"A puzzle remained. Why had Dilmun used the standard weights of the Indus Valley? The Babylonians and Sumerians used a completely different system... Either the first commercial impulses to have reached Dilmun must have come not from Mesopotamia but from India, or else India was a far more important commercial connection with Dilmun than was Mesopotamia."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Georg Feuerstein, Subhash Kak, and David Frawley. - In search of the cradle of civilization _ new light on ancient India-Quest Books (2011)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Geoffrey_Bibby
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Geoffrey Bibby
Thomas Geoffrey Bibby (14 October 1917 – 6 February 2001, Aarhus) was an English-born archaeologist.
1 quote on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Geoffrey Bibby →
Related Quotes
"The more I thought about it, the more obsessed I became with the idea of a swimming journey. I started to dream ever …"
"From water level, I observed the mating joined in flight like refuelling aircraft, and the random progress of the clo…"
"It is through trees that we see and hear the wind: woodland people can tell the species of a tree from the sound it m…"
"Waterlog (1999), Roger's now-classic account of swimming through Britain, published twenty years ago this year, opens…"
"In 1973, Roger Deakin, a British writer and environmental activist, acquired a tumbledown sixteenth-century farmhouse…"
"Der lange Marsch durch die Institutionen."
"The poet of England, he gave to the love of country, to patriotism as nowadays we call it, a voice which never shall …"
"It is in Henry V. that Shakespeare fashioned for us the true epic of England. The dramatic form sits very loosely upo…"
"For Shakespeare, as I have said, was above and before all things a lover of England. With how bitter a contempt would…"
"Again Shakespeare proves himself a gentleman in his moderation. He does not insist. He harbours no inapposite desire …"