An Ancient Library Contains Knowledge We Still Can't Explain | Nineveh
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The Library of Nineveh preserved more than 30,000 cuneiform tablets, including the Epic of Gilgamesh, ancient flood traditions, astronomy, medicine, and records from one of history’s greatest civilizations. This episode explores what that buried archive reveals about ancient knowledge — and what may still remain unread.
Long before books, libraries, and the internet, there was Nineveh.
Buried in the ruins of an ancient Assyrian capital, archaeologists uncovered more than 30,000 cuneiform tablets from the library of King Ashurbanipal — one of the greatest collections of ancient knowledge ever found.
Inside were royal records, myths, medical texts, astronomical observations, mathematical ideas, flood traditions, and one of the oldest surviving works of literature ever discovered: the Epic of Gilgamesh.
In this episode, we investigate King Ashurbanipal’s library, the discovery of the tablets, the Epic of Gilgamesh, the Planisphere tablet, ancient Mesopotamian astronomy, flood accounts, early medicine, and the thousands of tablets that still remain unread or untranslated.
This is not about pretending every ancient mystery has a hidden answer.
It is about asking what happens when one buried library preserves a world much older, smarter, and stranger than most people were taught to imagine.
Because Nineveh did not just preserve knowledge.
It preserved the uncomfortable possibility that humanity has forgotten far more than it remembers.
