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Thank you for joining us on this journey into ancient Sumerian wisdom. Subscribe for more educational content that uncovers the forgotten truths of the past. Sumerian Text Reveals Why We Were Left Behind and Not Taken Description: The Oldest Written Answer to Why We Are Alone Over five hundred thousand clay tablets have been excavated from ancient Mesopotamia. Fewer than ten percent have been fully translated. Among them lies a narrative repeated across centuries of Sumerian writing, describing a divine council that created humanity for a specific purpose, deliberately limited what we could become, and then departed. The Atra Hasis epic details how humans were fashioned from clay mixed with the blood of a slaughtered god. The Epic of Gilgamesh records the explicit policy that immortality was kept from us by design. The Sumerian King List chronicles when kingship descended from heaven and when it was taken away. These are not obscure fragments. They are humanity's oldest written records, and they tell a consistent story about creation, limitation, and abandonment that most people have never actually read. The Scholarship Behind the Story Sumerian is a language isolate with no known linguistic relatives, making translation extraordinarily challenging. Scholar Samuel Noah Kramer of the University of Pennsylvania spent four decades translating these texts. The critical edition of the Atra Hasis epic by W.G. Lambert and A.R. Millard remains the standard academic reference. Thorkild Jacobsen's analysis of Mesopotamian religious concepts established the framework for understanding divine hierarchies in these cultures. The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature at Oxford University has digitized primary sources for scholarly access. Archaeological work at Ur, Eridu, and Nippur has provided physical context for these written accounts. The tablets referenced in this video are held at the British Museum, the Louvre, the Penn Museum, and the Vorderasiatisches Museum in Berlin. Every claim about textual content comes from peer reviewed translations and established academic interpretations. Sources for Further Reading Kramer, Samuel Noah. The Sumerians: Their History, Culture, and Character. University of Chicago Press, 1963 Lambert, W.G. and Millard, A.R. Atra Hasis: The Babylonian Story of the Flood. Clarendon Press, 1969 Jacobsen, Thorkild. The Treasures of Darkness: A History of Mesopotamian Religion. Yale University Press, 1976 Bottéro, Jean. Religion in Ancient Mesopotamia. University of Chicago Press, 2001 George, Andrew. The Babylonian Gilgamesh Epic: Introduction, Critical Edition and Cuneiform Texts. Oxford University Press, 2003 Crawford, Harriet. Sumer and the Sumerians. Cambridge University Press, 2004 Van De Mieroop, Marc. A History of the Ancient Near East. Wiley Blackwell, 2015 Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature. University of Oxford. http://etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk Civil, Miguel. The Sumerian Flood Story. Published in Lambert and Millard, 1969 Michalowski, Piotr. The Lamentation over the Destruction of Sumer and Ur. Eisenbrauns, 1989 About This Channel This content is created for educational and informational purposes. Our goal is to widen understanding of historical scholarship and primary source material that remains inaccessible to general audiences. Every script is human written following extensive research into academic publications, archaeological findings, and peer reviewed translations. Visual storytelling and narrative structure are developed internally by our team to present complex scholarly material in an engaging format. We believe that ancient texts deserve accurate representation, not sensationalism, and that viewers benefit from content grounded in actual evidence rather than speculation.