Home E-Learning An Introduction to The Babylonian Map of the World–the Oldest Known Map of the World

An Introduction to The Babylonian Map of the World–the Oldest Known Map of the World

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An Introduction to The Babylonian Map of the World–the Oldest Known Map of the World

Tak­ing a first glance at the Baby­lon­ian Map of the World, few of us could rec­og­nize it for what it is. But then again, few of us are any­thing like the British Muse­um Mid­dle East depart­ment cura­tor Irv­ing Finkel, whose vast knowl­edge (and abil­i­ty to share it com­pelling­ly) have made him a view­er favorite on the insti­tu­tion’s Youtube chan­nel. In the Cura­tor’s Cor­ner video above, he offers an up-close view of the Baby­lon­ian Map of the World — or rather, the frag­ment of the clay tablet from the eighth or sev­enth cen­tu­ry BC that he and oth­er experts have deter­mined con­tains a piece of the old­est map of the known world in exis­tence.

“If you look care­ful­ly, you will see that the flat sur­face of the clay has a dou­ble cir­cle,” Finkel says. With­in the cir­cle is cuneiform writ­ing that describes the shape as the “bit­ter riv­er” that sur­rounds the known world: ancient Mesopotamia, or mod­ern-day Iraq.

Inside the cir­cle lie rep­re­sen­ta­tions of both the Euphrates Riv­er and the mighty city of Baby­lon; out­side it lie a series of what schol­ars have deter­mined were orig­i­nal­ly eight tri­an­gles. “Some­times peo­ple say they are islands, some­times peo­ple say they are dis­tricts, but in point of fact, they are almost cer­tain­ly moun­tains,” which stand “far beyond the known world” and rep­re­sent, to the ancient Baby­lo­ni­ans, “places full of mag­ic, and full of mys­tery.”

Com­ing up with a coher­ent expla­na­tion of the map itself hinged on the dis­cov­ery, in the nine­teen-nineties, of one of those tri­an­gles orig­i­nal­ly thought to have been lost. This owes to the enthu­si­asm of a non-pro­fes­sion­al, a stu­dent in Finkel’s cuneiform night class­es named Edith Hors­ley. Dur­ing one of her once-a-week vol­un­teer shifts at the British Muse­um, she set aside a par­tic­u­lar­ly intrigu­ing clay frag­ment. As soon as Finkel saw it, he knew just the arti­fact to which it belonged. After the piece’s reat­tach­ment, much fell into place, not least that the map pur­port­ed to show the dis­tant loca­tion of the beached (or rather, moun­tained) ark built by “the Baby­lon­ian ver­sion of Noah” — the search for which con­tin­ues these nine or so mil­len­nia lat­er.

Relat­ed con­tent:

Ancient Maps that Changed the World: See World Maps from Ancient Greece, Baby­lon, Rome, and the Islam­ic World

When a Medieval Monk Crowd­sourced the Most Accu­rate Map of the World, Cre­at­ing “the Google Earth of the 1450s”

The Largest Ear­ly Map of the World Gets Assem­bled for the First Time: See the Huge, Detailed & Fan­tas­ti­cal World Map from 1587

The World Map That Intro­duced Sci­en­tif­ic Map­mak­ing to the Medieval Islam­ic World (1154 AD)

How Did Car­tog­ra­phers Cre­ate World Maps before Air­planes and Satel­lites? An Intro­duc­tion

The Evo­lu­tion of the World Map: An Inven­tive Info­graph­ic Shows How Our Pic­ture of the World Changed Over 1,800 Years

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. His projects include the Sub­stack newslet­ter Books on Cities and the book The State­less City: a Walk through 21st-Cen­tu­ry Los Ange­les. Fol­low him on Twit­ter at @colinmarshall or on Face­book.


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