Page 19 - Diva_3_2024_Irak Special_
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It is not everyday that you have a chance to meet  writing. It’s a lucky thing because even though
               one  of  the  world’s  most  famous  specialists  on   the  ancient  Babylonians  ere  extinct,  their
               cuneiform writing. Dr Finkel has written many   language,  Babylonian,  is  related  to  modern
               books both scientific and fiction, and is a true  languages  of  the  Hebrew,  Aramaic,  Arabic,
               scholar whose activities include giving lectures,  and Syriac family – the Semitic group.
               some of which you can find on YouTube. He is
               in particular known for his discoveries linked to  So,  when  they  began  to  work  out  how  the
               the Royal Game of Ur, in ancient Mesopotamia,   script  could  be  understood,  they  learned
               a  game  going  back  some  3,500  years,  that  they could understand the language as well,
               people still play, and that you can find only in  and then translate things properly. Before the
               the British Museum.                    Babylonians  were  there,  there  was  a  people
                                                      called the Sumerians, and they used the same
               We had a chance to meet with Dr Finkel and  writing,  but  their  language  was  something
               ask  him  a  lot  of  questions.  He  speaks  with   completely  different.  There’s  no  modern
               enthusiasm  about  his  field  –  Mesopotamia,   relative  of  Sumerian,  so  we  have  to  use
               cuneiform writing, and all sorts of things that   Babylonian texts to understand the Sumerian
               happened long before we arrived on the scene.  texts.
               He has the gift of making people interested in
               his fields – history and archaeology. The floor is  It’s  a  fantastic  thing,  and  the  whole  of  life
               yours Dr Finkel                        is recorded on these rather strange looking
                                                      things  which  people  are  often  rather  rude
               To  start,  could  you  please  tell  us  a  little  bit   about  when  they  see  them.  They  often
               about yourself and your work?          say  that  they  look  like  nothing,  but  we
               My name is Dr Irving Finkel. I’m a curator in   have  literature,  magic,  medicine,  history,
               the British Museum in London where I’ve been  astronomy, astrology, grammar, love letters,
               working  since  1979,  which  is  rather  a  long   business letters.
               time. I was very lucky because when I went to
               university, I learned to read cuneiform writing.  Isn’t  it  difficult  to  continually  sit  there  and
               I  had  a  very  strict  professor.  I  was  his  only   read and understand what is written?
               student,  and  I  learned  the  ancient  Sumerian  Well, it depends on how you do it. You see,
               and  then  the  ancient  Babylonian  languages   I  was  so  fortunate  because  my  professor
               with him. I wrote my PhD with him, and then  was extremely strict and he didn’t want any
               I went to Chicago for three years. After that,   wasted  time.  He  said,  “If  you’re  going  to
               I got a job in the British Museum, which has   do this, you have to learn all of it,” and he
               always been my ambition. I’ve been there ever  never  said  anything  polite  or  friendly.  For
               since, and I hope to be there for at least another   six years, I had one-to-one teaching, like a
 Interview with   hundred years. I’m in the department called the   master class for a violinist. Sometimes some
               Middle East and we have archaeological objects
                                                      students  came  for  a  while,  but  they  didn’t
 Dr Irvin      from  all  over  what  people  call  the  Middle  stay  long.  He  said,  “You  have  to  learn  to
                                                      read both languages, any kind of text, any
               Eastern world. We have a big collection of these
 Finkel        cuneiform inscriptions, which are written on   period.”  So,  I  was  sent  out  into  the  world
               pieces of clay.                        with  the  best  possible  training.  I  went  to
                                                      Chicago  where  they  wrote  the  modern
               The writing starts, well, probably about 3,500   dictionaries of these ancient languages.
 Curator in the   BC  and  lasts  all  the  way  down  to  the  first

 British Museum   century  AD,  so  three  and  a  half  thousand   There also it was an amazing world because
               years.  It’s  the  writing  before  the  alphabet,  they  worked  like  in  a  cancer  research  unit.
 in London,    so it’s a syllabary, and not an alphabet. They   They  were  all  very,  very  serious.  They  even
 United Kingdom   wrote it on bits of clay which last in the ground   went to work on Christmas Eve. You had to
               marvelously. In the nineteenth century, they   work  all  the  time.  I  went  from  this  intense
               started  to  dig  them  up  during  excavations,   training  to  an  intense  workplace.  When  I
               and they eventually managed to decipher the   went to the British Museum, where you have



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