Babylon, So legendary, As Mistificated

And here the place we should turning backward, to culture, already passed but under other angle.

Brief reminder:

❗ Sumerians — The Blueprint Civilisation. Timeline: ~4000–2300 BCE. Main Cities: Uruk, Ur, Lagash, Eridu, Nippur. Language: Sumerian (isolate, not Semitic).

- Innovation Level: unparalleled — the world’s first known systematized culture.

Key Achievements

- Writing: Cuneiform on clay tablets — enabling administration, contracts, measurements, astronomy. Mathematics: Invented the sexagesimal (base-60) system, which became the foundation for all Mesopotamian calculation. Metrology: Developed the first unified measurement system — for length, volume, and mass, including the Sumerian cubit (~0.497 m), mina, and shekel. Architecture & Surveying: Canal irrigation required precise geometry, giving rise to proto-engineering. Astronomy: Recorded celestial movements; early ziggurats were aligned astronomically.

Cultural Essence

- Sumerian worldview was technical and pragmatic — gods controlled nature, but humans controlled order.

That sense of order through measurement is the core legacy that Babylon inherited.

❗ Akkadian Empire — The Unifier. Timeline: ~2334–2154 BCE. Founder: Sargon of Akkad

- Language: Akkadian (Semitic). Significance: The first empire — merging Sumerian city-states under one crown.

Influence

- Adopted Sumerian science wholesale: cuneiform, mathematics, and metrology. Introduced Akkadian language administration — blending Sumerian numerals with Semitic grammar.

- Standardized weights and measures across Mesopotamia.

- Set the stage for later Babylonian governance — bureaucracy, archives, and codified law (early precedents of Hammurabi).

Old Babylonian Period — The Systematizers

As we have already seen, the Babylonian Kingdom did not arise in a vacuum — its very existence was shaped by historical inevitability. The following points will only emphasise these outcomes.

By the time of King Hammurabi of Babylon (r. 1792–1750 BCE), a well-developed linguistic model already existed — Akkadian, in its Babylonian dialect — which, under the king’s administration, was further refined and standardised for official use.

Under the king’s regulations, the so-called Code of Hammurabi was designed and promulgated. It served not merely as a legal text but also as a catalogue of standardised measures and values — covering grain, land, and labour.

The proto-scientific evolution of Babylonian thought led later generations to preserve and refine the Sumerian base-60 arithmetic, producing tables for squares, cubes, and reciprocals — a genuine form of proto-algebra, forming a structured body of knowledge for future advancement.

The metrological system, already well known by its names — Cubit (kuš) ≈ 0.497 m; Shekel ≈ 8.4 g; Mina = 60 shekels (≈ 504 g); Talent = 60 minas (≈ 30.2 kg); and the volume measures (gur, sila, ban) — formed the base units for grain and liquid trade.

Continuation of the Sumerian long-term celestial recordkeeping, but with systematisation for calendrical use.

A vast amount of our contemporary knowledge base about Sumerian civilisation is owed to Babylonian records.

Now Time Of Units?, So, Follow Us...

Babylonian Units Of Length
Unit Approx Equivalent Notes / references
Cubit (kuš / ammatu / ammûtu) ~ 0.50 m In Neo-Babylonian texts the cubit is given ~ 0.5 m.
1/24 cubit (šu-si / ubânû) ~ 0.0208 m As a fractional subdivision: cubit ÷ 24 ≈ 0.5 m / 24 ≈ 0.0208 m
gi / qânu (length unit = 7 cubits) ~ 3.5 m 7 × cubit (~0.5 m) = ~3.5 m
Length “GAR” unit (14 cubits) ~ 7 m 14 × cubit ≈ 7 m
Babylonian Units Of Area (Superficy, land measurement)
System Units & Conversion Approx Area in m²
Reed (small units) e.g. kuš × kuš etc. e.g. 7 sq. cubits ~ 1.75 m²
Seed / larger system e.g. ban, gur of area e.g. gur area ≈ 13,500 m²
Babylonian Units Of Weight (Mass)
Unit Ratio / Relation Approx Metric Equivalent Notes / references
Grain (še / uḫṭatu) base very small unit ~ 0.0000466 kg (≈ 46.6 mg) Based on average of artefacts from Ur & Nippur
Shekel (šiqlu / gin₂) 1 shekel = ~ 8.40 g ~ 0.00840 kg Standard in Mesopotamian tables
Mina (manû) 60 shekels ~ 504 g 60 × 8.40 g = ~504 g
Talent (bītu / biltu / gun₂ / kakaru) 60 minas ~ 30.2 kg 60 × 504 g = ~30.2 kg
Babylonian Units Of Volume
Unit Relation / Multipliers Approx Metric Equivalent Notes / references
sila₃ / qa base volume unit ~ 1 litre The “sila” is often equated with about 1 L in Mesopotamian reconstructions.
ban₂ (sūtu) 6 × sila ~ 6 L 6 × 1 L = 6 L
PI / pānu 6 ban₂ = 36 L ~ 36 litres 6 × 6 L = 36 L
gur / kurru 5 × PI = 180 L ~ 180 litres 5 × 36 L = 180 L

These conversions are approximate — ancient measures varied over regions and epochs.

- Babylonian (Neo-Babylonian) systems often preserved and used older Sumerian standards.

- Volumetric capacity units often were tied to water weight equivalences, so a sila ≈ 1 litre is a standard working assumption.

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