AKKADIA
Akkad (Agade) was the capital of the Akkadian Empire which ruled over a large expanse of ancient Mesopotamia from 2300 BCE to 2100 BCE. Today, the exact location of Akkad is unknown but there are a number of sources that suggest its establishment to be near modern-day Baghdad. Despite a relatively short existence of about 200 years in the region, the Akkadian Empire recorded many major firsts in history. The King Sargon of Akkad united all the Akkadian speaking Semites and the Sumerian speakers under one sole rule within a multilingual territory, which would become known as the world’s first empire.
Links
* The image for Akkadia 101 comes from this link: Akkadia
[i] “the Curse of Akkad”
[ii] Naram-Sin
[iii] the Gutians
[iv] overpopulation, internal revolts, and poor managerial skills
[v] a dramatic climate change
[vi] Sumerians
[vii] Sumer
[viii] Sumerians' system of cuneiform writing
[ix] Morocco
[x] Jordan
[xi] Bahrain
[xii] this new conception of governance in Mesopotamia
[xiii] kingship
[xiv] Enheduanna
[xv] Inanna
[xvi] Rimush
[xvii] Manishtusu
[xviii] who expanded the Empire’s boundaries, increased trade, and led successful conquests
[xix] in the ancient Near East between the 3rd and 1st millennia BCE
[xx] half a million tablets written
[xxi] invented the first postal service
[xxii] based on finger and forearm lengths
[xxiii] The Akkadian economy relied primarily on agriculture
[xxiv] Akkadians were asked to pay taxes
By Oumaima Fathi