389 00:27:33,052 --> 00:27:35,486 She thinks it can shed light on how the city's 390 00:27:35,588 --> 00:27:38,956 Lost waterways once connect ur with other powerful 391 00:27:39,058 --> 00:27:40,190 City states. 392 00:27:41,260 --> 00:27:43,160 It's an incredible vision of what 393 00:27:43,262 --> 00:27:45,396 The landscape around ur was like. 394 00:27:46,866 --> 00:27:49,533 Narrator: The lines mark out a network of ancient canals 395 00:27:49,635 --> 00:27:51,535 Dug by sumerians 396 00:27:51,637 --> 00:27:55,039 That weave for miles across the region. 397 00:27:55,141 --> 00:27:58,142 There's also some settlements, and, in some of the other areas, 398 00:27:58,244 --> 00:28:01,679 The names of individual fields or field owners, 399 00:28:01,781 --> 00:28:05,115 And they're clearly calculating how much they need 400 00:28:05,217 --> 00:28:07,518 To feed the population. 401 00:28:07,620 --> 00:28:09,520 Narrator: Augusta thinks the sheer scale 402 00:28:09,622 --> 00:28:11,155 Of the winding canals could be 403 00:28:11,257 --> 00:28:15,592 A clue that they are used for more than just irrigation. 404 00:28:15,695 --> 00:28:18,062 Mcmahon: The larger ones could also be used for transportation. 405 00:28:18,164 --> 00:28:21,198 So some of them, you know, they're almost like a -- sort of 406 00:28:21,300 --> 00:28:22,866 A four-lane motorway, 407 00:28:22,968 --> 00:28:25,569 Big enough for boats to pass each other. 408 00:28:25,671 --> 00:28:28,772 You can think of it as, in fact, a roadmap. 409 00:28:28,874 --> 00:28:30,374 Narrator: Like venice today, 410 00:28:30,476 --> 00:28:32,810 Evidence of a sophisticated system of 411 00:28:32,912 --> 00:28:36,313 Marine transport exists in the land around ur. 412 00:28:37,349 --> 00:28:40,784 But to make it rich, ur needs direct contact 413 00:28:40,886 --> 00:28:41,919 With other cities. 414 00:28:43,255 --> 00:28:45,322 Where do these ancient waterways lead? 415 00:28:47,159 --> 00:28:49,693 To find out, augusta examines 416 00:28:49,795 --> 00:28:51,662 A high-resolution satellite image 417 00:28:51,764 --> 00:28:53,564 Of the region surrounding ur. 418 00:28:53,666 --> 00:28:55,632 Mcmahon: The dark area that you can see 419 00:28:55,735 --> 00:28:58,102 Is really the very, very densely occupied core. 420 00:28:58,204 --> 00:29:00,671 And if we go out a little bit further, then 421 00:29:00,773 --> 00:29:05,375 You can see this big gray band coming quite near the site. 422 00:29:05,511 --> 00:29:07,511 Narrator: Viewed from the air, a faint 423 00:29:07,613 --> 00:29:10,314 Band appears etched into the ground's surface. 424 00:29:11,484 --> 00:29:13,951 Augusta thinks this could be evidence that ur 425 00:29:14,053 --> 00:29:16,620 Once sits near the banks of a great river. 426 00:29:17,790 --> 00:29:19,389 Mcmahon: In the past, ur was essentially 427 00:29:19,492 --> 00:29:21,191 Right next to the euphrates river. 428 00:29:21,293 --> 00:29:22,593 The river has shifted away, 429 00:29:22,695 --> 00:29:25,529 But you can see the sort of agent water courses. 430 00:29:25,631 --> 00:29:28,866 So the river and the canals connected to the rest of 431 00:29:28,968 --> 00:29:31,802 Mesopotamia, also connected down to the gulf, 432 00:29:31,904 --> 00:29:33,537 Which gave it access to the indus valley. 433 00:29:33,639 --> 00:29:36,373 So it's really at the hub of this huge transport 434 00:29:36,475 --> 00:29:40,010 Network to bring in really unparalleled riches. 435 00:29:42,748 --> 00:29:45,382 Narrator: 4,000 years ago, ur sits on 436 00:29:45,484 --> 00:29:47,684 The banks of the great euphrates river. 437 00:29:48,854 --> 00:29:51,522 It brings riches into the city 438 00:29:51,624 --> 00:29:55,159 And sustains acres of lush vegetation, 439 00:29:55,261 --> 00:29:58,262 A green oasis inspiring stories 440 00:29:58,364 --> 00:30:00,697 About a prosperous garden of eden. 441 00:30:02,134 --> 00:30:03,433 For thousands of years, 442 00:30:03,536 --> 00:30:05,636 The people of ur enjoy a bountiful 443 00:30:05,738 --> 00:30:08,705 Existence on the banks of the euphrates. 444 00:30:08,808 --> 00:30:11,375 But shocking evidence reveals a sudden, 445 00:30:11,477 --> 00:30:13,944 Violent end to the reign of the sumerians. 446 00:30:15,314 --> 00:30:18,682 What does it take to wipe out the world's first civilization? 447 00:30:28,394 --> 00:30:32,563 At the mesopotamian city of ur, the sumerians master 448 00:30:32,665 --> 00:30:35,899 Their natural environment to unleash a creative explosion 449 00:30:36,001 --> 00:30:39,102 In technology, astronomy, and literature. 450 00:30:40,372 --> 00:30:43,507 But in 2004 b.C., traces of 451 00:30:43,609 --> 00:30:46,643 Their civilization vanish from the archaeological record. 452 00:30:47,847 --> 00:30:49,947 How does the great city of ur fall? 453 00:30:51,750 --> 00:30:54,284 Man: The fall of ur is a huge moment. 454 00:30:57,056 --> 00:31:00,224 Narrator: 4,000 years ago, it's believed looters 455 00:31:00,326 --> 00:31:03,393 Break into the tomb of king shulgi. 456 00:31:03,495 --> 00:31:05,395 They tunnel down to his lavishly 457 00:31:05,497 --> 00:31:09,266 Painted burial chamber and destroy the decoration. 458 00:31:09,335 --> 00:31:12,669 They steal all the treasure to leave nothing but 459 00:31:12,771 --> 00:31:16,106 A collection of strange stones sourced from hundreds of 460 00:31:16,208 --> 00:31:17,674 Miles away. 461 00:31:17,776 --> 00:31:20,677 A hand-sized rock with flecks of gold leaf 462 00:31:22,481 --> 00:31:25,315 Sits next to a collection of pebbles cut in half 463 00:31:28,254 --> 00:31:30,187 And a handmade clay pellet. 464 00:31:32,992 --> 00:31:35,859 What are these strange stones for? 465 00:31:35,961 --> 00:31:38,362 And why do the robbers leave them behind? 466 00:31:41,400 --> 00:31:43,567 When the stones are excavated, 467 00:31:43,669 --> 00:31:46,737 Archaeologists believe they are a clue to the end of 468 00:31:46,839 --> 00:31:48,805 The sumerian civilization. 469 00:31:48,908 --> 00:31:52,242 Augusta uses replicas to explore their possible 470 00:31:52,344 --> 00:31:54,845 Role in the fall of ur. 471 00:31:54,947 --> 00:31:57,781 You have a hammer stone that has little flecks of gold, 472 00:31:57,883 --> 00:31:59,383 Potentially breaking apart 473 00:31:59,485 --> 00:32:02,152 Something that had metal on it, maybe treasures. 474 00:32:02,254 --> 00:32:04,888 Then there were a lot of broken half stones 475 00:32:04,990 --> 00:32:06,957 That might have been used to weigh out 476 00:32:07,059 --> 00:32:09,059 The loot in these tombs. 477 00:32:09,161 --> 00:32:11,028 Narrator: The stones date to the last days 478 00:32:11,130 --> 00:32:13,230 Of the sumerian civilization. 479 00:32:13,332 --> 00:32:16,867 They could be tools left behind by looters, using 480 00:32:16,969 --> 00:32:19,569 Them to break up and distribute king shulgi's 481 00:32:19,672 --> 00:32:21,104 Stolen treasure. 482 00:32:21,206 --> 00:32:23,407 But the handmade clay pellet matches 483 00:32:23,509 --> 00:32:26,476 Hundreds more found across the city, 484 00:32:26,578 --> 00:32:28,745 Leading excavators to believe this could 485 00:32:28,847 --> 00:32:32,182 Be more than an ancient crime scene. 486 00:32:32,284 --> 00:32:35,285 The clay pellets could actually be sling bullets 487 00:32:35,387 --> 00:32:37,521 Or sling pellets used in slingshots 488 00:32:37,623 --> 00:32:40,290 That represent the remains of a battle. 489 00:32:43,996 --> 00:32:45,762 Narrator: Traces of weaponry could be 490 00:32:45,864 --> 00:32:47,798 Evidence of violence. 491 00:32:47,900 --> 00:32:50,033 But is this a looter's skirmish? 492 00:32:50,135 --> 00:32:52,269 Or is the whole city under siege? 493 00:32:53,772 --> 00:32:55,872 Abdulameer hunts for clues that could 494 00:32:55,975 --> 00:32:58,608 Reveal the true scale of the onslaught. 495 00:33:09,221 --> 00:33:10,821 Narrator: Charred fragments of pottery 496 00:33:10,923 --> 00:33:14,091 Have fallen from an exposed layer of deposits 497 00:33:14,193 --> 00:33:18,428 That date to the same time as the stones found in the tomb. 498 00:33:18,530 --> 00:33:19,863 They form part of a layer 499 00:33:19,965 --> 00:33:22,733 Of destruction that runs right through ur. 500 00:33:33,379 --> 00:33:35,846 Narrator: The ash is evidence of a great fire 501 00:33:35,948 --> 00:33:37,914 That rips through ur, 502 00:33:38,017 --> 00:33:40,817 An arson attack led by plunderers who break 503 00:33:40,919 --> 00:33:44,287 Into the royal tombs and steal the king's gold, 504 00:33:44,390 --> 00:33:46,523 Leaving only their tools and weapons. 505 00:33:48,694 --> 00:33:50,794 Who are these mysterious invaders? 506 00:33:52,898 --> 00:33:55,899 George heath-whyte searches for clues on an ancient 507 00:33:56,001 --> 00:33:59,870 Tablet that contains shocking details of how ur falls. 508 00:34:01,440 --> 00:34:03,840 Re-inscribing the ancient symbols 509 00:34:03,942 --> 00:34:07,110 Helps him decode the poetic script. 510 00:34:07,212 --> 00:34:10,380 The painstaking process gradually reveals the true 511 00:34:10,482 --> 00:34:13,717 Horror of the last days of ur. 512 00:34:13,819 --> 00:34:15,919 So the text reads... 513 00:34:23,362 --> 00:34:26,430 And that translates as, "in ur, weapons 514 00:34:26,532 --> 00:34:28,732 Smashed the heads like pottery." 515 00:34:29,802 --> 00:34:31,201 And the next line -- 516 00:34:34,206 --> 00:34:35,939 Fire approached. 517 00:34:37,109 --> 00:34:38,542 Narrator: The archaeological evidence 518 00:34:38,644 --> 00:34:40,177 For fire and destruction at ur 519 00:34:40,279 --> 00:34:42,913 Matches up with the ancient texts. 520 00:34:43,015 --> 00:34:46,616 As george deciphers the rest of the writing, 521 00:34:46,718 --> 00:34:48,518 He finds what he's looking for -- 522 00:34:48,620 --> 00:34:51,088 The identity of the invaders. 523 00:34:51,190 --> 00:34:52,789 Final line -- 524 00:34:57,830 --> 00:35:00,530 And it translates as, "from the south, 525 00:35:00,632 --> 00:35:03,133 The elamites came up, killing." 526 00:35:03,235 --> 00:35:04,534 It was absolute chaos. 527 00:35:06,038 --> 00:35:09,439 Narrator: In 2004 b.C., the elamites are in emerging 528 00:35:09,541 --> 00:35:13,043 Civilization from a region in what today is iran. 529 00:35:14,313 --> 00:35:17,147 Knowing they face a formidable foe, 530 00:35:17,249 --> 00:35:20,283 They strike when ur is at its weakest. 531 00:35:24,656 --> 00:35:26,590 In the 21st century b.C., 532 00:35:26,692 --> 00:35:29,025 The sumerians are hit by a severe famine, 533 00:35:30,529 --> 00:35:33,330 Leaving ur's residents to slowly starve. 534 00:35:35,367 --> 00:35:37,968 Taking advantage of the weakened city, 535 00:35:38,070 --> 00:35:41,371 The elamite tribe lays siege to ur 536 00:35:41,473 --> 00:35:42,839 And finally conquers it. 537 00:35:46,178 --> 00:35:48,111 They loot the sumerian treasure 538 00:35:49,448 --> 00:35:52,782 And ransacked the city, driving away its people. 539 00:35:57,389 --> 00:35:59,523 They capture the king, taking him 540 00:35:59,625 --> 00:36:01,458 To a distant town to die, 541 00:36:02,961 --> 00:36:05,295 Leaving ur to turn to dust. 542 00:36:07,866 --> 00:36:10,400 The invasion and destruction of ur by 543 00:36:10,502 --> 00:36:14,437 The elamites triggers the end of the sumerian civilization. 544 00:36:16,441 --> 00:36:20,143 Gradually, ur's mud metropolis crumbles. 545 00:36:20,245 --> 00:36:22,846 Only the ziggurat remains standing as 546 00:36:22,948 --> 00:36:24,814 A monument to this once great city. 547 00:36:26,018 --> 00:36:29,719 But now, incredible evidence could reveal how the sumerians 548 00:36:29,821 --> 00:36:31,354 Live on through legend, 549 00:36:31,456 --> 00:36:34,958 When their city is rebuilt by a mysterious people. 550 00:36:36,228 --> 00:36:37,827 Thousands of years later, 551 00:36:37,930 --> 00:36:40,564 How does ur rise from the ashes? 552 00:36:48,740 --> 00:36:52,842 Narrator: At ur, the sumerians build a revolutionary city. 553 00:36:54,446 --> 00:36:56,112 But after centuries of expansion, 554 00:36:56,215 --> 00:36:59,416 It burns to the ground in a wave of brutal violence. 555 00:37:01,920 --> 00:37:04,821 Their civilization crumbles, 556 00:37:04,923 --> 00:37:07,824 But its legacy gives rise to legend. 557 00:37:08,827 --> 00:37:12,896 The legend of ur lives on as the location of where abraham 558 00:37:12,998 --> 00:37:14,531 Was born, the location where 559 00:37:14,633 --> 00:37:16,433 The first flood could be identified, 560 00:37:16,535 --> 00:37:19,569 And also where the garden of eden might be located. 561 00:37:20,772 --> 00:37:23,873 Narrator: After their city falls into ruin, 562 00:37:23,976 --> 00:37:26,409 How does the sumerian world survive 563 00:37:26,511 --> 00:37:28,578 To forge a lasting legacy? 564 00:37:33,952 --> 00:37:36,686 Evidence in the walls of the ziggurat itself could 565 00:37:36,788 --> 00:37:39,155 Reveal how this pioneering metropolis 566 00:37:39,258 --> 00:37:40,890 Rises from the abyss. 567 00:37:43,662 --> 00:37:45,795 Abdulameer examines the brickwork of 568 00:37:45,897 --> 00:37:47,764 The outer layers of the ziggurat. 569 00:37:58,844 --> 00:38:03,513 Narrator: These bricks date to the second babylonian era, 570 00:38:03,615 --> 00:38:07,384 1,500 years after the end of the sumerian civilization. 571 00:38:07,486 --> 00:38:12,789 After the city first falls to invaders, ur rises again in 572 00:38:12,891 --> 00:38:15,191 The hands of a new people. 573 00:38:15,294 --> 00:38:20,363 They reclaim the remains of ur from squatting tribes 574 00:38:20,465 --> 00:38:24,000 And rebuild the city and the great ziggurat. 575 00:38:27,172 --> 00:38:30,674 The legacy of sumerian kings also lives on, 576 00:38:30,776 --> 00:38:34,844 Hailed as legendary leaders centuries after they die. 577 00:38:34,946 --> 00:38:38,048 How does their supremacy survive the ages? 578 00:38:40,385 --> 00:38:42,986 George hunts for clues on fragments of a statue 579 00:38:43,088 --> 00:38:46,589 Discovered among the remains of a babylonian temple at ur. 580 00:38:47,859 --> 00:38:48,958 You can kind of work out -- 581 00:38:49,061 --> 00:38:51,061 We have an arm, a shoulder here, 582 00:38:51,163 --> 00:38:53,963 And it would have originally looked like a man standing tall 583 00:38:54,066 --> 00:38:57,133 With his hands clasped together in front of him. 584 00:38:57,235 --> 00:38:58,935 Narrator: George thinks this could be one of 585 00:38:59,037 --> 00:39:02,439 The greatest kings of the sumerian civilization. 586 00:39:02,541 --> 00:39:04,741 To investigate, he decodes 587 00:39:04,843 --> 00:39:08,645 A broken piece that contains sumerian script. 588 00:39:08,747 --> 00:39:12,315 And the text reads, this legible bit here, 589 00:39:12,417 --> 00:39:14,784 "shulgi, 590 00:39:14,886 --> 00:39:16,686 Powerful man, 591 00:39:16,788 --> 00:39:19,456 King of ur," so we know that this 592 00:39:19,558 --> 00:39:23,093 Is a statute of the famous king shulgi of ur. 593 00:39:23,195 --> 00:39:26,830 Narrator: Why is a sumerian statue of the great king shulgi 594 00:39:26,932 --> 00:39:29,332 Discovered inside a babylonian temple 595 00:39:29,434 --> 00:39:32,769 Built 1,500 years later? 596 00:39:32,871 --> 00:39:34,971 George thinks this is no accident. 597 00:39:36,375 --> 00:39:39,109 This could be evidence of an astonishing link between 598 00:39:39,211 --> 00:39:42,445 Two ancient civilizations that lived thousands of years apart. 599 00:39:44,850 --> 00:39:47,984 These neo-babylonians knew the significance of these 600 00:39:48,086 --> 00:39:50,220 Ancient artifacts -- they're ancient for us, 601 00:39:50,322 --> 00:39:51,588 But they were ancient for them, as well, 602 00:39:51,690 --> 00:39:54,290 So they brought them up out of the ruins of this temple 603 00:39:54,393 --> 00:39:56,059 And put them in a collection. 604 00:39:56,161 --> 00:39:58,361 The people doing this work were 605 00:39:58,463 --> 00:40:00,663 Potentially the world's first archaeologists. 606 00:40:03,235 --> 00:40:05,335 Narrator: The babylonians restore the ziggurat 607 00:40:05,437 --> 00:40:07,170 At the heart of ur, 608 00:40:07,272 --> 00:40:11,107 Returning it to what they believe is its original state, 609 00:40:11,209 --> 00:40:12,709 With seven levels. 610 00:40:15,213 --> 00:40:19,716 They unearth ancient sumerian objects from beneath the city, 611 00:40:19,818 --> 00:40:22,752 Revealing its rich 2,000-year history. 612 00:40:25,791 --> 00:40:28,591 They put the artifacts on display, 613 00:40:28,693 --> 00:40:30,627 Saving them from the ravages of time 614 00:40:30,729 --> 00:40:33,229 By curating the world's first museum. 615 00:40:35,734 --> 00:40:38,401 And clay tablets found near the temple 616 00:40:38,503 --> 00:40:41,404 Contain students' writing on one side, 617 00:40:41,506 --> 00:40:45,308 Revealing how sumerian stories also survived the ages. 618 00:40:47,979 --> 00:40:51,014 The babylonians rebuild ur and communicate 619 00:40:51,116 --> 00:40:52,615 Its history to the civilizations 620 00:40:52,717 --> 00:40:54,517 That follow them, 621 00:40:54,619 --> 00:40:57,020 Turning stories of this ancient city 622 00:40:57,122 --> 00:41:01,191 Into legend -- across 1,000 years, 623 00:41:01,293 --> 00:41:05,328 The sumerians at ur build a revolutionary metropolis 624 00:41:05,430 --> 00:41:08,364 That transforms the way humans live forever. 625 00:41:10,135 --> 00:41:13,102 Ruled by powerful priest kings, 626 00:41:13,205 --> 00:41:16,339 The people of ur build mega mud monuments 627 00:41:16,441 --> 00:41:18,274 Aligned with the moon, 628 00:41:18,376 --> 00:41:21,110 They master their landscape to inspire stories 629 00:41:21,213 --> 00:41:22,679 Of a garden of eden, 630 00:41:22,781 --> 00:41:27,217 And forge the largest city on the planet, 631 00:41:27,319 --> 00:41:31,254 Ur, home of the world's first great civilization. 50131

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