Tower of Babel
Ancient Babylon Ruins Inscription

The modern day Tower of Babel ruins, on the outskirts of ancient Babylon (modern Iraq) are currently 150 feet above the plain with a circumference of 2300 feet. When translating the inscription, the Greeks used the word Babel for Borsippa, which means Tongue-tower. About 1,637 years after creation of the original tower it was rebuilt and an inscription written by the King of Babylon.

"I have completed its magnificence with silver, gold, other metals, stone, enameled bricks, fir and pine. The first which is the house of the earth’s base, the most ancient monument of Babylon; I built and finished it. I have highly exalted its head with bricks covered with copper. We say for the other, that is, this edifice, the house of the seven lights of the earth, the most ancient monument of Borsippa. A former king built it, (they reckon 42 ages) but he did not complete its head. Since a remote time, people had abandoned it, without order expressing their words. Since that time the earthquake and the thunder had dispersed the sun-dried clay. The bricks of the casing had been split, and the earth of the interior had been scattered in heaps. Merodach, the great god, excited my mind to repair this building. I did not change the site nor did I take away the foundation. In a fortunate month, in an auspicious day, I undertook to build porticoes around the crude brick masses, and the casing of burnt bricks. I adapted the circuits, I put the inscription of my name in the Kitir of the portico. I set my hand to finish it. And to exalt its head. As it had been in ancient days, so I exalted its summit."

King Nebuchadnezzar, c. 605 B.C.



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