In the 1920s, an archaeologist named Leonard Woolley dug into a royal grave in southern Iraq. Inside, next to the bones of a man who had been buried alive, he found small bright pieces of shell and blue stone in the dirt. The wooden box they had been stuck to was gone. The pieces had fallen into the soil more than 4,000 years before. Woolley lifted them out carefully and put them back together. The result is one of the most famous objects from the ancient world. We call it the Standard of Ur. It is a small box, no bigger than a school bag. But on its two long sides, it tells a story: war on one side, a feast on the other. There is no writing. The whole story is told in pictures, row by row, like a comic strip from 2,500 years before the birth of Jesus. This object can teach us how people who lived 4,500 years ago thought about kings, soldiers, prisoners, food, and power. It can also teach us a hard question that people are still arguing about today: who should keep the Standard of Ur — Britain, where it has been since 1928, or Iraq, where it was made and found?
Most students will put themselves, their family, or their leader as the biggest figure. Some will think about which moments to show — a wedding, a harvest, a war. This sets up the key idea: the Standard of Ur is not a neutral picture of life in Ur. It is a chosen story, told from the king's point of view. The king is the biggest figure. He breaks out of the top of the frame because he is so important. The artist is not making a mistake — the artist is showing us who matters most. Every choice is a choice about power.
The king sits and drinks. Other men bring him food, animals, and goods. The further down the picture, the harder the work. The artist is not hiding this — the artist is showing it on purpose. This is the order the king wanted: I sit at the top, others work below. Some students will notice that the workers do not look angry or sad. We do not know if they were happy. We only know how the king wanted them to look. The picture is a kind of advert for the king's rule. It says: 'Look how well I provide for my people. Look how peaceful my kingdom is.'
This is the heart of the object. The king is saying two things at once: 'I win wars' and 'I bring peace and plenty.' One side is the price of the other. You cannot have the feast without the battle. Some scholars think the two sides may even be one story: a battle, then the victory feast. The Standard is not just a picture — it is an argument. It tells the people of Ur, and the gods, that this king deserves to rule. Students can be asked: do leaders today still tell this same story? When you see a leader on the news with soldiers, then with farmers, what is being said?
There is no easy answer, and that is the point. Both sides have a real argument. Those who say it should stay in London point to: the 1928 agreement with the Iraqi government of the time, the museum's care of the object, free public access, the danger to objects in Iraq during recent wars. Those who say it should go home point to: the object was made by people whose descendants are Iraqi, the 1928 agreement was signed under British influence (Iraq was not fully independent), Iraqi museums today are working hard and successfully, and a country has a right to its own history. This is a real debate happening right now. Students do not need to pick a side. They need to see that both sides are made of real arguments by real people.
The Standard of Ur is a small box, about the size of a school bag, covered in a mosaic of shell, red stone, and blue lapis lazuli. It was made in the city of Ur, in what is now Iraq, about 4,500 years ago. One side shows war: a king winning a battle and taking prisoners. The other side shows peace: the same king at a feast while workers bring him food. Together, the two sides are an early example of a leader using art to tell a story about power. The Standard also raises a question we are still asking today: when an object is made in one country and kept in another, who does it belong to?
| Question | What we know | What we do not know |
|---|---|---|
| What was it for? | It was buried in a royal tomb. It was important. | We do not know if it was carried in battle, used in ceremonies, or part of a musical instrument. |
| Who made it? | Skilled craft workers in the city of Ur. | We do not know their names. We do not know if they were free or enslaved. |
| Who is the king on it? | A Sumerian ruler, around 2600 to 2400 BCE. | We do not know his name. There is no writing on the object. |
| Where is it now? | The British Museum, London, since 1928. | We do not know where it will be in 100 years. The debate about returning it is ongoing. |
| How was it made? | Small pieces of shell, red limestone, and lapis lazuli stuck onto wood with black tar. | We do not know exactly how the artists planned the design before fixing the pieces. |
People in the ancient world were not as clever or skilled as people today.
The people who made the Standard of Ur were highly skilled artists. They worked with tiny pieces of imported stone and made a picture more detailed than many things we make today.
Students often think 'old' means 'simple'. In fact, the Sumerians had cities, schools, laws, mathematics, and art that we still admire 4,500 years later.
The Standard of Ur shows what life in Ur was really like.
The Standard shows what the king wanted people to think life in Ur was like. The picture is chosen, not neutral.
Every picture made by powerful people is a kind of message. Students should learn early that 'a picture from the past' is not the same as 'the past'.
The Standard of Ur belongs in the British Museum because Britain saved it.
This is one view, but it is not the only one. Many people, including many Iraqis, argue the Standard belongs in Iraq. The 1928 agreement was made when Iraq was under British control, which complicates the picture.
There is no simple right answer here. Students must learn that some questions stay open, and that smart people can disagree for good reasons.
We can read the Standard of Ur because we have the writing on it.
The Standard has no writing at all. Everything we say about it comes from looking at the pictures and thinking carefully.
This helps students see that pictures can tell stories without words — and that our 'reading' of the Standard is partly a guess.
This lesson touches on living debates that need care. First, Iraq is a real country with a long, rich history that goes far beyond recent wars; do not let the lesson leave students with the impression that Iraq is only a place of conflict. The Sumerians are the cultural ancestors of modern Iraqis, who are proud of this heritage. Second, the question of where the Standard belongs is contested and unresolved; do not present the British Museum's position as the natural or correct one, and do not present repatriation as a simple matter either. Both sides have serious arguments and sincere people. Third, the war scene shows naked prisoners and dead bodies; describe these clearly but calmly, and do not joke about the violence — these were real people. Fourth, do not call Sumerian society 'primitive' or its art 'simple'; the Standard is finer than most modern mosaics. Finally, the man buried with the Standard was likely killed at the king's funeral; mention this once, plainly, and do not dwell on it for shock.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Standard of Ur.
What is the Standard of Ur made of, and how old is it?
Why is the king drawn so much bigger than the other people on the Standard?
What story do the two sides of the Standard tell when you look at them together?
Give one argument for keeping the Standard of Ur in London, and one argument for sending it to Iraq.
Why is it useful that the Standard of Ur has no writing on it?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk about them in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
Should the Standard of Ur be returned to Iraq? Why or why not?
If you were the king of Ur and you could only put one picture on a box to be remembered by, what would you choose?
The Standard shows workers carrying heavy loads while the king sits and drinks. Is the artist showing this to praise the king, or to criticise him?
Your feedback helps other teachers and helps us improve TeachAnyClass.