Tecnology of The Ancient Near East

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The book discusses technologies from the Ancient Near East ranging from construction and metallurgy to water management and timekeeping based on archaeological, textual and scientific evidence.

The book discusses technologies related to warfare, construction, metallurgy, ceramics and glass, water management and time keeping within their cultural and historical contexts.

The book discusses ancient technologies based on archaeological, textual, historical and scientific data drawn from a wide range of sources including literary, artistic and archaeological findings.

TECHNOLOGY OF THE

ANCIENT NEAR EAST

In this conversationally engaging volume, Baker has deftly collected the many
materials, machines, and technological applications that defined and enriched the
lives of those dwelling in the Ancient Near East into the Roman Era. Based firmly
on a wide array of literary, artistic, and archaeological sources, Technology of the
Ancient Near East provides an essential piece of the puzzle of the society, culture, and
history of the region, and it fills a longstanding gap on the bookshelves of all who
are interested in the history of technology, ideas, and the human quest to manipulate
the natural world.
— Georgia Irby, The College of William and Mary, USA

Peoples of the distant past lived comfortably in cities that boasted well-conceived
urban planning, monumental architecture, running water, artistic expression,
knowledge of mathematics and medicine, and more.Without the benefits of modern
technology, they enjoyed all the accoutrements of modern civilization.
Technology of the Ancient Near East brings together in a single volume what is
known about the technology behind these achievements, based on the archaeo-
logical, textual, historic, and scientific data drawn from a wide range of sources,
focusing on subjects such as warfare, construction, metallurgy, ceramics and glass,
water management, and time keeping. These technologies are discussed within the
cultural, historic, and socio-economic contexts within which they were invented
and the book emphasises these as the foundation upon which modern technology
is based. In so doing, this study elucidates the ingenuity of ancient minds, offering
an invaluable introduction for students of ancient technology and science.

Jill L. Baker is an Independent Researcher in Ancient Near Eastern Archaeology


and a Faculty Fellow (adjunct) in the Honors College at Florida International
University, USA. She is the author of The Funeral Kit: Mortuary Practices in the
Archaeological Record and co-author of The Greensboro Blockhouse Project: An Historical
and Archaeological Investigation in Greensboro,Vermont.
TECHNOLOGY OF THE
ANCIENT NEAR EAST
From the Neolithic to the
Early Roman Period

Jill L. Baker
First published 2019
by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
and by Routledge
711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
© 2019 Jill L. Baker
The right of Jill Baker to be identified as author of this work has been
asserted by her in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright,
Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or
utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now
known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in
any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing
from the publishers.
Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or
registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and
explanation without intent to infringe.
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Baker, Jill L., 1964- author.
Title: Technology of the ancient Near East: from the neolithic
to the early Roman period / Jill Baker.
Description: Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2018. |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2018008047 (print) | LCCN 2018012061
(ebook) | ISBN 9781351188111 (ebook) | ISBN 9781351188104
(web pdf) | ISBN 9781351188098 (epub) | ISBN 9781351188081
(mobi/kindle) | ISBN 9780815393689 |
ISBN 9780815393689q (hardback:qalk. paper) |
ISBN 9780815393696q (pbk.: qalk. paper) |
ISBN 9781351188111q (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Technology–Middle East–History. |
Middle East–Antiquities.
Classification: LCC T16 (ebook) | LCC T16.B35 2018
(print) | DDC 609.394–dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018008047

ISBN: 978-0-8153-9368-9 (hbk)


ISBN: 978-0-8153-9369-6 (pbk)
ISBN: 978-1-351-18811-1 (ebk)

Typeset in Bembo
by Sunrise Setting Ltd, Brixham, UK
CONTENTS

List of figures vii


Acknowledgements x
Maps xi
Chronology of Mesopotamia, Egypt, Canaan, and Greece xiv

1 Introduction 1

2 Early technologies 12

3 Stone 18

4 Wood 28

5 Metals 34

6 Bonding agents: glue, plaster, mortar, cement, bitumen 48

7 Engineering, machines, power, and energy 60

8 Construction 82

9 Warfare 104

10 Textiles 124

11 Ceramic and glass technology 143


vi Contents

12 Water management and technology 155

13 Medicine 173

14 Daily life 194

15 Transportation 216

16 Timekeeping 238

17 Food as technology 251

18 Writing, arts, weights, measures, and currency 274

19 Summary and discussion 285

Bibliography 295
Index 322
FIGURES

2.1 Lascaux Cave 13


3.1 Unfinished obelisk and quarry at Aswan, Egypt 21
3.2 Transporting colossal statues 23
3.3 Stone drill 24
3.4 Cargo loaded onto an aircraft using rollers 25
3.5 Depiction of an obelisk loaded onto a barge from the Mortuary
Temple of Queen Hatshepsut 25
3.6 Locations from Jerusalem’s ancient quarries 27
4.1 Dendrochronology, or tree ring dating, relies on annual growth
rings of trees to establish chronology and atmospheric conditions
during the life of the tree 29
4.2 Egyptian woodcutters felling a tree 32
4.3 Scenes of maritime transportation and preparation of timber 32
5.1 Native copper, gold, silver 35
5.2 Timna mines in southern Israel 37
5.3 Timna copper smelting site and copper smelting in the
tomb of Rekhmira 40
5.4 Turin papyrus map 42
5.5 The Berlin Foundry Cup 45
6.1 Bitumen 54
6.2 Middle Bronze Age mudbrick gate complex, Ashkelon, Israel 57
6.3 Egyptian mudbrick manufacturing and laying 58
6.4 Examples of Roman fired brick 59
7.1 Block and tackle 61
7.2 Deir el-Bahari, Hatshepsut’s Temple, the Voyage to Punt 62
7.3 Recreation of a rope roller 63
viii Figures

7.4 Shaduf in use in modern-day Egypt 65


7.5 Life-size crane replica and graphic recreation of a crane 66
7.6 Jerusalem, Western Wall Tunnel 66
7.7 Early wheels 68
7.8 Stone block functioning as axle between wheels for easy
transport from quarry to site 69
7.9 Lever and fulcrum lifting a heavy load 70
7.10 Possible ramp scenarios used by ancient Egyptians to
construct the pyramids 71
7.11 Depictions of Egyptian surveying scenes 72
7.12 Surveying instruments 73
7.13 Olive presses at Tel Miqne-Ekron 76
7.14 Olive presses at Maresha 77
7.15 Processing grapes to make wine 77
7.16 Baghdad battery 79
7.17 Baghdad battery experiment in the classroom 80
8.1 Stone detail on Temple Mount, Jerusalem 84
8.2 Examples of stone masonry construction, depiction of wall
construction and two examples from Qumran and the
Jerusalem Archaeological Park 86
8.3 Casemate walls 87
8.4 Select examples of domestic dwellings of the Bronze Age 89
8.5 Select examples of temples 93
8.6 Illustration of a rampart and city gate 96
8.7 Selected wood construction techniques 98
8.8 Jerusalem Archaeological Park near the southern end
of the Temple Mount 99
8.9 Egyptian pyramids 100
9.1 Royal Battle Standard of Ur. The war side depicting a
defeated enemy, including warriors and horse drawn chariots 105
9.2 Stele of the Vultures. Victory stele of King Ennatum of Lagash,
who was victorious over Umma 106
9.3 Siege of Lachish, by Sennacherib, King of Assyria,
ca. 701 BCE 109
9.4 Reliefs from Sennacherib’s palace in Nineveh, depicting
the Siege of Lachish dating to ca. 701 BCE 110
9.5 Assyrian soldiers using inflated pigskins to cross bodies of water,
as an underwater breathing apparatus, or to float rafts 115
9.6 Reliefs depicting siege engines from Sennacherib’s Siege of
Lachish and the Palace of Nimrud 119
9.7 Masada 120
9.8 Ashkelon Middle Bronze Age gate 121
10.1 Recreation of spindles and whorls and loom weights and
Egyptian spinning scene 132
Figures ix

10.2 Depictions of horizontal and vertical looms from ancient Egypt 133
10.3 Depictions of some garments from Canaan and Egypt 137
12.1 Nilometers in Egypt 157
12.2 Sebastia, Nablus. Restored clay pipes in use 160
12.3 Qumran canal system 161
12.4 Western Wall Tunnel, Jerusalem, Israel 162
14.1 Woman being showered by attendants 196
14.2 A man’s double-style wig, said to have been found in its
storage box in Thebes, Egypt 202
14.3 Two Egyptian combs, one decorated 203
14.4 The tomb of Nakht in Thebes. Perfume cones atop the
head of female guests and the blind harpist at a banquet in
honor of the deceased 205
14.5 Selection of Egyptian mirrors 206
14.6 Musicians and dancers, Tomb of Nebamun, Thebes and
kohl container 209
15.1 Examples of coracles 217
15.2 Reed boats used in the conquest of a marsh village 218
15.3 Line drawings made from reliefs found in Queen
Hatshepsut’s funerary temple at Deir el-Bahri, Egypt 220
15.4 Phoenician merchant ships and warships 223
15.5 Roman roads 236
16.1 Early calendars 240
16.2 Sippar, Mesopotamia. The library in the Šamaš temple 242
16.3 Calculating year length 247
17.1 Recreation of a hearth with the main fire for cooking, and
areas to the side for slow-cooking or warming previously
cooked foods 256
17.2 Egyptian cooking scenes 257
17.3 Court Bakery, Ramesses III (ca. 1186–1155 BCE)
Twentieth Dynasty Egypt, Valley of the Kings, Tomb KV11 259
17.4 Beer drinking scenes 261
17.5 Beekeeping in the Tomb of Rekhmara, Vizier of Upper Egypt
in the reign of Thutmose III and Amenhotep II 267
18.1 Cuneiform tablet. A tablet from the Tell el-Amarna letters
dating to the fourteenth century BCE 276
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This book has been a work-in-progress for a long time. The inspiration for this
volume comes from my fascination with modern technology and by moments of
invention and innovation among ancient peoples. Eventually, my fascination grew
into a large body of research, then a class, and now, finally, a book. I hope those who
read this book will be inspired by ancient peoples’ knowledge and application of
science and technology. I have been.
Numerous people have accompanied me along the way, offering their support and
useful and creative thoughts. I am grateful for their involvement in this work. To the
Routledge referees, I am grateful for and appreciate your constructive comments and
useful suggestions. You have made this work stronger. To C. Chapman, S. Cohen, and
S. Gitin, who read early drafts of the manuscript, I am grateful for and appreciate your
support, ideas, and constructive comments. You have helped to shape this work, mak-
ing it stronger and well rounded. To Janet Angelo of IndieGo Publishing, I am deeply
thankful for your detailed, diligent, and creative editing. Your thoughts and suggestions
have contributed much to this work. To the W. F. Albright Institute of Archaeological
Research, to the Directors (Emeritus and current), to the Library Staff, and to the Staff,
I am grateful for use of the library and for accommodation and meals; you provided a
productive and collegiate base camp from which to conduct research. To Archaeological
Horizons, Inc. thank you for providing a travel grant, making research for this book
possible. To L. Northup, Honors College, Florida International University, thank you
for the opportunity to share the ingenuity of ancient peoples with modern students. To
the FIU Honors College students who have taken my class, I am grateful for your
enthusiasm, curiosity, and insightful questions. You have been inspiring and thought
provoking. I am also grateful to friends and colleagues, especially S. Cohen and S. Gitin,
for friendly but useful banter and professional advice regarding the mechanics of the
manuscript. Any inaccuracies in this work are my own.
Finally, but not least, I am deeply grateful to my family for their unconditional
support, especially to my husband, J. Tidy, who has been supportive and patient
while I have been ‘in the zone’. This book is dedicated to you all.
MAPS

MAP 1 Depicting the major regions of the ancient Near East and eastern Mediterranean
Adapted from GoogleMaps.

MAP 2 Select sites and kingdoms in Mesopotamia


Adapted from GoogleMaps.
MAP 3 Select sites in ancient Egypt
Adapted from GoogleMaps.

MAP 4 Select sites in Canaan/ancient Israel


Adapted from GoogleMaps.
MAP 5 Select sites in Anatolia (modern Turkey)
Adapted from GoogleMaps.
Chronology of Mesopotamia, Egypt, Canaan, and Greece
The assignment of dates to chronological periods is complex and remains the subject of much discussion.The dates listed below
are approximate and represent a middle-of-the-road approach to ancient Near Eastern chronology. These are meant to provide
general dates for the periods discussed in this work and do not advocate for or against any specific chronological scenario.
(Dates based on The New Encyclopaedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land; University of Chicago, Oriental Institute
Museum Timeline; Hamblin 2006.)
Unless otherwise noted, dates are BCE.

Mesopotamia Egypt Canaan

Neolithic 10,000–6200 Neolithic 7000–4500 Neolithic 10,000–5500


Hasuna, Samarra, 6200–5000 Pre-Dynastic 4500–3000 Pre-Pottery 8500–6000
Halaf Periods Archaic 3000–2686 Pottery 6000–5500
Ubaid 5000–4000 Old Kingdom 2689–2125 Chalcolithic 5500–3300
Late Uruk 4000–3100 1st Intermediate 2166–2055 Early Bronze I 3300–3050
Middle Kingdom 2055–1650 Early Bronze II 3050–2700
Jamdat Nasr 3100–2900 2nd Intermediate 1650–1550 Early Bronze III 2700–2300
Early Dynastic I 2900–2650 New Kingdom 1550–1069 Middle Bronze I 2300–2000
Early Dynastic II 2650–2550 3rd Intermediate 1069–664 (EB IV/Intermediate)
Early Dynastic IIIA 2550–2400 Late Period 664–332 Middle Bronze IIA 2000–1750
Early Dynastic IIIB 2400–2350 Ptolemaic Period 332–30 Middle Bronze IIB-C 1750–1550
Akkadian 2350–2150 Roman Period 30 BCE–395 CE Late Bronze I 1550–1400
Neo-Sumerian 2150–2000 Late Bronze II 1400–1200
Old Assyrian/ 2000–1600 Iron Age I 1200–1000
Isin-Larsa- 2000–1600 Iron Age II 1000–586
Old Babylonian Babylonian and 586–332
Middle Assyrian 1430–934 Persian Periods
Neo-Assyrian 934–612 Hellenistic 332–37
Neo-Babylonian 625–539 Roman 37 BC–324 CE
Achaemenid 538–331 Byzantine 324–638 CE
Persian 547–334 (late Roman)
Macedonian/ Seleucid 330–64
Parthian 250 BCE–224 CE
1
INTRODUCTION

When considering the concept of technology, what comes to mind? Most people
living in the twenty-first century immediately think of computers, mobile phones,
tablets, smart watches, voice-interaction apps, global positioning system (GPS)
devices, 3D printers, and other types of high-tech equipment. Some might also
include machines such as power tools, kitchen appliances, automobiles, airplanes, and
bulldozers under the umbrella of technology. Equating the notion of technology with
electronic gadgets and machines has become commonplace because they have
become so permanently integrated into the fabric of our lives and our very being.
Today, some people have never known life without computer technology, and many
people have never known what it’s like to live without basic electronic machines
such as electric stoves, dishwashers, washing machines, clothes dryers, and fans.
For many, it seems impossible to imagine a productive or comfortable life without
these conveniences, yet in the distant past, people lived comfortably in cities that
boasted monumental architecture, running water, access to doctors and medicine,
knowledge of mathematics and astronomical events, and artistic expression in the
form of sculpture, music, and theater. They enjoyed all the accoutrements of modern
civilization without the aid of modern technology.
The purpose of this work is to explore some of the technologies employed by
the peoples of the ancient Near East. In doing so, we will consider the unique func-
tion and contribution of these technologies to the construction of civilization, as
well as their evolution and continued use in modern civilization. To achieve this
goal, this study will specifically offer a survey of technologies utilized in
Mesopotamia, Egypt, Canaan, and Anatolia from the Neolithic to the early Roman
period (ca. 8500 BCE–132 CE). This is not meant to be an exhaustive survey, but
rather an examination of selected technologies that contributed to the creation,
development, and perpetuation of these ancient civilizations. Narrowing the
chronological and geographic range for the purpose of this study is deliberate.
2 Introduction

The primary foci of this work will be on earlier pre-Hellenistic and Roman
periods; however, important technologies that migrated to the Near East from
Greece and Rome will be discussed, such as aqueducts and Roman cement. An
exhaustive study of the technologies of the Hellenistic and Roman periods in the
Near East is best left to a dedicated volume. To be sure, the technologies brought
to the Near East by the Greeks and Romans were impactful; however, the use and
complexities of Graeco-Roman technology in the Near East deserve to be addressed
in a separate volume. Additionally, numerous Classical scholars have expertly and
meticulously discussed Greek and Roman technology (Humphrey et al. 2006; Oleson
2008; Landels 2000). To do so here would be redundant, and would significantly
add to the length of this volume.
This study is intended to be a kind of first resource for those who wish to learn
about the technologies of the ancient Near East but who will go beyond this work.
It is meant to begin a discussion and inspire students of all fields and generations—
professional and proletarian—to dive deeper into the topics presented here. It will
present a broad picture of technologies used over a wide region by summarizing in
one volume the ancient resources, excavation reports, focused studies, research, and
recent discoveries that have formed an important foundation for our understanding
of ancient technology. While these works provide important data, they are so
specific that they are rarely integrated into broader studies. Here, these foundational
works will be illuminated in an attempt to underscore the breadth and intercon-
nection of ancient technological knowledge.
Finally, it is my hope that the reader will be inspired by the ingenuity, research,
problem-solving ability, tenacity, and curiosity of these ancient peoples to achieve
organized and sophisticated civilizations without the aid of electricity, combustion
engines, electronic gadgets or computers. There is room in our knowledge bank to
learn from the technologies designed, built, and used by these ancient peoples, and
to consider how those technologies can be applied in our world today. Ancient
systems were not necessarily simplistic or irrelevant when compared to modern
ones.With an open mind, one can apply ancient technologies in new and innovative
ways or be inspired to create entirely new approaches or systems that may prove
useful in resolving present and future problems.
While teaching a course entitled Ancient Technology, it became clear that
numerous academic resources discuss technology beginning in the eighth/seventh
century BCE onward and focus mainly on the achievements of the Greeks and
Romans. Certainly, this was a vibrant period of scientific advancement and engi-
neering marvels, and many of the philosophic, scientific, and engineering concepts
that we use today were developed or advanced during that time. Philosophers such
as Thales of Miletus (ca. 624–546 BCE), Anaximander of Miletus (ca. 610–546 BCE),
and Pythagoras of Samos (ca. 570–495 BCE) advanced the basic tenets of mathematics,
physics, science, and medicine.There were notable inventors, such as Archimedes of
Syracuse (ca. 287–212 BCE), who invented (among other things) a screw consisting
of an evenly measured spiral that wound around a central cylindrical shaft, and
Heron of Alexandria (ca. 10–70 CE), who developed a wind-powered organ, a force
Introduction 3

pump, a steam engine called an aeolipile, and temple doors that opened and closed
automatically. These machines are antecedents to many of our own devices, and
deserve recognition as such. However, many achievements of the Greeks and
Romans were made possible by an extensive and solid foundation of scientific
and mechanical knowledge already theorized and applied in Mesopotamia, Egypt,
and Canaan long before the Greek or Roman periods.The experience, knowledge,
and research of Near Eastern peoples, together with that gained from China and
India, provided the foundation upon which the early Greek philosophers and
scientists made their discoveries and developed their innovative technology that
propelled humankind toward automation and mechanization.
Some modern academic resources acknowledge the technological and scientific
achievements of the peoples of the ancient Near East; however, few of these
achievements have been explored in detail or synthesized into one volume. While
it is recognized that a thorough discussion of Bronze and Iron Age technology is
necessary and worthwhile, it is understood that such a discussion would require a
separate study (Oleson 2008:3). After cobbling together outdated references and
recent archaeological reports and articles for my class, it became clear that enough
material exists to compile a handbook dedicated to an integrated study of the tech-
nology of the ancient Near East.This work will focus mainly on the Mesopotamians,
Egyptians, Canaanites, and Israelites and some of the technologies they employed
to create their magnificent urban centers and cultures.
One might pose the question, why study ancient technology? After all, human-
kind and technology have progressed significantly since the period from 8500 BCE
to 132 CE in the ancient Near East. What can possibly be learned from scientists,
engineers, architects, and doctors who lived millennia ago? A stock response from
an archaeologist’s point of view is that understanding our past can help us make
informed decisions regarding the present and future. However, humankind rarely
learns from the past, and if it does, that knowledge is rarely incorporated into the
decision-making process to solve present-day problems. Instead, humankind often
repeats the same mistakes and poor decisions without analyzing the consequences
that can be gleaned from history. Nevertheless, much can be learned from the
successes and failures of the past and applied to the present and future.
Archaeology, anthropology, history, and culture elucidate the resumé of
humanity. When going to a job interview, one presents a potential employer with
a resumé or CV summarizing the experiences and abilities that make one suitable
for the position. Similarly, humankind’s technological resumé establishes the
foundation and skill set upon which to move forward. It shows how people
adapted to their natural surroundings, including micro and macroclimate changes,
and developed new technologies and strategies to cope with and manage those
changes. It is important to recognize the contributions and diligent work of the
scientists, physicists, medical practitioners, mariners, engineers, metallurgists, and
artists who lived before us; to understand how new technologies interacted with
and advanced society; and to ask whether ancient principles can be applied to our
present and future world.
4 Introduction

Additionally, significant technological, scientific, and industrial advancement


stagnated and much knowledge was lost in the Near East and Europe during the
Middle Ages due to the fall of the Roman Empire, movement of peoples, socio-
political reorganization, scholasticism, and the controlling grip of the Christian
Church in influencing every aspect of society and culture. Studying ancient
technology helps to regain lost knowledge and incorporate some of it into the
present. As we move forward locally, nationally, and globally, ancient lessons learned
can inform present and future decisions to provide a better standard of living and
quality of life for people the world over.

Methodological approach
This work will approach technology from the practical standpoint of an ancient
person with a task to perform, a problem to solve, a structure to build, or a goal to
achieve. We will attempt to observe what the ancient people knew, when they
knew it, how they knew it, and the ways in which they applied or did not apply
their knowledge.
Let’s revisit the opening question: what is technology? The word technology is
comprised of two Greek words: tekhnologia/tekhne, τε′χνη, meaning art, skill, or
craft, and logia, λογι′α, meaning subject of study or interest. Technology can
be defined as “the practical application of knowledge especially in a particular
area” (see www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/technology) and as “the applica-
tion of scientific knowledge for practical purposes, especially in industry” (see
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/technology). Humphrey et al. (2006:xiv)
describe technology as an “attempt by humans to control and master the natural
environment, changing it into a more hospitable, if artificial one,” and as a “process
by which humans accomplish change.” For the purpose of this work and the overall
discussion, technology will be defined as the practical application of knowledge,
scientific or otherwise, to resolve a problem, achieve a goal, satisfy curiosity, make
life easier, or to facilitate change. With this working definition in mind, technology
can encompass a wide range of strategies and systems, some of which may be less
obvious and more passive than others, such as architectural design, artwork, military
organization and tactics, judicial systems, and even religion, all of which were
utilized by ancient peoples to realize their goals and to accomplish change. Though
we may not be aware of it, we use these non-mechanical technologies for the same
purposes today.
To facilitate this survey, previously published research will be synthesized and
integrated to establish a foundation for these technologies.This work will be based
on known studies as a way to assemble a wide variety and scope of resources into
one volume. This work is not meant to be an exhaustive review of all technologies
or previously published works on ancient technology in the Near East. Instead, the
most ubiquitous, instrumental, and informative will be integrated into our dis-
course. For example, in his book Ancient Mesopotamian Materials and Industries,
Moorey (1999) discussed stone working, agriculture, metalworking, ceramic and
Introduction 5

glass crafts, and building methods and materials in Mesopotamia. In Ancient


Egyptian Materials and Technology, Nicholson and Shaw (2009) discussed topics
such as materials used for building, tool making, textiles, leatherwork, and food
technology in ancient Egypt. Scholars have discussed ancient warfare, including
Yadin in The Art of Warfare in Biblical Lands in Light of Archaeological Discovery (Yadin
1963) and Hackett, Warfare in the Ancient World (Hackett 1989), both of which
highlight the technologies used in warfare. And some scholars discuss textiles, such
as Nosch, Koefoed, and Strand in Textile Production and Consumption in the Ancient
Near East (Nosch et al. 2013) and Friend in Tell Taannek 1963–1968 III: The
Artifacts, 2:The Loom Weights (Friend 1998). Each of these references provides valu-
able information; however, each focuses on specific aspects of the ancient world
and related technologies, and does not necessarily integrate those technologies
with the wider Near East. Henry Hodges integrates technologies from the
Neolithic to the early Roman period in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Canaan in
Technology in the Ancient World (Hodges 1992) a valuable work, but one that needs
updating. Equally important are the manuals, handbooks, histories, and observa-
tions written by ancient engineers, physicists, scientists, mathematicians, astrono-
mers, historians, and doctors. These essential works record the research and
development of theories and knowledge established by the world’s earliest research-
ers. The work of people such as Mesopotamian astronomers, Imhotep, Thales of
Miletus, Hesiod, Herodotus, Ctesibius, and Pliny the Elder, established the founda-
tion upon which our principles of science, engineering, physics, mathematics,
astronomy, etc. are built. Throughout this work, reference will be made to the
ancient authors. The accompanying citations will provide the name of the ancient
author, the title of their work, and the chapter and verse of the relevant text, fol-
lowed by one or two modern references that provide easily accessible English
translations of the cited passage. This is to encourage the reader to chase-down the
ancient reference to get a sense of the ancient people’s knowledge, sense of humor,
and understanding of the world around them.
This volume is meant to emphasize and build upon disparate works that discussed
ancient technologies; to summarize the various technologies in use from the
Neolithic to the early Roman period in Mesopotamia, Canaan, and Egypt; and to
illustrate how, when combined, each study contributes to our understanding of the
technology that supported the social, cultural, and economic complexities of
the ancient world.
For the purpose of this work, it is necessary to establish some regional defini-
tions. This work will focus on the ancient Near East. The broader terms ancient
Near East or Levant will be used to refer to ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia (modern
Iraq, southwestern Iran, northeastern Syria), Anatolia (modern Turkey), Canaan
(modern Israel, Jordan, Syria), and Phoenicia (modern Lebanon). Modern Israel
will be referred to as such or in ancient terms such as Canaan, ancient Israel, or
Palestine, as it was known in the Graeco-Roman periods. Use of these geographical
terms is in no way meant to support or refute any current political or religious
ideologies or associations.
6 Introduction

Although the focus will be on the Near East and the Mediterranean basin, tech-
nological invention and innovation were not particular to this area and timeframe.
Concurrently, there were remarkable achievements in technology, engineering, and
medicine in India, China, Europe, and South America. Because humankind
inhabited the whole of the earth, it is important to recognize concurrent uses of
similar technologies and advances in other regions of the ancient world because the
human experience is similar no matter the culture or location. So, throughout this
work, reference will be made to other cultures in other regions of the globe that
were developing and utilizing similar technologies contemporaneous to these
developments in the ancient Near East.

Theoretical approach
What sparks technological discovery, invention, and innovation? What causes people
to create a tool, device, or weapon? Before proceeding, these terms should first be
defined.
Discovery is the act or process of finding, encountering, or gaining knowledge
about something that already exists. For example, electricity exists in nature in the
form of lightning, static electricity, and in creatures such as eels and fireflies
(Lampyridae). Humans did not discover electricity; rather, we figured out how to
harness, manipulate, and produce electricity based on its natural properties.
To invent is to originate, create, fabricate, or produce something as the result of
one’s own ingenuity, research, experimentation, or imagination. For example, Hero
of Alexandria (first century BCE) invented the aeolipile based on his knowledge of
hydraulics and physics.
Innovation applies changes to something that already exists or has been established
to develop it further or to adapt it to a different set of parameters. For example, the
Greeks invented the gastraphetes, a crossbow, as a weapon to hurl projectiles. Based on
the crossbow, the Romans later developed variations of catapults, which also hurled
projectiles, but in different forms and for different purposes.
Scholars have long debated the impetus behind these actions. Were the driving
forces for discovery, invention, and innovation based on need, competition, revo-
lution, conflict, original thought, curiosity, or a combination of these? Humans are
complex beings, and the technologies we have invented throughout the centuries
have primarily been purposeful. Therefore, the development of technologies must
be understood within the historic, cultural, social, economic, and religious contexts
within which they were created and utilized. Some technologies were created
during times of war to outsmart and/or respond to the enemy, such as the catapult.
Others were meant to dazzle and mesmerize, such as Heron’s temple doors that
opened and closed mechanically, without human intervention, to entice worship-
pers to devote their loyalty to one deity over others. Still other technologies were
created at the behest of rulers and their monumental egos, usually in times of war.
The theoretical and practical development of technologies and their application
will be discussed throughout the text. Where relevant, contemporaneous historic
Introduction 7

events and economic, cultural, and religious contexts within which certain tech-
nologies were created will be mentioned. This will provide a framework that may
help to explain the reason certain technologies were deemed necessary.

Technology and society


Technology and society are inextricably interwoven.Without one, the other would
perish. From the moment one individual created a stone tool, that individual
gained an advantage in daily survival. The person/people who made tools for
others and traded or sold those for goods and services they needed gained an even
greater advantage economically, and thus began social complexity, trade, market-
place supply and demand, accumulation of surplus, and power and control. The
creation of technologies irreversibly altered society forever—a pattern that repeats
to this day.
A modern example is the smart phone, specifically the Apple iPhone, the technol-
ogy of which greatly impacted society and economy. The introduction of the iPhone
led to advances in voice-recognition technology, fingerprint identification, social and
industrial competition, and broader forms of communication written and spoken.
So too ancient technologies, such as agriculture, mills, and metallurgy led to complex
societies, accumulation of surplus, and power for those who controlled the technology
and surplus. Technology allowed for leisure time and the emergence of social classes
and altered the way people interacted with each other. It led to a stronger economy,
competition in the marketplace, domestic and international trade, and the exchange
of ideas.
It can be argued that new, innovative technologies can have a positive and a
negative impact on society. Technology can positively impact society by resolving
problems, increasing production, improving health and food production, and
making daily survival easier. However, technology widens the gap between socio-
economic classes, allowing the rich to become very wealthy and the poor to remain
poor. Technology can also be harmful to the environment: air and water pollution
due to smelting and the depositing of waste in rivers; deforestation from felling trees
for construction and fuel; the irreparable scarring of the earth due to mining.
Some technologies were welcomed with great relief and enthusiasm. For example,
water mills literally released people from the “daily grind” of having to pulverize
grain into flour every day, which was celebrated by Antipater of Thessalonica (Greek
Anthology 9.418):

Cease from grinding, ye women who toil at the mill; sleep late, even if the
crowing cocks announce the dawn. For Demeter has ordered the Nymphs to
perform the work of your hands, and they, leaping down on the top of the
wheel, turn its axle which, with its revolving spokes, turns the heavy concave
Nisyrian mill-stones. We taste again the joys of the primitive life, learning to
feast on the products of Demeter without labour.
(Paton 1917:232–233. See also Humphrey et al. 2006:31)
8 Introduction

Others cursed technology, such as in Plautus’ The Woman from Boeotia, wherein the
speaker was not pleased with the increased reckoning of time:

The gods confound the man who first found out


How to distinguish hours! Confound him, too,
Who in this place set up a sun-dial
To cut and hack my days so wretchedly
Into small portions! When I was a boy,
My belly was my only sun-dial, one more sure,
Truer, and more exact than any of them.
This dial told me when ’twas proper time
To go to dinner, when I had aught to eat;
But nowadays, why even when I have,
I can’t fall to unless the sun gives leave.
The town’s so full of these confounded dials
The greatest part of the inhabitants,
Shrunk up with hunger, crawl along the streets.
My master Favorinus too, when I was reading the Nervularia of Plautus,
and he had heard this line of the comedy.
Old, wheezing, physicky, mere foundered hags
With dry, parched, painted hides, shrivell’d and
shrunk, delighted with the wit of the archaic words that describe the ugly
defects of harlots, cried: “By heaven! just this one verse is enough to con-
vince one that the play is Plautine”
( Fragments, Boeotia, 1, De Melo 2013:432–433.
See also Humphrey et al. 2006:517)

Today, technology continues to have positive and negative effects on society. For
example, the introduction of the iPhone created marketplace competition, friendly
social rivalry (iPhone versus Android), questions regarding workplace ethics and
conditions in factories that manufacture iPhones (Mielach 2012; Bilton 2014), and
medical ethical dilemmas created by stem cell technology, cloning, and artificial
intelligence. This reliance on these technologies has also created what some are
calling digital dementia (Greenfield 2015), the condition in which people no longer
remember phone numbers, cannot do math without the aid of a calculator, cannot
spell words correctly or write well-constructed sentences, and do not remember
information because they can simply look it up on the internet. These are a few
examples of how technology can change daily life and society for the better and for
the worse. As humankind continues to create and integrate new technology, its
effects on humanity and society must be considered.
The earliest technologies were based on naturally occurring, observable
phenomena. Early peoples were acutely aware of nature’s recurring cycles—spring,
summer, autumn, winter—and adapted to each of them accordingly. The cyclical
nature of the seasons was observable in the phases of the moon throughout the
Introduction 9

month and the sun’s path throughout the day, in the movement of celestial bodies
in the night sky, in weather cycles, and by the migration of animals and the growth
cycle of vegetation. Humankind was also acutely aware of biological cycles—birth,
life, death, and illness. Humankind’s ability to understand nature’s technology even-
tually led to the ability to harness and manipulate various aspects of it. Even as
hunter-gatherers, people recorded the movement of celestial bodies in the night
sky, enabling a better understanding of the passage of seasons and the reckoning of
time, which was helpful for predicting the availability of food resources.
Because of their keen observation, and to meet their nutritional needs, people
gradually domesticated the flora and fauna that were amenable to human interven-
tion. The progression from hunter-gatherer to sedentary agriculturalist and the
work of animal husbandry should not be underestimated. It required persistent
attention to detail as well as observation, research, trial and error, and ingenuity on
the part of early peoples who developed techniques and technologies, many of
which remain in use today. As humankind progressed, technology and society
became inextricably interwoven. As technology advanced, society became more
complex, creating the division of labor and craft specialization.With the advancement
of technology, leisure time and demand for luxury items increased, as did the accu-
mulation of wealth, leading to greed, exploitation, and poverty. Although society
advanced in food production, tool making, and weapons production, the divide
between rich and poor grew exponentially.

How do we learn about ancient technology? The resources


Multiple resources will be utilized to piece together knowledge of technology in
the ancient Near East.These include artifacts recovered from archaeological investi-
gation, artwork such as reliefs and wall paintings, painted decoration on ceramics
and figurines, and written texts. Much of what is known about ancient engineering
and technology is revealed in the monuments and artifacts left behind by peoples
who did not always record their achievements in the form of handwritten
instructional manuals or journals.
Prior to the written word, knowledge was passed orally from one person to
another, from generation to generation, through narratives, legends, songs, and
poems. Dissemination of knowledge was also achieved through apprenticeship.
Highly skilled master craftsmen passed their knowledge to the next generation in
trades such as masonry, carpentry, metallurgy, textile production, and agriculture
through hands-on training and guidance. For example, this type of information
sharing is reflected in architecture, monumental and mundane. Eventually, informa-
tion was written down, and there was a shift from a memory-based, oral tradition
to a more permanent method of record keeping that employed writing. Pre-literate
societies, however, did not lack technological knowledge, as evidenced in their
architecture, ceramics, and material culture.
From the Bronze Age onward in Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Canaan, textual
evidence contributes greatly to our knowledge of ancient technology directly and
10 Introduction

indirectly. Egyptian medical papyri provide detailed descriptions of disease, treat-


ment, and pharmaceuticals, and cuneiform tablets from the library of Ashurbanipal
discuss astronomical events, mythologies, and mathematics. Early forms of writing
appear as glyphs, pictures used to represent a concept, phrase, or word, which
eventually evolved into an alphabet comprised of symbols and/or letters. Early
forms of these include hieroglyphics (later hieratic), Cuneiform, and Hebrew.
Writing was used by the state to record royal heredity, rations, labor, accounts of
war, and legends; by temples to record religious rites, mythologies, offerings, rations;
by merchants to record orders, income, expenditures; and by early doctors who created
early medical handbooks (Egypt). Libraries and archives of tablets and scrolls kept at
Ugarit (ca. 1200 BCE), Ashurbanipal (ca. 668–627 BCE), and the library at Alexandria,
Egypt (ca. third century BCE) preserved literary works, census reports, astrological
observations, calculations, and much more. As more people became literate, poetry
and narratives were available for popular consumption as exemplified by multiple
copies of the Egyptian Tale of Sinuhe (Lichtheim 1975:222–235).
The reliefs and paintings found in monumental temples, palaces, on stelae and
on obelisks found in Egypt and Mesopotamia provide a wealth of information
regarding war tactics, weaponry, architecture, law, historic events, religious beliefs,
burial practices, and afterlife scenarios. State-sponsored information sharing, or
rather propaganda, was disseminated via large-scale reliefs on the walls of massive
temples and palaces, which functioned as the news media of the ancient world.
These reliefs announced to all who set eyes on them the deeds and accomplish-
ments of kings and pharaohs. For example, the exterior reliefs at Medinet Habu and
Karnak Temple announced to the Egyptian public and to visitors the achievements
of the pharaoh(s) and helped to legitimize his reign. Similarly, the reliefs from
Sennacherib’s palace at Nineveh (ca. 701 BCE) depict the siege of Lachish (Canaan),
illustrating battle tactics, weaponry, and architecture.
The combination of pictorial representation and writing ensured that the literate
and illiterate could understand who was in charge and the deeds that had been
accomplished. A glimpse into daily life, occupations, and family life were also
depicted in tomb paintings and reliefs, figurines, seals, and artifacts. Although paint-
ings and reliefs in tombs, temples, and palaces may seem mundane and insignificant,
they represent the daily realities of royal and non-royal peoples who comprised the
nation-state and contributed to the vitality of the economy and complexity of
society. These depictions describe relatively normal aspects of daily life that would
otherwise go unnoticed or did not survive into the archaeological record.
The data gathered from archaeological excavation also contribute greatly to our
understanding of ancient technology. The investigation of architecture allows us to
understand construction technique and materials. Daily activities and foodstuffs are
illuminated through installations such as beehives, altars, and olive and wine presses.
Industry is revealed through the discovery of looms and loom weights, coins, and
storage jars and warehouses. Personal hygiene and adornment are evidenced by
jewelry, wigs, and combs made from bone and ivory. Pottery vessels, such as bowls,
juglets, and jars, provide information regarding manufacturing techniques. Some
Introduction 11

ceramic forms were task-specific, and ceramic typologies can be arranged into
chronological sequence, which is useful when determining dates for specific strata
within an archaeological context.Thus, the architecture, pottery, and material culture
found in the archaeological record contribute greatly to our understanding of
technology in the ancient world.
The modern resources utilized in this work will include excavation reports,
secondary studies, journals, and electronic sources, as well as scholarly websites.
Given that this is a textbook about ancient technology, it is fitting that modern
technology should be integrated. Many scholars remain reluctant to utilize elec-
tronic resources, especially websites found on the internet. As with any resource,
however, including printed matter such as books and journals, the information
contained within must be judged for its scholarly integrity and quality. That said,
there are numerous organizations and independent scholars producing quality work
and publishing it on the internet. Organizations such as the British Museum and
the Metropolitan Museum of Art; online journals such as PlosOne and LiveScience;
and research institutes, such as the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology and The
Antikythera Mechanism Research Project, offer scholarly research and data. It is
important to integrate the internet into academic discipline and discern between
the websites that offer accurate data and interpretations and those that do not.
Therefore, websites with high academic integrity will be referenced and their data
woven throughout the fabric of this work.
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