1Private Baths of Mohenjo-Daro
Almost every home in the ancient city of Mohenjo-daro, which existed over 4,000 years ago, was equipped with a private bathing area with drains that emptied into a larger sewage drain.
2. The first wheels were not used for transportation. Evidence indicates that they were created to serve as potter's wheels around 3500 B.C. in Mesopotamia, 300 years before someone figured out how to use them for chariots.
3. The Behistun Inscription, similar to the Rosetta Stone, was a multilingual inscription that played a key role in decoding cuneiform. It tells the story of King Darius' struggle for power and his conquests in Mesopotamia and Persia.
4. The ancient Indian epic Mahabharata is the longest poem ever written, with 200,000 verses and 1.8 million words. It was orally transmitted for centuries before being written down 2,500 years ago.
5. The "Indus script," which comprised of symbols used by the Indus Valley Civilization, remains undeciphered to this day. It was in use from around 3500 to 1900 BCE.
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6Babylonian Beer
The ancient Babylonians took their beer very seriously. If a brewer was found to be watering down his beer, he would either be drowned in the barrel or forced to drink it until death.
7. Indoor gardening has been practiced since ancient times, with early civilizations in Egypt, India, and China using potted plants in outdoor settings such as courtyards.
8. Crocodile dung was used as one of the earliest contraceptives in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia.
9. Ancient civilizations discovered iron tools before the Iron Age by finding meteorites made of iron and nickel that didn't require smelting.
10. For centuries, Kurdish villagers knew an ancient rock relief as "Naram-Sin" without knowing its meaning. Later, archaeologists discovered it to be a depiction of Naram-Sin of Akkad, King of the Akkadian Empire, the world's first empire, who ruled over 4,200 years ago.
11Early Stone Pillows
Historically, pillows were made of stone and were not intended to be comfortable. The first pillows were used around 7,000 BC in Mesopotamia and were carved in the shape of a cradle.
12. The first proper banks likely originated in ancient Mesopotamia, where evidence suggests that temples and palaces throughout Babylonia and other cities provided lending activities. However, much of this was not in the form of financial lending but rather lending out seeds.
13. This picture of an ancient tablet is actually a 5,000-year-old beer receipt. The "Alulu beer receipt" records a purchase of the "best" beer from a brewer circa 2050 B.C. in the Sumerian city of Umma, ancient Iraq.
14. Ancient Egyptians loved board games, and a well-known Bronze Age game, which was invented in Egypt 4,000 years ago, had one player choose Hound pegs, and the other Jackal pegs. Carved out of ivory, pieces of the game have been found in Mesopotamia, Israel, Syria, Iran, Azerbaijan, Levant, and the Mediterranean.
15. Dentistry is one of the oldest medical professions, dating back to 7000 B.C. from the Indus Valley Civilization.
16Fart Jokes Through History
Fart jokes have existed since at least 1900 B.C. The world's oldest recorded joke is a Sumerian quip about a woman farting in her husband's lap.
17. Approximately 5,000 years ago, workers in ancient Mesopotamia were paid in beer rations. A 3,900-year-old poem featuring Ninkasi, the goddess of brewing, also describes the oldest surviving beer recipe.
18. The oldest drinking straw in existence was found in a Sumerian tomb dated 3,000 B.C. It was a gold tube inlaid with precious stones.
19. Sumer was the first known civilization in southern Mesopotamia, dating back to between 6,000 and 5,000 B.C. Its writing dates back to around 3000 B.C., with the oldest texts coming from the cities of Uruk and Jemdet Nasr.
20. The Assyrians had basic lens technology, and one of their creations, the Nimrud lens, dates back to 710 B.C., though its purpose is debated. Lenses could have been used for starting fires, decoration, or as astronomy tools (with references to the snakes of Saturn being the rings or mythology).
21Pillows as Symbols of Status
In ancient Mesopotamia, only the wealthy used pillows, and the number of pillows symbolized status. So, the more pillows one owned, the more affluence he or she held.
22. The Harappan city of Mohenjo Daro was the first to use a grid system for its streets.
23. The Code of Hammurabi gave total jurisdiction over brewing and beer to women, who were known as "she" in every tavern owner reference. Women in Sumerian society were primarily responsible for brewing beer and were allowed to operate their own taverns.
24. Buttons were first discovered in the Indus Valley Civilization. Dating back to 2800-2600 B.C., they were made from sea shells and were initially used for ornamental purposes.
25. Mirrors were made as far back as 6000 B.C., which predates the invention of writing. The earliest mirrors were made from obsidian and have been found in Anatolia in modern-day Turkey.