All Object Lessons
Belief & Identity

The Warka Vase: A 5,000-Year-Old Story That Was Almost Lost

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, art, ethics, religion, citizenship
Core question How does a 5,000-year-old stone vase, made by people who had only just invented writing, end up being smashed during a modern war and then returned in the boot of a car — and what does its incredible story teach us about the long survival of art, the power of looting, and the deep connection between ancient cities and the modern people who claim them as heritage?
The Warka Vase, made around 3200-3000 BCE in the Sumerian city of Uruk (modern Warka, Iraq). One of the earliest surviving examples of narrative relief sculpture in human history. The three carved bands show a religious procession bringing offerings to the goddess Inanna. Now in the Iraq Museum in Baghdad. Photo: Solider 16IQ / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0
Introduction

Around 3200 BCE, in a city called Uruk in what is now southern Iraq, a craftsman or a team of craftsmen made an extraordinary object. They took a block of alabaster — a soft, pale, translucent stone — and hollowed it out into a tall slim vase, about a metre high. Then they spent many weeks, perhaps months, carving the outside of the vase with three bands of figures. The lowest band showed plants — date palms, barley, water reeds — and above them, rows of rams and ewes walking together. The middle band showed naked men carrying baskets and jars of food, walking in a procession. The top band showed the climax of the story: a goddess standing at her temple, receiving the offerings, with a ruler bringing her a basket of fruit. The vase was made for Inanna — the great goddess of love, war, and the city of Uruk. It was probably placed in her temple, where it held water or beer or wine offered to her by worshippers. The men who made it lived in one of the first cities in human history. Uruk was probably the largest city on earth at the time, with about 50,000 people. Writing had been invented in Uruk only a few generations before — small clay tablets covered with the earliest known cuneiform marks. The vase was made by people who were still figuring out, for the first time anywhere, what it meant to live in a city, how to organise religion, how to record their stories. The vase is one of the very first pieces of narrative art — art that tells a story across multiple scenes — anywhere in the world. The vase stayed in Inanna's temple. Then, slowly, the city declined. Its temples were rebuilt, then abandoned, then forgotten. The vase was buried in rubble, smashed at some point into pieces, and lay underground for nearly 5,000 years. In 1933 and 1934, a team of German archaeologists led by Heinrich Lenzen was digging at the ruins of Uruk — by then a deserted ruin called Warka — when they found the broken pieces of the vase. They reassembled it carefully and sent it to the museum in Baghdad. There it stayed for almost 70 years, the centrepiece of the Sumerian collection at the Iraq Museum. Then, in April 2003, during the looting that followed the American invasion of Iraq, looters broke into the museum. They forced open the vase's display case. The vase snapped at the base. It was carried away in pieces. Most of the world thought the Warka Vase was lost forever. But on 12 June 2003, three young men in their twenties drove up to the Iraq Museum in a red Toyota. They got out and tried to carry a heavy bundle wrapped in a blanket from the boot of the car. American soldiers at the museum gate raised their weapons. The men peeled back the blanket. Inside were 14 pieces of carved alabaster — the broken Warka Vase. The men handed them over and disappeared. The vase was painstakingly restored. It is now back on display at the rebuilt Iraq Museum in Baghdad. This lesson asks who made it, what it shows, how it survived for 5,000 years, and what its story teaches us about the long life of art and the strange ways that cultural heritage can be both threatened and protected.

The object
Origin
The ancient Sumerian city of Uruk, in southern Mesopotamia (modern southern Iraq). Found in 1933-1934 by a German archaeological expedition led by Heinrich Lenzen, in the temple complex of the goddess Inanna. The site is now called Warka (the modern Arabic name for Uruk), in the Al Muthanna Governorate of Iraq.
Period
Made around 3200-3000 BCE — the late Uruk period, sometimes called the Jemdet Nasr period. This is one of the earliest periods of urban civilization anywhere in the world. Uruk was probably the largest city on earth at the time, with perhaps 40,000 to 50,000 inhabitants. Writing had only just been invented (in the same city, in the same century).
Made of
Carved alabaster (a soft, translucent stone often used for ancient Mesopotamian objects). The vase was hollowed out from a single block of alabaster, then carved with three bands of relief sculpture on the outside. The carving was done with stone or copper tools.
Size
About 105 centimetres tall (about 1 metre) and about 36 centimetres in diameter at the rim. It is one of the largest known Mesopotamian relief-carved vessels. It was made to hold liquid offerings — probably water, beer, or wine — for the goddess Inanna.
Number of objects
There is only one Warka Vase. A plaster cast was made of the original after its discovery and stood for many decades in the Vorderasiatisches Museum (Near Eastern Museum) in Berlin, Germany. Other Sumerian vessels with related carved scenes exist (the Uruk Trough, for example), but the Warka Vase is unique in its size, complexity, and the completeness of its narrative.
Where it is now
The Iraq Museum (also called the National Museum of Iraq) in Baghdad. The vase was looted in April 2003 during the chaos of the Iraq invasion, then returned in pieces in June 2003 by three young men in a red Toyota. After careful restoration, it has been back on permanent display in the Sumerian Gallery of the rebuilt museum.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. The Warka Vase is one of the world's earliest surviving artworks. How will you teach this with the wonder it deserves while keeping the lesson grounded?
  2. The looting of the Iraq Museum in 2003 happened during a war that Iraqis lived through directly. How will you handle this with care for students who may have personal connections?
  3. The vase shows a religious ceremony from a long-dead religion. How will you treat ancient religion as a real system of belief, not as exotic curiosity?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Uruk was one of the world's first cities. Around 3500 BCE, in the marshy plains of southern Mesopotamia between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, people began gathering in unprecedented numbers. They built mud-brick houses. They dug irrigation canals. They organised collective work to plant and harvest grain. They built large temples for their gods. Within a few centuries, Uruk had grown into something the world had never seen: a city of perhaps 40,000 to 50,000 people, surrounded by a wall about 9 kilometres long, dominated by two huge temple complexes — the Eanna (the temple of the goddess Inanna) and the Anu Ziggurat (a great mud-brick mountain dedicated to the sky god An). Uruk was, around 3200 BCE, almost certainly the largest city on earth. London at the same time was a few scattered farmhouses. Beijing did not exist. The cities of the Indus Valley, of Egypt, of China — all came later. Uruk came first. The people of Uruk are now called Sumerians. They spoke a language called Sumerian, unrelated to any modern language. Their land was called Sumer. They invented many things. They invented the wheel. They invented writing — small wedge-shaped marks pressed into wet clay tablets, called cuneiform. They invented the cylinder seal — a small carved cylinder rolled across wet clay to make a personal mark. They invented complex bureaucracy: tablets recording how much grain was given to which temple, how many sheep were owed by which household, who owned what. They invented urban planning, with public spaces, residential quarters, and dedicated industrial areas. The Warka Vase was made in this Uruk, at the height of its early flowering, around 3200-3000 BCE. The vase was contemporary with the very first writing. The people who made it were the first urban people in human history. Why might one ancient city be so important?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because Uruk was a turning point. Before Uruk, humans had lived in villages, hunting bands, and small farming settlements for tens of thousands of years. The first 'cities' before Uruk were really just larger villages — a few thousand people at most. Uruk was different. It was big enough that people could specialise — some made pots, some kept records, some ran temples, some farmed, some traded — without each person having to do everything to survive. Specialisation made innovation possible. Writing was developed by Uruk's bureaucrats to keep track of temple offerings. The wheel was developed for transport across the city's streets. Religion became more elaborate as full-time priests had time to develop rituals. Art became more sophisticated as full-time craftsmen could practice their skills. The Warka Vase is a product of this sophistication. The shape is elegant. The carving is detailed. The story it tells across three registers is sophisticated. None of this would have been possible in a smaller settlement. The vase reflects a city that had the time, wealth, and skill to make extraordinary objects. Uruk inspired everything that came later in Mesopotamian civilization. The legendary king Gilgamesh, hero of one of the world's oldest stories (the Epic of Gilgamesh, written down around 2100 BCE), was supposedly a king of Uruk around 2700 BCE. The city's wall was famous for centuries afterwards. By the time the Greek historian Herodotus visited Mesopotamia around 450 BCE, Uruk was already a deep and ancient legend. Students should see that 'first cities' is not just a label. Uruk was the place where some of the basic features of human civilization — cities, writing, organised religion, complex art — first came together. The Warka Vase is one of its most important surviving artefacts.

2
The Warka Vase is more than an object. It is a story carved in stone. To read it, you have to walk around it, looking at each band in turn, working from bottom to top. The bottom register, just above the foot of the vase, shows the natural world. There are wavy lines representing water — the rivers that gave Uruk its life. Above the water, plants grow: date palms, ears of barley, ears of wheat. Above the plants, animals: rams and ewes alternating, walking in a single file in profile. The bottom register tells you where Uruk's wealth came from — water, plants, animals, the stuff of farming and herding. The middle register shows the human world. Naked men walk in a procession from left to right, all facing the same direction. Each man carries something: a basket of fruit, a jar of liquid, a bowl of grain. They are bringing offerings. The men are similar to each other but not identical. They are walking in step, like a religious procession, taking the goods of the bottom register up to the gods. The top register shows the goddess. She stands at her temple, marked by two tall bundles of reeds (the symbol of Inanna). She is much larger than any other figure on the vase, indicating her importance. A male figure — probably a king or high priest, in a long belt — approaches her with a basket of offerings. Behind the goddess, the temple area shows additional sacred objects, including small models of the temple's storerooms. This is one of the earliest examples of narrative art anywhere in the world. Older art exists — cave paintings from 30,000 years ago, simple statues, rock carvings — but they tend to show single subjects, not a story unfolding across multiple scenes. The Warka Vase tells a story: water and plants → animals → people → gods. The wealth of the natural world flows up to the gods through human hands. The whole vase is a visual prayer. Why might one civilization develop a new way of telling stories with images?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because storytelling is one of the basic things humans do, and visual storytelling needs to be invented just like written storytelling. Cave paintings are powerful but mostly show single moments — a hunt, a herd, an animal. The Warka Vase shows sequence. The eye moves from bottom to top. The natural progression of the procession matches the natural progression of the story. The use of multiple registers — three horizontal bands stacked on top of each other — is a brilliant solution to the problem of fitting a long story onto a single object. The technique would influence Mesopotamian art for the next 3,000 years. Egyptian, Greek, and other Mediterranean cultures developed similar register-based narrative art independently. Even modern comic strips work the same way — multiple panels, read in sequence, telling a unified story. The basic insight on the Warka Vase has never gone away. The vase also shows that ancient people thought hierarchically. The bottom is the natural world. The middle is the human world. The top is the divine world. The whole vase is a model of how the world is organised: nature feeds humans; humans serve gods; gods (in turn) protect the city. The hierarchy is not just decorative. It is a statement about how Uruk's people thought reality worked. Many later religions have similar hierarchies — including most modern religions. Students should see that art is not just decoration. It is a way of thinking. The Warka Vase shows how Uruk's people thought about their world, presented in a form that 5,000 years later we can still read. That is one of the small miracles of ancient art.

3
The vase was buried in the ruins of Uruk for thousands of years. Uruk itself slowly faded. By the 4th century CE, the city was abandoned. The mud-brick buildings collapsed and turned back into the soil they were made of. The site became a low mound rising out of the desert, called Warka by local people. For over a thousand years, no one paid much attention to it. In the 19th century, European interest in ancient Mesopotamia began. British and French archaeologists worked at famous sites like Nineveh and Babylon. German archaeologists eventually focused on Uruk. From 1912 onwards, German teams under various leaders dug into the mound. They found the great temples, the early walls, the cuneiform tablets that were the world's first writing. In 1933-1934, the German team led by Heinrich Lenzen was working in the temple complex of Inanna. In one of the deepest layers — a layer dating to around 3200-3000 BCE — they found the broken pieces of an extraordinary alabaster vase. They recorded it carefully in their field book on 2 January 1934 as 'find number W14873: large container of alabaster, circa 96 cm high with flat-reliefs'. They reassembled the pieces and recognised what they had: one of the earliest pieces of narrative art ever found. Under the agreement between the German expedition and the Iraqi government, the vase stayed in Iraq. It went to the National Museum of Iraq in Baghdad, where it became the centrepiece of the Sumerian gallery. A plaster cast was made and sent to Berlin, where it stood for many decades in the Vorderasiatisches Museum. For 70 years, the vase sat in its case in Baghdad. Iraqi children visited it on school trips. International scholars came to study it. Photographs of it appeared in art history textbooks around the world. It was part of the basic visual vocabulary of ancient Near Eastern art. Then, in March-April 2003, the United States invaded Iraq. The Iraqi government collapsed. American forces entered Baghdad on 9 April. For several days, the city was in chaos. Government buildings were looted. Police did not work. The Iraq Museum, in central Baghdad, had been closed for two weeks before the invasion. Museum staff had hidden the most portable objects, but the very large objects — including the Warka Vase — could not be easily moved. On 10-12 April 2003, looters entered the Iraq Museum. They smashed cases. They took thousands of objects. The Warka Vase was forcibly wrenched from its mounting, snapping at the base. The foot of the vase remained attached to the broken display case. The body of the vase was carried away in pieces. Why might one war cause the loss of irreplaceable cultural heritage?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because in war, ordinary protections collapse. Police, security guards, careful management — all these depend on functioning institutions. When the institutions fail, objects that have been protected for decades or centuries are suddenly vulnerable. The Iraq Museum looting was particularly bad because of three factors. First, the war was fast. The Iraqi army collapsed quickly. The transition from one government to no government was abrupt. Second, the American forces had not been instructed to protect the museum. They had been told to protect oil installations and military targets. The museum was not on the priority list. Third, the chaos drew opportunists — both ordinary people taking objects in the confusion, and organised criminal networks who knew exactly which objects were valuable and how to sell them on the international black market. About 15,000 objects were taken from the Iraq Museum in April 2003. Most were small things — cylinder seals, tablets, statues. Many were extremely valuable. The Warka Vase was the largest and most famous object taken. About half of the looted objects have been recovered. Many have never been seen again. They are presumed to be in private collections around the world, sold through the international antiquities market, often via intermediaries in neighbouring countries. The looting of the Iraq Museum was one of the worst losses of cultural heritage in modern times. It joined a long, sad list — the destruction of the Library of Alexandria, the burning of the Imperial Library of Constantinople, the looting of Beijing's Summer Palace by British and French troops in 1860, the Nazi looting of art across occupied Europe. Each event was different. Each was a loss. Students should see that 'cultural heritage' is not just an abstract idea. It is real objects that real people have made, and that real wars or other disasters can damage or destroy. Protecting heritage is part of what civilisation does. When civilisation fails, heritage is at risk.

4
The Warka Vase was returned in one of the strangest moments of the entire 2003 looting story. On 12 June 2003 — exactly two months after the looting — three young men in their early twenties drove up to the Iraq Museum in a red Toyota. The museum had reopened with American military protection. The men got out and tried to lift a heavy bundle wrapped in a blanket from the boot of the car. The American guards at the gate raised their weapons. They thought it might be a bomb. The men kept working with the bundle, struggling under its weight. One of them peeled back the blanket. Underneath was carved alabaster — clearly something extraordinary. The guards lowered their weapons. The men handed over 14 pieces of the Warka Vase. They did not give their names. They drove away. They have never been identified. Who were they? It is not certain. They might have been part of the original looting and brought the vase back when they realised they could not sell it. They might have bought it from looters and decided to return it. They might have been ordinary Iraqis who had recovered it from someone and felt it should go home. Whatever their story, they returned an object that most people had assumed was lost forever. The vase was carefully studied. The 14 pieces were nearly all of it — though some small fragments are still missing, and the vase has been restored with neutral filler in places where pieces are gone. A team of conservators worked on the vase for several years. By 2009, it was back on display in the rebuilt Iraq Museum. The museum itself reopened in stages. After the 2003 looting, much work was needed to restore both the building and the collection. By 2009, the museum was open to scholars. By 2015, it was open to the public again. Today, the Iraq Museum is one of Baghdad's main cultural attractions, although tourism is still limited because of regional security issues. Not everything that was looted has come back. About half of the missing objects have been recovered, often through international cooperation between Iraqi authorities, Interpol, and other police forces. Some were returned by collectors who realised they had bought stolen goods. Some were found being smuggled across borders. Many — perhaps thousands — have never been recovered. They are presumed to be in private hands somewhere in the world, often unable to be sold openly because of their stolen status. What does the Warka Vase's modern story teach us?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several things together. First, that cultural heritage is fragile. Objects that have survived for 5,000 years can be damaged in a few hours of chaos. Protecting heritage requires constant attention — by museum staff, by national governments, by international organisations like UNESCO. Second, that recovery is possible. The Warka Vase was returned. Many other objects have been returned. The work of recovery is slow and complicated, but it is real. Third, that ordinary people can play extraordinary roles. We do not know who the three young men in the red Toyota were. They could have kept the vase. They could have sold it on the black market. Instead, they drove it back to the museum. Their choice shows that 'cultural heritage' is not just about institutions — it is about individual people deciding to do the right thing. Fourth, that war damages everything. The looting of the Iraq Museum was a small part of the much larger damage that the 2003 invasion caused. The war took many lives, destroyed infrastructure, and damaged the social fabric of Iraq in ways that are still being felt 20 years later. The vase coming back is one bright moment in a much darker story. Fifth, that modern conservation can perform miracles. The vase that was wrenched into 14+ pieces in April 2003 is now back on display, looking almost as it did before. The work was painstaking. The result is a tribute to the conservators who did it. End the discovery here. The Warka Vase is in its case at the Iraq Museum tonight. Visitors come to see it. The story continues.

What this object teaches

The Warka Vase is a tall slim alabaster vase, about 1 metre high, made around 3200-3000 BCE in the Sumerian city of Uruk in southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq). It is carved with three horizontal bands of relief sculpture showing a religious procession bringing offerings to Inanna, the goddess of Uruk. The bottom band shows the natural world — water, plants, and animals. The middle band shows naked men carrying offerings. The top band shows the goddess at her temple, receiving the offerings. It is considered one of the earliest surviving examples of narrative relief sculpture in human history. Uruk, where the vase was made, was probably the largest city on earth at the time, with about 40,000 to 50,000 people. The vase is contemporary with the very first writing — cuneiform was invented in Uruk in the same century. The vase was found in 1933-1934 by a German archaeological expedition led by Heinrich Lenzen, in the temple complex of Inanna. It went to the Iraq Museum in Baghdad, where it became one of the centrepieces of the Sumerian collection. In April 2003, during the chaos of the American invasion of Iraq, the Iraq Museum was looted. The Warka Vase was forcibly removed from its display case, snapping at the base, and carried away in pieces. On 12 June 2003, three unidentified young men in a red Toyota returned 14 pieces of the vase to the museum. After careful restoration, the vase has been back on display in the rebuilt Iraq Museum. About half of the 15,000 objects looted from the museum in 2003 have been recovered; many remain missing. The Warka Vase's survival across nearly 5,000 years — through the decline of Uruk, the rise and fall of many empires, and the looting of 2003 — makes it one of the most remarkable surviving artefacts of early human civilization.

DateEventWhat changed
c. 3500 BCEUruk emerges as one of the world's first true citiesAround 40,000-50,000 people gather in a planned urban environment
c. 3200 BCECuneiform writing invented in UrukHumans begin to record information in a way that can survive thousands of years
c. 3200-3000 BCEWarka Vase made for the temple of InannaOne of the earliest pieces of narrative art is created
c. 4th century CEUruk abandonedThe vase is buried in the ruins of the temple
1933-1934German archaeologists led by Heinrich Lenzen find the vaseAfter nearly 5,000 years underground, the vase is recovered and reassembled
1934Vase placed at the Iraq Museum in BaghdadBecomes one of the centrepieces of the Sumerian collection
April 2003Iraq Museum looted during the American invasionVase smashed and stolen along with about 15,000 other objects
12 June 2003Three unidentified young men return 14 pieces of the vaseThe vase comes home; the men disappear
TodayRestored vase on display at the Iraq Museum5,000 years after it was made, it is still being seen
Key words
Uruk
An ancient Sumerian city in southern Mesopotamia (modern southern Iraq), one of the earliest true cities in human history. Flourished from around 3500 to 2000 BCE. Probably the largest city on earth around 3200 BCE, with 40,000-50,000 inhabitants. The legendary king Gilgamesh, hero of the Epic of Gilgamesh, was supposedly a king of Uruk around 2700 BCE.
Example: Modern Warka, in the Al Muthanna Governorate of Iraq, is a low mound where the ancient city once stood. The site has been excavated since 1912, mostly by German teams. Many of the most important Sumerian artefacts have come from Uruk, including the Warka Vase, the Mask of Warka, and many of the earliest cuneiform tablets.
Inanna
The chief goddess of Uruk and one of the most important deities of Mesopotamia for over 3,000 years. Goddess of love, war, sex, and fertility. Later known to the Babylonians and Assyrians as Ishtar. The bundles of reeds shown in the top register of the Warka Vase are her sacred symbol.
Example: Inanna appears in many Sumerian myths, including the famous Descent of Inanna into the Underworld. She was associated with the planet Venus. Her temple complex at Uruk, called the Eanna ('House of Heaven'), was one of the most important religious sites of the ancient world.
Sumerian civilization
The civilization of southern Mesopotamia (modern southern Iraq) from about 4500 to 1900 BCE. Sumerians spoke a language unrelated to any modern language. They invented writing (cuneiform), the wheel, the cylinder seal, and many other foundational technologies. Their city-states — Uruk, Ur, Lagash, Eridu, and others — were among the world's first.
Example: The Sumerians left a deep legacy. The Epic of Gilgamesh, the world's oldest extended literary work, is Sumerian (and later Babylonian). The 60-minute hour and 360-degree circle come from Sumerian mathematics. Many Mesopotamian religious traditions traced their origins to Sumerian gods and stories.
Narrative art
Art that tells a story across multiple scenes or figures, rather than showing a single moment. The Warka Vase, with its three registers showing a procession from natural world to human world to divine world, is one of the earliest known examples in human history.
Example: Earlier art exists — cave paintings, simple sculptures — but tends to show single subjects. Narrative art requires a way of organising multiple scenes into a coherent story. The Warka Vase's solution (horizontal registers stacked vertically) influenced Mesopotamian art for the next 3,000 years and is the same basic approach used in modern comic strips.
Heinrich Lenzen (1909-1995)
German archaeologist who led excavations at Uruk from 1956 to 1968 and worked there earlier in the 1930s. He was part of the team that found the Warka Vase in 1933-1934. He was Director of the Uruk Excavation for many years and published widely on Sumerian archaeology.
Example: The German Uruk excavation, in which Lenzen worked, has been one of the longest-running archaeological projects in the world. It began in 1912 and has continued, with interruptions for both World Wars and other crises, into the 21st century. The Lenzen-era excavations of the 1930s were particularly important for understanding early Sumerian art.
The Iraq Museum (National Museum of Iraq)
The national museum of Iraq, in Baghdad. Founded in 1926 as the Baghdad Antiquarium, expanded to its current form in the 1960s. Holds one of the world's most important collections of Mesopotamian art and artefacts, including objects from Sumerian, Akkadian, Babylonian, Assyrian, and later periods.
Example: The museum was looted in April 2003 during the American invasion. About 15,000 objects were taken; about half have been recovered. The museum reopened to scholars in 2009 and to the public in 2015. The Warka Vase, after restoration, is one of its star exhibits.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a class timeline of early civilization: first farming villages (around 9000 BCE in the Fertile Crescent); first towns (around 7000 BCE, like Çatalhöyük); first true cities (around 3500 BCE, like Uruk); cuneiform writing invented (around 3200 BCE); Warka Vase made (around 3200-3000 BCE); Egyptian hieroglyphs developed (around 3200 BCE); Indus Valley civilization (around 2600 BCE); Chinese writing (around 1200 BCE). Uruk was at the very start of city-based civilization.
  • Geography: On a map of the Middle East, mark Uruk (in southern Iraq), the Tigris and Euphrates rivers (which made the area habitable), and other early Mesopotamian cities — Ur, Eridu, Lagash, Babylon, Nineveh. Discuss how the geography of Mesopotamia (a fertile river delta with reliable water but few natural defences) shaped its history.
  • Art: Look closely at the three registers of the Warka Vase. Discuss how the artist organised a complex story onto a single object. Compare with later Mesopotamian art (Stele of Hammurabi, Assyrian palace reliefs) and with other early narrative art (Egyptian temple reliefs, Greek vase painting, Roman triumphal columns). The technique of registers has been used for over 5,000 years.
  • Religion: The Warka Vase shows offerings being made to Inanna. Discuss what 'offerings' meant in ancient Mesopotamian religion — gifts to the gods in exchange for protection, prosperity, and good harvests. Compare with offering practices in other religious traditions, ancient and modern. Strong answers will see that the basic idea of giving something to the divine is widespread across human cultures.
  • Citizenship: The Warka Vase was looted in 2003 and returned by anonymous individuals. Discuss the role of ordinary people in protecting cultural heritage. Other examples include people who hid Jewish religious objects from the Nazis, people who saved books during library fires, people who protected art during wars. Strong answers will see that 'heritage protection' often comes down to individual choices.
  • Ethics: Hold a class discussion: 'When countries are invaded, who is responsible for protecting their cultural heritage?' The 2003 looting of the Iraq Museum has been blamed on multiple parties — the looters themselves, the criminal networks that organised some of the theft, the American forces who did not protect the museum, the international community that did not prepare. Strong answers will see that responsibility is often shared across many actors. The lesson is part of a wider conversation about heritage in wartime.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The Warka Vase is just a pretty pot.

Right

It is one of the earliest surviving examples of narrative relief sculpture in human history. The three registers tell a story about the relationship between nature, humans, and gods. The vase is contemporary with the invention of writing — it is a snapshot of one of the most important moments in early civilization.

Why

'Just a pot' undersells what the object actually is.

Wrong

The vase was definitely made for the goddess Inanna.

Right

The vase shows a goddess at a temple, with reed bundles that are Inanna's symbol, found in the temple complex of Inanna at Uruk. So it was almost certainly made for Inanna. But ancient religious objects sometimes had multiple uses, and the exact ritual function is not fully certain.

Why

Honest acknowledgment of what we know and what we are inferring is part of taking the past seriously.

Wrong

Most of the looted objects from the Iraq Museum have been returned.

Right

About half have been recovered (over 7,000 objects), but many thousands remain missing. They are presumed to be in private hands somewhere in the world, often sold through the international antiquities black market. The Warka Vase is one of the lucky ones.

Why

'Mostly returned' overstates how complete the recovery has been.

Wrong

The Warka Vase has been at the Iraq Museum since the 1930s, with no interruption.

Right

It was at the museum from the 1930s until April 2003, when it was looted. It was returned (in pieces) in June 2003 and went through several years of restoration before going back on display. Today's display is the post-restoration vase, which is the original stone but has been carefully reassembled.

Why

The 2003 looting and restoration are an essential part of the vase's modern history.

Teaching this with care

Treat the Warka Vase with the wonder it deserves. It is one of the world's earliest surviving artworks. It comes from one of the world's first cities. It has survived for nearly 5,000 years. The lesson should help students feel the awe of this without overplaying it into hyperbole. Use precise language. The vase is from around 3200-3000 BCE. It was made by Sumerians in Uruk. It shows a religious procession to the goddess Inanna. These are facts. Avoid vague terms like 'mysterious' or 'lost civilization' — Sumerian civilization is well-documented. Be careful with the 2003 invasion and looting. Iraq is a real country. Many Iraqis lived through the invasion and its aftermath. Some students may be Iraqi or have Iraqi heritage. The lesson should not present the looting as an exotic adventure story. It was a real loss for real people. Be balanced about responsibility. The looting was carried out by individual looters, but the conditions for it were created by the war. American forces had not prioritised protecting the museum. Iraqi staff had done what they could but were overwhelmed. Multiple parties bear some responsibility. The lesson should not blame any single party simplistically. Be respectful of Inanna. She was the chief goddess of one of humanity's first cities, worshipped for thousands of years. Treat her religion as a real system of belief, not as an exotic curiosity. The lesson should not present ancient Mesopotamian religion as primitive or strange. It was sophisticated, organised, and meaningful for the people who practised it. Be careful with the 'three young men in a red Toyota' story. The story is true and remarkable. But the men are unidentified, and we should not speculate about their motives or backgrounds. The lesson should tell what is known without inventing details. Be respectful of the German archaeologists who excavated the site. They were doing rigorous scientific work. The fact that they came from a colonial-era European tradition does not undercut their genuine scholarly contribution. The Iraqi government allowed the work and kept the finds in Iraq, which is the right model. Be aware that the wider question of looted antiquities is real. Many objects from Iraq, Egypt, Greece, and other countries are in major Western museums under disputed circumstances. The Warka Vase is in Iraq. Other Iraqi objects are in the British Museum, the Louvre, the Berlin Museum, and elsewhere. The lesson should acknowledge this without making it the whole story. Be respectful of Iraqi heritage. The Iraq Museum, after years of difficulty, is open and operational. Iraqi conservators have done remarkable work. The vase is a source of national pride. The lesson should support Iraqi ownership and stewardship of Iraqi heritage. Finally, end the lesson on the present. The Warka Vase is in its case at the Iraq Museum tonight. The story continues.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Warka Vase.

  1. What is the Warka Vase, and where does it come from?

    It is a tall slim alabaster vase, about 1 metre high, made around 3200-3000 BCE in the Sumerian city of Uruk in southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq). It was carved with three horizontal bands of figures showing a religious procession to the goddess Inanna. It is one of the earliest known examples of narrative relief sculpture in human history.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the size, the date, the place, and the carved decoration.
  2. What is shown on each of the three registers of the vase?

    The bottom register shows the natural world — water, plants (date palms, barley), and animals (rams and ewes walking in profile). The middle register shows naked men carrying baskets and jars of offerings in a procession. The top register shows the goddess Inanna at her temple, receiving the offerings, with a male ruler bringing her a basket of fruit.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that correctly identifies the contents of all three registers.
  3. Why is the vase considered an important early example of narrative art?

    Earlier art mostly showed single subjects — a hunt scene, an animal, a god. The Warka Vase tells a story across multiple scenes, with the eye moving from bottom (natural world) through middle (human world) to top (divine world). This way of organising a story onto a single object — using horizontal registers stacked vertically — was a major artistic innovation that influenced Mesopotamian art for the next 3,000 years.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention the multiple scenes, the register technique, and the early date.
  4. What happened to the Warka Vase in April 2003?

    During the chaos of the American invasion of Iraq, looters broke into the Iraq Museum in Baghdad. They forced the Warka Vase from its display case, snapping it at the base. The body of the vase was carried away in pieces. The vase was one of about 15,000 objects looted from the museum during those days. Most of the world thought the vase was lost forever.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the looting, the date, and the smashing of the vase.
  5. How was the Warka Vase returned, and what does its return teach us?

    On 12 June 2003, three unidentified young men in their early twenties drove a red Toyota up to the Iraq Museum gate. They took 14 pieces of the vase out of the boot, wrapped in a blanket, handed them over, and drove away. They have never been identified. The vase was carefully restored over several years. Its return shows that ordinary people can play extraordinary roles in protecting cultural heritage.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention the date, the men, the pieces, and the wider lesson about heritage protection.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. When countries are invaded, who is responsible for protecting their cultural heritage — the invading forces, the local government, the international community, individual citizens?

    Push students to think specifically. There are real arguments for shared responsibility. Invading forces: international law (the 1954 Hague Convention) requires military forces to protect cultural property; the American forces in 2003 had been informed about the museum and could have prioritised it. Local government: the Iraqi authorities had primary responsibility for their own museums; some preparation was done but it was not enough for the scale of the chaos. International community: organisations like UNESCO and Interpol have ongoing responsibilities; preparation could have been better; recovery efforts have continued for 20+ years. Individual citizens: the three men who returned the Warka Vase are an example of how individuals can help; ordinary Iraqis preserved many objects in their homes during the chaos. Strong answers will see that responsibility is shared. The deeper point is that 'heritage protection' is everyone's job, not anyone's job alone.
  2. About half of the objects looted from the Iraq Museum have never been recovered. They are presumed to be in private collections around the world. What should be done about this?

    There are real arguments and complications. Recovery efforts: international cooperation, work with museums and private collectors, legal action against known traffickers, rewards for return. Public awareness: more people knowing about looted objects makes them harder to sell openly. Private collectors: some have voluntarily returned objects when they realised they had bought stolen goods; others have not. Market pressure: stricter rules at museums and auction houses can reduce the market for looted objects. Strong answers will see that this is slow and partial work. We will probably never recover everything. But continuing the work matters because (a) some objects do come home, and (b) the existence of recovery efforts deters future looting. The deeper point is that cultural heritage protection is a long-term project across generations.
  3. The Warka Vase shows people 5,000 years ago bringing offerings to a goddess. Do humans still do similar things today? In what ways?

    This is a creative question. Push students to think specifically. Religious offerings still happen in many traditions: Christians light candles or give to charity; Hindus offer flowers and food at temples; Buddhists make offerings at shrines; Muslims give zakat (mandatory charity); Jews give to tzedakah. Beyond religious traditions, modern people give time and resources to causes they believe in — political donations, charity work, tributes at memorials, gifts to loved ones. The basic human impulse to give something of value to a power larger than ourselves has not gone away. Strong answers will see that the Warka Vase is not just an ancient curiosity. It shows a basic human pattern that continues today. The forms have changed; the impulse has not.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Show the photograph of the Warka Vase. Ask: 'How old do you think this is?' Take guesses. Then say: 'About 5,000 years old. Made in one of the world's first cities, by people who had only just invented writing. Smashed during a war 20 years ago. Returned by three young men in the boot of a red Toyota. We are going to find out about it.'
  2. URUK AND THE FIRST CITIES (10 min)
    Tell the basics: Uruk was probably the largest city on earth around 3200 BCE, with about 50,000 people. The Sumerians invented writing, the wheel, the cylinder seal, urban bureaucracy. Pause and ask: 'Why might one ancient city be so important?' Lead them to the idea of specialisation, innovation, and the foundations of civilization.
  3. READING THE VASE (15 min)
    Walk through the three registers. Bottom: water, plants, animals — the natural world. Middle: men carrying offerings — the human world. Top: the goddess at her temple — the divine world. Discuss why this is one of the earliest examples of narrative art. Discuss how the same technique of registers is still used in modern comic strips.
  4. THE MODERN STORY (10 min)
    Tell the discovery story (1933-1934, German team led by Heinrich Lenzen) and the looting story (April 2003, taken from the Iraq Museum during the chaos of the American invasion). Then tell the return story: 12 June 2003, three young men in a red Toyota, 14 pieces of carved alabaster wrapped in a blanket. Discuss: who were they? Why did they bring it back?
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'What does the Warka Vase teach us about the long life of art and the protection of cultural heritage?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'A piece of carved stone from one of the first cities ever built. Buried for 5,000 years. Found by archaeologists. Smashed during a war. Returned by three unknown young men in a red Toyota. Now back in its case at the Iraq Museum in Baghdad. Visitors come every day. The story continues.'
Classroom materials
Read the Three Registers
Instructions: On the board, draw a simplified version of the Warka Vase with three horizontal bands. In each band, students draw what is shown — bottom (water, plants, animals), middle (men with offerings), top (goddess at temple). Discuss as a class: how does the eye move? What story is being told? Why does putting the goddess at the top matter?
Example: In Mr Khalid's class, students were surprised at how clearly the story unfolded once they slowed down to read it. The teacher said: 'You have just read a 5,000-year-old story. The Sumerians who made this vase did not have books, did not have films, did not even have most of the alphabets we know today. But they could tell a story in three carved bands of stone. The basic technique is still used in comics, in storyboards for films, and in many other modern visual arts. The Warka Vase is the deep ancestor of all of these.'
Make Your Own Three-Register Story
Instructions: Each student designs their own three-register narrative on paper. The story can be about anything — a meal, a trip, a sports match, a school day. Bottom register: the setting. Middle register: the action by ordinary people. Top register: the climax or important figure. Students share their designs. Discuss: why do hierarchies of importance work this way?
Example: In Ms Patel's class, students designed three-register stories about everything from cricket matches to family dinners. The teacher said: 'You have just used the same artistic technique that Sumerian artists used 5,000 years ago. Bottom for setting, middle for people in motion, top for the most important figure. The technique works because it matches how humans naturally think about importance and hierarchy. The Warka Vase artists discovered this for the first time. Their discovery is still useful today.'
Heritage Under Threat
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'What cultural heritage in your country might need to be protected, and from what threats?' Threats might include: war, natural disasters, climate change, theft, neglect, pollution, urban development. Each group presents one example and proposes one protective measure. Discuss as a class.
Example: In Mrs Lange's class, students named threats including flooding for old buildings, climate change for ancient sites, urbanisation for archaeological remains, and theft for portable objects. The teacher said: 'You have just thought about something that the Warka Vase teaches in a very direct way. Heritage is fragile. It needs active protection. Every generation has to decide what to save and how. The work is never finished.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Cyrus Cylinder for another important Mesopotamian object with a complicated modern story.
  • Try a lesson on the Phaistos Disc for another extraordinary object from the early Bronze Age.
  • Try a lesson on the Mummy of Ramses II for another well-preserved object that has had a complicated modern life.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on Mesopotamian civilization — the Sumerians, the Akkadians, the Babylonians, the Assyrians — and on what was invented in the world's first cities.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on narrative art across cultures and centuries — Mesopotamian registers, Egyptian temple reliefs, Greek vase painting, Roman triumphal columns, Byzantine mosaics, modern comics and films.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of cultural heritage protection during war. The Iraq Museum looting is one of many recent examples. Other cases include the destruction of Palmyra by ISIS in 2015 and the destruction of the Buddhas of Bamiyan by the Taliban in 2001.
Key takeaways
  • The Warka Vase is a tall alabaster vase, about 1 metre high, made around 3200-3000 BCE in the Sumerian city of Uruk in southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq).
  • It is carved with three horizontal bands showing a religious procession to the goddess Inanna — the natural world (bottom), men carrying offerings (middle), and the goddess at her temple (top).
  • It is considered one of the earliest surviving examples of narrative relief sculpture in human history. The technique of using horizontal registers to tell a story has influenced visual storytelling for over 5,000 years.
  • It was discovered in 1933-1934 by a German archaeological expedition led by Heinrich Lenzen, in the temple complex of Inanna at Uruk. It went to the Iraq Museum in Baghdad.
  • In April 2003, during the looting that followed the American invasion of Iraq, the vase was smashed and stolen along with about 15,000 other objects. Most of the world thought it was lost.
  • On 12 June 2003, three unidentified young men returned 14 pieces of the vase to the Iraq Museum in a red Toyota. After careful restoration, it has been back on display in the rebuilt Iraq Museum. About half of the looted objects from 2003 have been recovered; many remain missing.
Sources
  • The Warka Vase: A Sumerian Masterpiece — Iraq Museum (2024) [institution]
  • The Looting of the Iraq Museum, Baghdad: The Lost Legacy of Ancient Mesopotamia — Milbry Polk and Angela M. H. Schuster (eds.) (2005) [academic]
  • The Sumerian World — Harriet Crawford (ed.) (2013) [academic]
  • Looters smashed Warka Vase, but it was returned — The Times (2003) [news]
  • Warka Vase — Wikipedia (citing multiple peer-reviewed sources) (2024) [academic]