3,000-Year-Old World’s Oldest Map Deciphered
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3,000-Year-Old World’s Oldest Map Deciphered

The British Museum has solved the mystery of the Babylonian world map, which is almost 3,000 years old. A recent video from the British Museum reveals new insights into the world’s oldest map: a Babylonian clay tablet called the Imago Mundi. Dating back to the 7th century BC, this ancient map, inscribed in Akkadian cuneiform, was found in Sippar (modern Abu Habba, Iraq) and acquired by the British Museum in 1882. Despite its significance, it remained a mystery until curators recently transcribed its inscriptions. The tablet shows a top-down view of Mesopotamia, framed by a circular “bitter river” representing the boundary of the known world. The British Museum has solved the mystery of the Babylonian world map, which is almost 3,000 years old. Inside this circle, symbols mark various cities, including Babylon, and the Euphrates River cutting through Mesopotamia, reflecting the Babylonians’ belief that their land was the center of the world. Dr. Irving Finkel, a British Museum curator, explains that the tablet not only depicts geography but also explores the Babylonians’ vision of lands beyond their known world. This included mythical creatures, like the scorpion-man and a lion-headed bird named Anzu, and hints at a well-known flood story that predates the Bible. In this story, a Babylonian Noah figure, Utnapishtim, built an ark by divine command, which came to rest on a mountain beyond the “bitter river.” The tablet also shows the Babylonians’ belief in gods like Marduk, the creator deity, and creatures like the scorpion-man and the Anzu, a lion-headed bird. Dr. Finkel notes that this map not only captures the known world but also hints at the Babylonians’ imaginations of lands beyond—fusing reality, myth, and geography into a single ancient vision. The post 3,000-Year-Old World’s Oldest Map Deciphered appeared first on Anomalien.com.