5,000-year-old building in Iraq could transform understanding of world’s first city

Archaeology News

5,000-year-old building in Iraq could transform understanding of world’s first city
Kani ShaieUruk
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Archaeologists have just uncovered a 5,000-year-old building in Kani Shaie, Iraq.

During the 2025 excavation campaign, researchers in Iraq unearthed a monumental building that might transform current understandings of Uruk ’s relationship with surrounding regions, a location known as the world’s first metropolis.

As the University of Coimbra announced, Kani Shaie is regarded as the most important archaeological site east of the Tigris River for understanding the sequence of human occupation from the Early Bronze Age through to the 3rd millennium BC…”A region quite literally tied up with the Cradle of Civilization, the 2025 excavations yielded an extraordinary monument that dates back to the very first cities on Earth. Though archaeologists did recover some artifacts pointing to the presence of administrative duties, they haven’t been able to confirm it yet, but it indicates that this site held political significance.The remarkable structure shows that Kani Shaie was a “…key actor in shaping cultural and political networks,” researchers stated in a press release.New political building outside UrukKani Shaie was located almost 300 miles north of Uruk, which would have taken over two weeks to reach from the legendary city, according to Live Science. However, the recent discovery suggests that the adjacent settlement, although not nearby, was part of a larger network that extended across ancient Mesopotamia.Bringing the ancient, 5,000-year-old building to the surface, researchers from the University of Coimbra and the University of Cambridge believe that the “monumental structure,” one that, due to its size, could only be political in nature, might be a temple.Thus far, archaeologists have recovered several pieces of intriguing evidence that the structure was public or ceremonial. They found “a fragment of a gold pendant,” according to the news release, “reflecting social displays of wealth and access to precious metals within an apparently peripheral community; and a cylinder seal from the Uruk period, an artefact associated with administrative practices, control and legitimization of power.”According to The Jerusalem Post, cylinder seals found onsite would also indicate the stamp of authority. However, until archaeologists can scientifically confirm that the building was an official structure, the speculation remains. But the evidence looks promising.The press release continued that “they also identified wall cones, decorative elements typical of monumental architecture and widely attested in Uruk, which reinforce the interpretation of the building as a public or ceremonial structure.”Live Science continued that the flat parts of the ones would have been painted to create an illusion of a mosaic, a visual effect that would have included geometric designs, such as triangles and zigzags.Cradle of Civilization reframedAncient Uruk, a city of 80,000 people, was laid out with administrative and residential neighborhoods, once again linking this radiating structure over two weeks away by foot, to the world’s first city that might have had a more extensive political reach than was previously understood.Now the question remains— will archaeologists be able to prove it? Excavations began in 2013, and they found evidence of occupation beginning from around 6500 BCE, according to Archaeology News. The findings show that the ties that kept the Cradle of Civilization together were stronger and wider than archaeologists ever knew.

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