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Ichingcarpenter

(36,988 posts)
Fri Jan 27, 2012, 07:15 AM Jan 2012

Sex, Beer & Politics: Riddles from the ancient Mesopotamians.

Millennia before modern-day Americans made fun of their politicians or cracked crude jokes over a cold one, people in ancient Mesopotamia were doing much the same thing.

The evidence of sex, politics and beer-drinking comes from a newly translated tablet, dating back more than 3,500 years, which reveals a series of riddles.


umor

Some of the decoded riddles are crude and sexual, while others are complex and metaphorical. One of them reveals what appears to be a bit of political humor, albeit with a dark, violent twist.

He gouged out the eye:

It is not the fate of a dead man.

He cut the throat: A dead man (-Who is it?)

The answer is a governor.

"This riddle describes the power of a governor namely to act as a judge who punishes or sentences to death," write Streck and Wasserman in the journal article.


In(?) your mouth and your teeth (or: your urine)

constantly stared at you

the measuring vessel of your lord (-What is it?)

The answer........... guess before looking at link.






Another one:

One of the riddles appears to rely on metaphor to get its point across.

The tower is high

it is high, but nonetheless has no shade (- What is it?)

The answer is ........ guess before looking at link.




Like a fish in a fish pond

Like troops before the king (-What is it?)

The answer is ....... guess before looking at link.

http://www.livescience.com/18147-ancient-riddles-decoded-mesopotamia.html

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