Dubai Telegraph - Iraq dig uncovers 5,000 year old pub restaurant

EUR -
AED 3.879106
AFN 71.836244
ALL 97.811336
AMD 409.193719
ANG 1.896546
AOA 964.767481
ARS 1057.965564
AUD 1.621423
AWG 1.895185
AZN 1.793297
BAM 1.948627
BBD 2.124799
BDT 125.757076
BGN 1.951427
BHD 0.39801
BIF 3108.08826
BMD 1.056122
BND 1.409724
BOB 7.298135
BRL 6.108237
BSD 1.052341
BTN 88.868865
BWP 14.317499
BYN 3.443855
BYR 20699.997333
BZD 2.121212
CAD 1.475794
CDF 3031.070946
CHF 0.934325
CLF 0.037176
CLP 1025.800392
CNY 7.651811
CNH 7.654574
COP 4638.901086
CRC 534.935915
CUC 1.056122
CUP 27.987241
CVE 109.860593
CZK 25.288005
DJF 187.391967
DKK 7.459751
DOP 63.377302
DZD 140.847301
EGP 52.439323
ERN 15.841835
ETB 129.521173
FJD 2.396555
FKP 0.833615
GBP 0.833122
GEL 2.899058
GGP 0.833615
GHS 16.763293
GIP 0.833615
GMD 74.453318
GNF 9069.699448
GTQ 8.124094
GYD 220.059938
HKD 8.219219
HNL 26.589625
HRK 7.533594
HTG 138.242425
HUF 409.331816
IDR 16812.516711
ILS 3.95249
IMP 0.833615
INR 89.124787
IQD 1378.525516
IRR 44468.030174
ISK 145.4805
JEP 0.833615
JMD 166.908754
JOD 0.749106
JPY 164.434545
KES 136.739257
KGS 91.358758
KHR 4274.306342
KMF 490.859257
KPW 950.509681
KRW 1474.515714
KWD 0.324737
KYD 0.876972
KZT 522.187777
LAK 23073.283512
LBP 94236.698004
LKR 306.175837
LRD 191.527689
LSL 19.023949
LTL 3.118455
LVL 0.638837
LYD 5.133153
MAD 10.514196
MDL 19.125777
MGA 4918.962692
MKD 61.523484
MMK 3430.244075
MNT 3588.703562
MOP 8.436544
MRU 41.882224
MUR 48.89539
MVR 16.317201
MWK 1824.808623
MXN 21.30283
MYR 4.718227
MZN 67.549792
NAD 19.026462
NGN 1768.803991
NIO 38.727806
NOK 11.64068
NPR 142.191924
NZD 1.793975
OMR 0.406608
PAB 1.052326
PEN 3.993599
PGK 4.234453
PHP 62.304351
PKR 292.445633
PLN 4.337977
PYG 8195.907685
QAR 3.837872
RON 4.975922
RSD 116.964891
RUB 105.76711
RWF 1447.499029
SAR 3.964845
SBD 8.839236
SCR 14.123089
SDG 635.259601
SEK 11.583217
SGD 1.417126
SHP 0.833615
SLE 23.865744
SLL 22146.361842
SOS 601.397587
SRD 37.533002
STD 21859.599575
SVC 9.208104
SYP 2653.538845
SZL 19.021251
THB 36.646628
TJS 11.186222
TMT 3.706989
TND 3.315794
TOP 2.473539
TRY 36.43942
TTD 7.145696
TWD 34.367268
TZS 2802.929587
UAH 43.446088
UGX 3874.736724
USD 1.056122
UYU 45.173711
UZS 13496.318762
VES 48.397494
VND 26838.708277
VUV 125.384963
WST 2.948261
XAF 653.560464
XAG 0.034096
XAU 0.000402
XCD 2.854224
XDR 0.800465
XOF 653.560464
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.925472
ZAR 19.146821
ZMK 9506.370021
ZMW 29.071261
ZWL 340.070954
  • RBGPF

    59.6500

    59.65

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.0590

    24.565

    -0.24%

  • SCS

    -0.1100

    13.09

    -0.84%

  • RIO

    0.3100

    62.43

    +0.5%

  • CMSD

    -0.0460

    24.344

    -0.19%

  • NGG

    0.6800

    63.58

    +1.07%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    6.62

    -1.06%

  • GSK

    -0.2300

    33.46

    -0.69%

  • RELX

    0.2500

    45.29

    +0.55%

  • BTI

    0.2500

    36.93

    +0.68%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    8.92

    0%

  • AZN

    0.4100

    63.8

    +0.64%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    27.31

    +0.29%

  • BCC

    -3.3600

    138.18

    -2.43%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.26

    +0.23%

  • BP

    -0.3300

    29.09

    -1.13%

Iraq dig uncovers 5,000 year old pub restaurant
Iraq dig uncovers 5,000 year old pub restaurant / Photo: Asaad NIAZI - AFP

Iraq dig uncovers 5,000 year old pub restaurant

Archaeologists in southern Iraq have uncovered the remains of a tavern dating back nearly 5,000 years they hope will illuminate the lives of ordinary people in the world's first cities.

Text size:

The US-Italian team made the find in the ruins of ancient Lagash, northeast of the modern city of Nasiriyah, which was already known to have been one of the first urban centres of the Sumerian civilisation of ancient Iraq.

The joint team from the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Pisa discovered the remains of a primitive refrigeration system, a large oven, benches for diners and around 150 serving bowls.

Fish and animal bones were found in the bowls, alongside evidence of beer drinking, which was widespread among the Sumerians.

"So we've got the refrigerator, we've got the hundreds of vessels ready to be served, benches where people would sit... and behind the refrigerator is an oven that would have been used... for cooking food," project director Holly Pittman told AFP.

"What we understand this thing to be is a place where people -- regular people -- could come to eat and that is not domestic," she said.

"We call it a tavern because beer is by far the most common drink, even more than water, for the Sumerians", she said, noting that in one of the temples excavated in the area "there was a beer recipe that was found on a cuneiform tablet".

- 'Regular people' -

The world's first cities developed in what is now southern Iraq, after agricultural surpluses from the domestication of the first crops allowed the emergence of new social classes not engaged directly in food production.

The Lagash area, close to the confluence of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, was dubbed the "garden of the gods" by the ancients for its fertility and gave rise to a string of Sumerian cities dating back to the early dynastic period.

"Lagash was one of the important cities of southern Iraq," Iraqi archaeologist Baker Azab Wali told AFP, after working with the US-Italian team on the site.

"Its inhabitants depended on agriculture, livestock, fishing, but also on the exchange of goods," he said.

Pittman said the team was eager to learn more about the occupations of the people who used the tavern in its heyday in around 2700 BC to throw new light on the social structure of the first cities.

Detailed analysis would need to be carried out on the samples taken during the excavations the team completed in November.

"There is so much that we do not know about this early period of the emergence of cities and that is what we are investigating," she said.

"We hope to be able to characterise the neighbourhoods and the kinds of occupation... of the people that lived in this big city who were not the elite," she added.

"Most of the work done at the other sites focuses on kings and priests. And that is all very important but the regular people are also important."

T.Prasad--DT