Once upon a time, in the land known as Sumer, the people built a temple to their god, who had conquered the forces of chaos and brought order to the world. They built this temple at a place called Eridu, which, as scholar Gwendolyn Leick notes, was:

One of the most southerly sites, at the very edge of the alluvial river plain and close to the marshes: the transitional zone between sea and land, with its shifting watercourses, islands and deep reed thickets.

(City, 2)

From this rural setting, the Mesopotamian city arose, and urbanization – wherever it developed in the region afterwards – would become central to Mesopotamian personal identity, communal commerce, education, industry, military, religious, and cultural advances from circa 4000 BCE onwards. The rise of the Mesopotamian cities not only came to define the region but also its people. Leick writes:

Mesopotamian scribes considered urban life as the only form of civilized communality. A person's civic identity was that of a citizen of a particular city with its suburbs and surrounding countryside. Nonurban members of the population defined themselves by tribal allegiance.

(A to Z, 42)

The city was not just somewhere to live but also provided people their identity, livelihood, and purpose in life. In the same way people today champion their individual city and its landmarks, culinary specialities, and peculiarities, so did the people of ancient Mesopotamia. The city also came to be associated with kingship and, therefore, order. The semi-mythical Sumerian King List gives the first five cities on which kingship was bestowed by divine will:

Kingship, according to this document, passed from Eridu on down to Shuruppak and from there further, maintaining the divine vision of social order first realized at Eridu. Although modern-day scholarship has proven this a false narrative, the worldview expressed in the Sumerian King List shows how the city was equated with order and civilization at the time the piece was written during the Ur III Period (circa 2112 to circa 2004 BCE).

Why did the first cities rise in Mesopotamia? The simplest answer is that people established communities near water sources. developed irrigation techniques to draw that water toward their fields, and so attracted others who wanted the same level of affluence they saw in those living in that locale. As more people arrived, the city developed not only to encourage economic growth, but to protect those engaged in making that happen through a king, government, laws, walls, a military force, and religious/cultural obligations.

This marshy area around Eridu represented to the people the life-giving force of the god and provided a physical manifestation of the order their god had created from chaos; the sweet waters of life were celebrated at Eridu as they were associated with what the Sumerians called the abzu, the primordial source of all existence, the realm in which the gods lived and from which they emerged.

The god Enki came forth from the abzu and dwelt at Eridu, and the Sumerian King List states, "After kingship had descended from heaven, kingship was in Eridu," meaning that, to the Sumerians, Eridu was the first city and the origin of the divine mandate of kingship that would maintain order. Leick writes:

Thus the Mesopotamian Eden is not a garden but a city, formed from a piece of dry land surrounded by the waters. The first building is a temple…This is how Mesopotamian tradition presented the evolution and function of cities, and Eridu provides the mythical paradigm. Contrary to the biblical Eden, from which man was banished forever after the Fall, Eridu remained a real place, imbued with sacredness but always accessible.

(City, 2)

Eridu was not only the first city in the world to the Sumerians, but the beginning of civilization. Every other city ever raised, they believed, had its origin in the sand and waters which surrounded Eridu.

Modern scholars disagree on why the first cities in the world rose in the region of Mesopotamia instead of elsewhere. Theories range from the ancient alien hypothesis to social or natural upheavals that forced people to band together in urban centers, to environmental concerns, and even to forced migration of rural communities to cities. None of these theories is universally accepted, while the ancient alien hypothesis is rejected by every reputable scholar.

What is agreed upon, however, is that the moment the ancient Sumerians of Mesopotamia decided to engage in the process of urbanization, they changed the way humans would live forever. Scholar Paul Kriwaczek writes:

This was a revolutionary moment in human history. The were consciously aiming at nothing less than changing the world. They were the very first to adopt the principle that has driven progress and advancement throughout history, and still motivates most of us in the modern times: the conviction that it is humanity's right, its mission and its destiny, to transform and improve on nature and become her master.

(20)

This principle Kriwaczek refers to is perhaps no more than the natural inclination of human beings to gather together for safety from the elements, or it could have its roots in religion and communal religious practices, which, among the benefits they offer, provide an assurance that there is order and meaning behind the seemingly random events of life. The scholar Lewis Mumford claims:

The habit of resorting to caves for the collective performance of magical ceremonies seems to date back to an earlier period, and whole communities, living in caves and hollowed-out walls of rock, have survived in widely scattered areas down to the present. The outline of the city as both an outward form and an inward pattern of life might be found in such ancient assemblages.

(1)

Whatever it was that first gave rise to the development of the cities in Mesopotamia, the world would never be the same. Kriwaczek writes:

From before 4,000 BCE, over the next ten to fifteen centuries, the people of Eridu and their neighbors laid the foundations for almost everything that we know as civilization. It has been called the Urban Revolution, though the invention of cities was actually the least of it.

With the city came the centralized state, the hierarchy of social classes, the division of labour, organized religion, monumental building, civil engineering, writing, literature, sculpture, art, music, education, mathematics and law, not to mention a vast array of new inventions and discoveries, from items as basic as wheeled vehicles and sailing boats to the potter's kiln, metallurgy and the creation of synthetic materials.

And on top of all that was the huge collection of notions and ideas so fundamental to our way of looking at the world, like the concept of numbers, or weight, quite independent of actual items counted or weighed – the number ten, or one kilo – that we have long forgotten that they had to be discovered or invented. Southern Mesopotamia was the place where all that was first achieved.

(20 to 21)

The concept of the city, first manifested in the construction of Eridu, did not remain bound by that area for long. Urbanization spread rapidly across the region of Sumer, beginning circa 5000/4500 BCE with the rise of the city of Uruk, understood today as the world's first city. Eridu, claimed by the Sumerians as the first city, provides little in its ruins to suggest it was ever any more than a sacred centre, perhaps even defined as a large village or town by modern-day standards of scholarship.

Uruk, on the other hand, was an enormous urban center and the point of origin for several important cultural advances, the most notable being the invention of writing circa 3200 BCE, but also the birthplace of the ziggurat, advances in architectural works in stone, and the creation of the cylinder seal, which was a citizen's form of legal identification. At its height, Uruk was the most powerful, largest, and wealthiest city in ancient Mesopotamia, and, according to Sumerian literature, this is because the meh, basically the god-given rules of civilization, were taken from Eridu to Uruk, and as the latter rose in power, the former diminished.

Sumerian mythology supports the contention that Uruk superseded Eridu in the poem Inanna and the God of Wisdom. In this work, the goddess Inanna, whose home is in Uruk, goes to Eridu to visit her father Enki. Kriwaczek notes,

Mesopotamians recognized Enki as the god who brings civilization to humankind. It is he who gives rulers their intelligence and knowledge; he 'opens the doors of understanding'…he is not the ruler of the universe but the gods' wise counsellor and elder brother…Most importantly, Enki was the custodian of the meh, which the great Assyriologist Samuel Noah Kramer explained as the "fundamental, unalterable, comprehensive assortment of powers and duties, norms and standards, rules and regulations, relating to civilized life."

(30)

At the beginning of the poem, Inanna says, "I shall direct my steps to Enki, to the Apsu, to Eridu, and I myself shall speak coaxingly to him, in the Apsu, in Eridu. I shall utter a plea to Lord Enki,” indicating clearly that she wants something from her father. Enki seems to be aware of her coming and instructs his servant to make her welcome, to "pour beer for her, in front of the Lion gate, make her feel as if she is in her girl-friend's house, make her welcome as a colleague.”

Inanna sits down to drink beer with her father and, as they become progressively more drunk together, Enki offers his daughter one meh after another until she has over a hundred. Enki then seems to pass out from the drinking, and Inanna, with the meh, hurries from Eridu back toward Uruk. When Enki wakes and finds he has lost his meh, he sends his servant Isimud to get them back.

The rest of the poem relates Isimud's futile attempts to keep Inanna from reaching Uruk with the meh. She succeeds in bringing "the Boat of Heaven to the Gate of Joy” at Uruk, and "Where the boat came to dock at the quay, she named that place with the name White Quay” to commemorate her triumph. The poem has been interpreted to render, in symbolic form, the transfer of power and prestige from the city of Eridu to Uruk – and the development of urbanization that led to the rise of other cities.

This version of events, of course, comes from Sumerian mythology, but there has existed, since serious excavations began in the mid-19th century, ample evidence to suggest that there is some historical truth behind the poem. Eridu did seem to decline as Uruk rose in prestige, even though the older city always remained a sacred centre and place of pilgrimage.

As further archaeological excavations have proceeded in the Near East, however, scholars have come to question whether the traditional view of urbanization beginning in Sumer and spreading north can still be considered valid. The discovery of the settlement of Tell Brak (in modern-day Syria), founded circa 6000 BCE, seems to some scholars to suggest that the Urban Revolution may have begun in the north and that the claim that it originated in Sumer has only been accepted because the Sumerians invented writing and so their version of history has come to be regarded as truth and, of course, because the earliest excavations of the 19th century were in Sumer.

While the settlement at Tell Brak is older than Eridu, the question of where cities first rose is best addressed by defining what is meant by a "city" in ancient times. Professor M. E. Smith of Arizona State University writes:

The earliest large urban settlement was Tell Brak in the dry farming zone of northern Mesopotamia. During the Uruk period (3800 to 3100 BCE) this city consisted of a central zone of public architecture surrounded by sprawling suburban settlement over 1 square kilometer in extent. At the end of this period, the site declined and the focus of urban development shifted to southern Mesopotamia.

(The Sage Encyclopedia of Urban Studies, 24)

The problem with this assertion, however, is that it fails to address the definition of "city." Was Tell Brak a "city" or a large town or village? Professor George Modelski of the University of Washington maintains that it was not a city and bases his claim on the 1987 work of the historian Tertius Chandler, Four Thousand Years of Urban Growth. Chandler claims that an ancient city should be defined by the size of its population. Modelski writes:

One important estimate concerns Uruk, that on the basis of the work of Robert Adams (1967, 1981), as the largest city of the very early period.

(3)

Tell Brak, according to his definition of a city, would be regarded as more of a settlement since the population does not seem to have been great enough to qualify it as an urban centre. This, of course, is a modern method of determining what is and what is not a city, and there is no way of knowing how the ancient Mesopotamians would have defined the city or how they regarded a settlement such as Tell Brak.

What is certain, however, is that, for whatever reason, the Urban Revolution began in Mesopotamia and, it also seems certain, in the region of Sumer. Regarding the various theories as to why Sumer and not elsewhere, Kriwaczek writes that some scholars

see the emergence of civilization as an inevitable consequence of evolutionary changes in human mentality since the end of the last ice age…But we humans aren't really like that; we don't react so unthinkingly. The actual story would have to allow for the everlasting conflict between progressives and conservatives, between the forward and backward looking, between those who propose 'let's do something new' and those who think 'the old ways are best', those who say, 'let's improve this' and those who think 'if it ain't broke, don't fix it'. No great shift in culture ever took place without such a contest.

(21)

Once upon a time, in the land known as Sumer, the people built a temple to their god, who had conquered the forces of chaos and brought order to the world. Those people then continued the work of their god and established order throughout the land in the form of the city. The answer to the question of why it happened in Mesopotamia instead of elsewhere can best be found in considering the culture of that particular society.

The people of Mesopotamia, regardless of the region or ethnicity, shared the common concern with establishing and maintaining order and, because of their religious beliefs, a near-obsession with control of the natural world. It should not be surprising, then, that such a culture would have been the first to conceive of and construct the urban entity which most completely separates human beings from their natural environment: the city.