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IslandChillin OP t1_iwgnyth wrote

"Around 3,800 years ago, traders in the ancient city of Zakhiku would wait for wooden beams, cut down from the forests in the mountains in the north and east of Mesopotamia – spanning what is today Iraq, Kuwait and parts of Turkey, Iran and Syria – to float down the Tigris River. Once the logs reached Zakhiku, they were collected and taken to storehouses.

From the same mountainous regions in what is present-day Turkey and Iran, merchants transporting metals and minerals such as gold, silver, tin and copper would travel by donkey or camel to Zakhiku. To protect against bandits, they would make the difficult journey as caravans of travellers. After selling their wares in Zakhiku, the merchants would cross the Tigris before continuing on to the borderlands."

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JoeNoble1973 t1_iwis88i wrote

Things like this remind me that even though can study history, we know…very little about the ancient world. Or at least, that there’s vast amounts MORE to learn. And there always will be.

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AlfaBetaZulu t1_iwj19oc wrote

I imagine there is much more still under water? Based on the people in the photo this would be a very small city if that's all there is to it.

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Multiverseer t1_iwj70pk wrote

So much war takes place in the most ancient of human habitats, for whatever reason. Hope they can excavate it quick.

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aWheatgeMcgee t1_iwjpldj wrote

Zakhiku was founded around 1,800 BC by the Old Babylonian Empire that ruled Mesopotamia between the 19th and 15th centuries BC. With only water and soil in the area, Zakhiku was established to take advantage of the traffic of caravans and a flourishing trade route in the Near East, which includes the present-day Middle East, Turkey and Egypt.

The trading post grew into an important commercial city in the region for about 600 years before it was hit by an earthquake and later abandoned.

Zakhiku disappeared altogether in the 1980s, when – as part of the Mosul Dam project, built under the late Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein – it was flooded and submerged. Previously known as Saddam Dam, it is Iraq’s largest and most important water reservoir used for downstream irrigation.

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powersv2 t1_iwka4vn wrote

The Mittani will forever send their regards.

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WolfDoc t1_iwkrbct wrote

About 1.8% of Iraq is forested (slightly up since 1990), but much of Iraq and the surrounding lands were forested a few thousand years ago. However, 6000 + years of land clearance for farming, logging and grazing together with climate getting drier and hotter has reduced the former forests to a shadow of what they were.

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ProfessorCal_ t1_iwkzjif wrote

it’s amazing to me how long modern human life has been around for. people four thousand years ago were really trading goods together, maybe shaking hands, sharing food, having a laugh and joking about taxes the way we do today. absolutely fascinating. makes you wonder where we’ll be in another four thousand

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MeatballDom t1_iwn9szu wrote

"Checkmate" comes from Persian

>شاه مات‎ (šâh mât, “the king [is] amazed”). Perhaps conflated with Arabic مَاتَ‎ (māta, “to die”).

The origins of the game itself are a bit blurrier, but not four thousand years old blurry. But, there were games four thousand years old that if we went back in time and saw people playing we would probably describe them as "like chess" as they had similar elements.

There's a lot of games from antiquity that we would recognise or be somewhat familiar with, and probably pick up the rules of relatively quickly. https://www.joshobrouwers.com/articles/ancient-greek-heroes-play/

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