The Curious Case of King Gilgamesh Tomb

The Curious Case of King Gilgamesh Tomb

The Epic of Gilgamesh is one of the most thrilling stories one will read from the ancient past. I recall being stuck in a Los Angeles immigration line for hours trying to contain my frustration with the process and the unprofessionalism of the staff by the way they were treating those of us in line, only to be kept sane by reading this wonderful book. I read the version by Stephen Mitchell called Gilgamesh, which was just such a delight and I recommend it to anyone. It is believed the story was written around 2900 - 2350 B.C.

In the story, Gilgamesh goes on adventures with his friend Enkidu but is eventually crushed with grief over his friends death. He goes on a long quest to discover the secret to eternal life. I won’t say the ending to avoid spoiling the story for anyone that wants to read it. But at one point Gilgamesh and Enkidu fight the giant Humbaba who guards a forest.

The image below depicts an original sculpture of Gilgamesh that is located at the Louvre in Parsis which I took when I was last visiting. Note how Gilgamesh is always depicted holing a Lion in his left hand and a snake in his right hand. Gilgamesh was not a small man but a giant man, perhaps 8 - 9 ft tall. The legend has him as part human and part god.

The thing about Gilgamesh, is that he apparently did not exist as a person and is considered by archaeologists to be mere mythology. Although it is claimed that he might have been inspired by a historical figure who ruled the city state of Uruk in the year 2800 - 2500 BCE. Let us examine this briefly, in terms of the two main pieces of archaeological evidence.

At the Ashmolian Museum in Oxford, England, there is an artefact, called the Sumerian Kings List. It contains a list of all the ancient Sumerian kings, which includes the name Gilgamesh. This is the artefact in a photo I took a few years ago.

What is more curious about this object is how archaeologists have chosen to interpret it. This is the actual words on their description piece:

The Sumerian King List is not history as we would understand it. Parts relating to the earliest kings are largely mythological, although the last 500 years is more accurate. It is also a work of propaganda designed to show that the current kings of Larsa were descended from heroes and demigods of ancient times. Written when local city-states struggled against each other for supremacy, the scribe perhaps intended to show that southern Mesopotamia was always united under a single ruler. There were also times of instability or anarchy, such as decline of the Akkad dynasty in around 2150 BC, aptly put by the words ‘who was king? who was not king? written on this, the prisms fourth side.”

It further states:

This second side of the Sumerian King List mentions Gilgamesh, hero-king of epic literature and legendary ruler of Uruk. The list combines older versions into what appears to be a continuous genealogical sequence of rulers, although some kings ruled at the same time. Fact and fantasy are blended, particularly in earlier sections mentioning mythical rulers reigning for thousands of years.

What are we to make of this interpretation? So here we have a list of Kings, some of which are fiction and some of which are real. This seems an odd way to generate a list for a Royal Dynasty. One wonders if in fact the long reigns represent many generations of sons taking the same name as their fathers, like Richard I, Richard II, Richard III…..but without the addition of a number, so that the Kings are in fact one coronation embodied into multiple generations. But this is speculation on my part.

Yet, here is the curious thing about Gilgamesh, archaeologists have been busy excavating his city for years. This is the City of Uruk, located east of the current Euphrates River in modern Iraq, although its located on a now dried out channel bed since the river has moved.

According to the ancient Mesopotamian text, Gilgamesh was buried in a unique and elaborate manner. In one account he was buried beneath the riverbed of the Euphrates River. Then after his death the flow of the river was temporarily diverted to construct his tomb, which was then sealed with the water redirected back to its original coarse direction. This is told in the poem called The Death of Gilgamesh or sometimes associated with The Death of Ur-Nammu, dating from the reign of Shulgi of Ur in 2029 - 1982 BCE during the Ur III Period. Here is an account from the World History Encyclopedia:

“The work begins with the failing health of King Gilgamesh, though no cause is given, only that he can no longer eat or drink, stand up or sit down (Segments A-E), suggesting illness or advanced age (according to legend, he reigned for 126 years). Lines 13-19 of Segment A reference the underworld deity Namtar, son of Ereshkigal Queen of the Underworld, who was known as the herald of death.

In Segment F, Gilgamesh dies and arrives in the underworld where he is honored for his many achievements in life. There seems to have been some discussion among the gods concerning his fate (the lines are missing) as Enki, the god of wisdom, asks whether Gilgamesh could not be spared owing to his mother, the goddess Ninsun (also known as Ninsumun), but this cannot be as Gilgamesh, though a demigod, was still mortal and so must share all mortals' fate.

Segment H gives the famous scene in which the Euphrates River parts after his death and his tomb is built in the riverbed, and in 2003, a German expedition claimed to have found this tomb in the location given in the poem. Segment K ends the work with Gilgamesh again depressed with the knowledge that all living things must die, and his individual grief is addressed as universal by the narrator who then speaks to "all the people" and reminds them that no one truly dies as long as they are remembered by the living.”

On the 29th April 2003 The BBC News ran a curious article titled ‘Gilgamesh Tomb Believed Found’. It said that archaeologists in Iraq believe they may have found the lost tomb of King Gilgamesh. This was a German led expedition and the article quoted the Jorg Fassbinder, a Geophysicist of the Bavarian Department of Historical Monuments in Munich as saying “I don’t want to say definitely it was the grave of King Gilgamesh, but it looks very similar to that described in the epic”. This was especially since in the epic story it described Gilgamesh as having been buried under the Euphrates, in a tomb apparently constructed when the waters of the ancient rivers parted after his death.

Fassbinder said “We found just outside the city an area in the middle of the former Euphrates river, the remains of such a building which could be interpreted as a burial”. The discovery of the ancient city had apparently been made possible “by differences in magnetisation in the soil….the differences between mudbricks and sediments in the Euphrates river gives a very detailed structure”. This results in a magnetogram, which is then digitally mapped to produce a plan of the entire city.

Further he said “The most surprising thing was that we found structures already described by Gilgamesh…we covered more than 100 hectares. We have found garden structures and field structures as described in the epic, and we found Babylonian houses”. They also found a sophisticated network of canals. In the article by the BBC, in a quote of the archaeologists, they described it as being like “Venice in the Desert”.

A few snippets have appeared in blog posts over the years given more information but otherwise very little has appeared in the press ever since that 2003 article which I find perplexing since work resumed on the site from 2016. I mean, the discovery of a King’s tomb of this importance is as significance as the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun by Howard Carter in 1922. Was the report wrong? Was the researchers misquoted? Why has a state of ambiguity and non-information left remaining ever since? What is the official position of the Department in Munich?

The reports were that the location, orientation and positioning of the discovered tomb appeared to be consistent with that described in the epic. In a report published by the team the authors stated in reference to magnetic prospection that “In Uruk in 2000 and 2002 the cesium-magnetometer Smartmag SM4G-G was employed in a so-called duo-sensor configuration for the measurement of the total geomagnetic field. This not only doubled the measuring speeds but also provided maximal sensitivity and thur also information from deeper parts of the soil. This was demonstrated also in the magnetic prospection of tomb chambers.” (Uruk, First City of the Ancient World, H. Becker, M. van Ess, J. Fassbinder, date unknown).

The image below shows the magnetometer survey of the city made by the team, elements of which were published in Magnetometry at Uruk (Iraq): The City of King Gilgamesh (J. W. E. Fassbinder, M. Van Ess, 2005).

Now the statement by the German archaeologists reported to the BBC is very strange. We know that the German archaeologists are some of the best in the world and their work is to be admired. The work of Klaus Schmidt at Gobekli Tepe in Turkey for example is outstanding. So in 2023 I reached out to Jorg Fassbinder and after several attempts he kindly replied to me and engaged me in constructive conversation, although would like to highlight that he is not an archaeologist himself but a geophysicist. To be fair to him I will quote his exact statement:

I never claimed nor excavated that we found the grave of Gilgamesh - but unfortunately we mentioned to find in our magnetogram image a feature which resembles descriptions of the location of the grave of Gilgamesh. In German language we have the ‘Konjunktiv’ such ‘somehow could be’ does not exist in English language and thats why such a claim ‘Gilgamesh grave was found’ came into the world through an article in the BBC”.

Okay, so fair enough, he is saying the BBC took him out of context. But the misquotes then are pretty criminal if that is the case and where is the retraction and apology from the BBC? I would further note that at some point I completed a course at Oxford University on Mesopotamian studies and I tried to engage the main lecturer on the subject of the Gilgamesh tomb and there was just a reluctance to discuss it, again pointing towards the media getting ahead of themselves. This is possible of course but I have also attempted to reach out to a couple of other archaeologists on the subject and not received a reply.

But here is the thing I find absolutely curious and for which nobody else seems to have noticed. I have looked on the web so see if anyone else has made the same observation as I have but I can’t see it. So I may have been the first to find this interesting ‘anomaly’ in the City of Uruk which I think deserves some attention and an examination by those on the ground. If you go to the City of Uruk on google maps and zoom in on it you are met with an image like this:

If you look at around 6 O’Clock on the image there is a curious looking marking on the ground that looks almost like a geoglyph. A geoglyph is a ground feature that often appears in South America or even in parts of Britain associated with ancient cultures produced by durable elements on the landscape such as stone, gravel and earth. Let us zoom in a little closer:

If we zoom in a little closer, re-orient it and then superimpose lines over the image, a curious figure emerges that appears to have a strong correlation to the classical depiction of King Gilgamesh holding the Lion and the snake. Even what appears to be a crown is visible. Is this indeed a geoglyph marking the grave of King Gilgamesh?

Now, its possible this is just a case of pareidolia, since the human eye does seem to see shapes and patterns when they are not always there. This is why I have sat on this observation for several years, lacking the ability to go to the site and check it out for myself. It remains pure conjecture. I did show these images to Jorg and this is what he said, again quoting him in full:

Geoglyphs can simply not occur or if they have been made by man on fluvial sediments of the Euphrates river will survive max one year. Every rain or flood event of the next years season will have washed away and erased such a feature in the soft clay and salty mud”.

Jorg also makes the point that the depiction of Gilgamesh with a Lion is from the Assyrian period, 2000 years later and so would not have been contemporary with the City of Uruk existence. I have not looked into it enough to check if this is the case. But who is to say that the Assyrian depiction was not based on earlier depictions which have not survived or just havn’t been discovered yet?

I find it curious that much of the work on the dig site for King Gilgamesh was stopped in 2003 due to Operation Iraqi Freedom which began on the 20th March and involved sending many troops into the country. During this turmoil, the main museum in Baghdad was also looted of many artefacts and was not protected. I wonder what was taken from Iraq? I wonder what was removed from the ancient city of Uruk? What secrets of the past do those in power not want us to find out? I would certainly be interested in the opinion of others whether there was once a Gilgamesh tomb in the City of Uruk or much like the epic has this just been a good read?

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