Enmebaragesi, king of Kish, is the oldest…
2505 BCE to 2494 BCE
Enmebaragesi, king of Kish, is the oldest Mesopotamian ruler from whom there are authentic inscriptions.
These are vase fragments, one of them found in the temple oval of Khafajah (Khafaji).
In the Sumerian king list, Enmebaragesi is listed as the penultimate king of the First dynasty of Kish; a Sumerian poem, “Gilgamesh and Aga of Kish,” describes the siege of Uruk by Aga, son of Enmebaragesi.
The discovery of the original vase inscriptions was of great significance because it enabled scholars to ask with somewhat more justification whether Gilgamesh, the heroic figure of Mesopotamia who has entered world literature, was actually a historical personage.
The indirect synchronism notwithstanding, the possibility exists that even remote antiquity knew its “Ninus” and its “Semiramis,” figures onto which a rapidly fading historical memory projected all manner of deeds and adventures.
Thus, though the historical tradition of the early second millennium believes Gilgamesh to have been the builder of the oldest city wall of Uruk, such may not have been the case.
The palace archives of Shuruppak (modern Tall Fa'rah, one hundred and twenty-five miles southeast of Baghdad), dating presumably from shortly after 2600, contain a long list of divinities, including Gilgamesh and his father Lugalbanda.
More recent tradition, on the other hand, knows Gilgamesh as judge of the nether world.
However that may be, an armed conflict between two Mesopotamian cities such as Uruk and Kish would hardly have been unusual in a country whose energies were consumed, almost without interruption from 2500 to 1500 BCE, by clashes between various separatist forces.
The great “empires,” after all, formed the exception, not the rule.