Cuneiform tablet containing details about infertility
ishtartv.com - dailysabah.com
9-11-2017
he
first diagnosis to determine infertility was made 4,000 years ago, an ancient
Assyrian clay tablet discovered by Turkish researchers in central Kayseri
province revealed Thursday.
Various
researchers from different universities led by Şanlıurfa's Harran University
examined a 4,000-year-old Assyrian tablet containing a prenuptial agreement and
found out that the first infertility diagnosis was made in central Kayseri
province's Kültepe district.
The
clay tablet written in cuneiform script discusses infertility and a solution
for the issue, which is the inability of a person to reproduce through natural
means.
Professor
Ahmet Berkız Turp from Harran University's Gynecology and Obstetrics Department
told NTV that the clay prenuptial agreements addressed the issue of infertility
in Assyrian families.
Accordingly,
the wife would allow her husband to hire a hierodule - a female slave brought
in to serve as a surrogate - if the couple failed to conceive a baby two years
after the date of marriage.
"The
female slave would be freed after giving birth to the first male baby and
ensuring that the family is not be left without a child," Professor Turp
said.
The
results of the research have been published in the medical journal of
Gynecological Endocrinology and the tablet is on display at the Istanbul
Archaeology Museum.
Assyria
was a complex Mesopotamian civilization dating back to the 25th century B.C.
Kültepe
was home to an Assyrian settlement of the Old Assyrian Empire from the 21st to
18th centuries B.C.
Over
1,000 cuneiform tablets were discovered at the site in 1925, while modern
archaeological work started in 1948.
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