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Riddle Of 'Baghdad's Batteries'
BBC ^ | 2-27-2003 | Arran Frood

Posted on 02/27/2003 3:53:20 PM PST by blam

Riddle of 'Baghdad's batteries'

Arran Frood investigates what could have been the very first batteries and how these important archaeological and technological artefacts are now at risk from the impending war in Iraq.

I don't think anyone can say for sure what they were used for, but they may have been batteries because they do work

Dr Marjorie Senechal

War can destroy more than a people, an army or a leader. Culture, tradition and history also lie in the firing line.

Iraq has a rich national heritage. The Garden of Eden and the Tower of Babel are said to have been sited in this ancient land.

In any war, there is a chance that priceless treasures will be lost forever, articles such as the "ancient battery" that resides defenceless in the museum of Baghdad.

For this object suggests that the region, whose civilizations gave us writing and the wheel, may also have invented electric cells - two thousand years before such devices were well known.

Biblical clues

It was in 1938, while working in Khujut Rabu, just outside Baghdad in modern day Iraq, that German archaeologist Wilhelm Konig unearthed a five-inch-long (13 cm) clay jar containing a copper cylinder that encased an iron rod.

THE KEY COMPONENTS

Batteries dated to around 200 BC Could have been used in gilding

The vessel showed signs of corrosion, and early tests revealed that an acidic agent, such as vinegar or wine had been present.

In the early 1900s, many European archaeologists were excavating ancient Mesopotamian sites, looking for evidence of Biblical tales like the Tree of Knowledge and Noah's flood.

Konig did not waste his time finding alternative explanations for his discovery. To him, it had to have been a battery.

Though this was hard to explain, and did not sit comfortably with the religious ideology of the time, he published his conclusions. But soon the world was at war, and his discovery was forgotten.

Scientific awareness

More than 60 years after their discovery, the batteries of Baghdad - as there are perhaps a dozen of them - are shrouded in myth.

"The batteries have always attracted interest as curios," says Dr Paul Craddock, a metallurgy expert of the ancient Near East from the British Museum.

"They are a one-off. As far as we know, nobody else has found anything like these. They are odd things; they are one of life's enigmas."

No two accounts of them are the same. Some say the batteries were excavated, others that Konig found them in the basement of the Baghdad Museum when he took over as director. There is no definite figure on how many have been found, and their age is disputed.

Most sources date the batteries to around 200 BC - in the Parthian era, circa 250 BC to AD 225. Skilled warriors, the Parthians were not noted for their scientific achievements.

"Although this collection of objects is usually dated as Parthian, the grounds for this are unclear," says Dr St John Simpson, also from the department of the ancient Near East at the British Museum.

"The pot itself is Sassanian. This discrepancy presumably lies either in a misidentification of the age of the ceramic vessel, or the site at which they were found."

Underlying principles

In the history of the Middle East, the Sassanian period (circa AD 225 - 640) marks the end of the ancient and the beginning of the more scientific medieval era.

Though most archaeologists agree the devices were batteries, there is much conjecture as to how they could have been discovered, and what they were used for.

How could ancient Arabic science have grasped the principles of electricity and arrived at this knowledge?

Perhaps they did not. Many inventions are conceived before the underlying principles are properly understood.

The Chinese invented gunpowder long before the principles of combustion were deduced, and the rediscovery of old herbal medicines is now a common occurrence.

You do not always have to understand why something works - just that it does.

Enough zap

It is certain the Baghdad batteries could conduct an electric current because many replicas have been made, including by students of ancient history under the direction of Dr Marjorie Senechal, professor of the history of science and technology, Smith College, US.

"I don't think anyone can say for sure what they were used for, but they may have been batteries because they do work," she says. Replicas can produce voltages from 0.8 to nearly two volts.

Could the batteries have been placed inside idols? (Image by Stephanie Yong)

Making an electric current requires two metals with different electro potentials and an ion carrying solution, known as an electrolyte, to ferry the electrons between them.

Connected in series, a set of batteries could theoretically produce a much higher voltage, though no wires have ever been found that would prove this had been the case.

"It's a pity we have not found any wires," says Dr Craddock. "It means our interpretation of them could be completely wrong".

But he is sure the objects are batteries and that there could be more of them to discover. "Other examples may exist that lie in museums elsewhere unrecognised".

He says this is especially possible if any items are missing, as the objects only look like batteries when all the pieces are in place.

Possible uses

Some have suggested the batteries may have been used medicinally.

The ancient Greeks wrote of the pain killing effect of electric eels when applied to the soles of the feet.

The Chinese had developed acupuncture by this time, and still use acupuncture combined with an electric current. This may explain the presence of needle-like objects found with some of the batteries.

But this tiny voltage would surely have been ineffective against real pain, considering the well-recorded use of other painkillers in the ancient world like cannabis, opium and wine.

Other scientists believe the batteries were used for electroplating - transferring a thin layer of metal on to another metal surface - a technique still used today and a common classroom experiment.

This idea is appealing because at its core lies the mother of many inventions: money.

In the making of jewellery, for example, a layer of gold or silver is often applied to enhance its beauty in a process called gilding.

Grape electrolyte

Two main techniques of gilding were used at the time and are still in use today: hammering the precious metal into thin strips using brute force, or mixing it with a mercury base which is then pasted over the article.

These techniques are effective, but wasteful compared with the addition of a small but consistent layer of metal by electro-deposition. The ability to mysteriously electroplate gold or silver on to such objects would not only save precious resources and money, but could also win you important friends at court.

" Let's hope the world manages to resolve its present problems so people can go and see them"

Dr Paul Craddock

A palace, kingdom, or even the sultan's daughter may have been the reward for such knowledge - and motivation to keep it secret.

Testing this idea in the late seventies, Dr Arne Eggebrecht, then director of Roemer and Pelizaeus Museum in Hildesheim, connected many replica Baghdad batteries together using grape juice as an electrolyte, and claimed to have deposited a thin layer of silver on to another surface, just one ten thousandth of a millimetre thick.

Other researchers though, have disputed these results and have been unable to replicate them.

"There does not exist any written documentation of the experiments which took place here in 1978," says Dr Bettina Schmitz, currently a researcher based at the same Roemer and Pelizaeus Museum.

"The experiments weren't even documented by photos, which really is a pity," she says. "I have searched through the archives of this museum and I talked to everyone involved in 1978 with no results."

Tingling idols

Although a larger voltage can be obtained by connecting more than one battery together, it is the ampage which is the real limiting factor, and many doubt whether a high enough power could ever have been obtained, even from tens of Baghdad batteries.

One serious flaw with the electroplating hypothesis is the lack of items from this place and time that have been treated in this way.

"The examples we see from this region and era are conventional gild plating and mercury gilding," says Dr Craddock. "There's never been any untouchable evidence to support the electroplating theory."

He suggests a cluster of the batteries, connected in parallel, may have been hidden inside a metal statue or idol.

He thinks that anyone touching this statue may have received a tiny but noticeable electric shock, something akin to the static discharge that can infect offices, equipment and children's parties.

"I have always suspected you would get tricks done in the temple," says Dr Craddock. "The statue of a god could be wired up and then the priest would ask you questions.

"If you gave the wrong answer, you'd touch the statue and would get a minor shock along with perhaps a small mysterious blue flash of light. Get the answer right, and the trickster or priest could disconnect the batteries and no shock would arrive - the person would then be convinced of the power of the statue, priest and the religion."

Magical rituals

It is said that to the uninitiated, science cannot be distinguished from magic. "In Egypt we know this sort of thing happened with Hero's engine," Dr Craddock says.

Hero's engine was a primitive steam-driven machine, and like the battery of Baghdad, no one is quite sure what it was used for, but are convinced it could work.

If this idol could be found, it would be strong evidence to support the new theory. With the batteries inside, was this object once revered, like the Oracle of Delphi in Greece, and "charged" with godly powers?

Even if the current were insufficient to provide a genuine shock, it may have felt warm, a bizarre tingle to the touch of the unsuspecting finger.

At the very least, it could have just been the container of these articles, to keep their secret safe.

Perhaps it is too early to say the battery has been convincingly demonstrated to be part of a magical ritual. Further examination, including accurate dating, of the batteries' components are needed to really answer this mystery.

No one knows if such an idol or statue that could have hidden the batteries really exists, but perhaps the opportunity to look is not too far away - if the items survive the looming war in the Middle East.

"These objects belong to the successors of the people who made them," says Dr Craddock. "Let's hope the world manages to resolve its present problems so people can go and see them."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: baghdad; batteries; riddle

1 posted on 02/27/2003 3:53:21 PM PST by blam
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To: blam
Well that settles it. Call off the troops, everybody go home! Sorry, Iraqis, we cant liberate you. We found an old battery somewhere near you. Good luck!
2 posted on 02/27/2003 3:56:01 PM PST by CaptainJustice (Get RIGHT or get left.)
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To: blam
Perhaps it is too early to say the battery has been convincingly demonstrated to be part of a magical ritual

Nothing magical about it, they'll probably find the crocodile clamps to go with it, right beside the rack of whips and the meatgrinder.

Get bombing already.

3 posted on 02/27/2003 3:59:01 PM PST by Cachelot (~ In waters near you ~)
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To: blam
I bet they were used for electroplating silver onto base metals. I saw them do it with salt water on PBS recently. Salt water batteries connected in series produced enough current to produce oxides used to make a primative photo sensitive emulsion. They took a crude photo (more like a radiogram) with a pinhole camera.
4 posted on 02/27/2003 4:03:23 PM PST by ffusco ( "Gallia delenda est!")
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To: blam
"War can destroy more than a people, an army or a leader. Culture, tradition and history also lie in the firing line.

Iraq has a rich national heritage." Oh Puke! Another utopian scientist without a clue. Hitler's Germany had culture, tradition and history too.

Iraq has had years to join the civilized world. If war happens it THEIR fault.
5 posted on 02/27/2003 4:07:16 PM PST by ffusco ( "Gallia delenda est!")
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To: Cachelot
You beat me! I immediately thought of the movie"The Evil that Men Do".
6 posted on 02/27/2003 4:10:36 PM PST by ffusco ( "Gallia delenda est!")
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To: ffusco
I've heard some describe this as a battery too:


7 posted on 02/27/2003 4:11:18 PM PST by blam
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To: blam
The Arc of the Covenant. Dr. Jones, you've done it again!
8 posted on 02/27/2003 4:14:43 PM PST by ffusco ( "Gallia delenda est!")
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To: CaptainJustice
This can be worked out. Just get Hans to ask Saddam to take the scud launchers out of the museum parking lot.
9 posted on 02/27/2003 4:17:33 PM PST by xlib
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To: blam
Most sources date the batteries to around 200 BC - in the Parthian era, circa 250 BC to AD 225. Skilled warriors, the Parthians were not noted for their scientific achievements.

Although this collection of objects is usually dated as Parthian, the grounds for this are unclear," says Dr St John Simpson, also from the department of the ancient Near East at the British Museum.

"The pot itself is Sassanian. This discrepancy presumably lies either in a misidentification of the age of the ceramic vessel, or the site at which they were found."

>>Ahem. The Parthians were only a ruling class over Mesopotamia. Most of the peasants were still Amorite/Assyrian/Akkadian/Sumerian in ancestry. The cities throughout the Parthian period were strongholds of the Hellenistic way of life.

How could ancient Arabic science have grasped the principles of electricity and arrived at this knowledge?

>>Because it didn't?

>>The Sassanians, a native Iranian dynasty, overthrew the Parthians about 225 and ruled till the Arab Muslim conquest in 633. Nothing Arabic about either them or the Parthians, who were from Central Asis.
10 posted on 02/27/2003 5:22:26 PM PST by Restorer (TANSTAAFL)
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To: blam
I've heard some describe this as a battery too:

Capacitor or condenser, somebody wrote a paper on it one time, so long ago I forgot the author, title, and how a charge was built up to overcome the dielectric.

11 posted on 02/27/2003 5:38:41 PM PST by Little Bill (No Rats, A.N.S.W.E.R (WWP) is a commie front!!!!)
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To: blam
Screw the battery and the horse it rode in on! Let's Roll!!!
12 posted on 02/27/2003 6:20:54 PM PST by dc-zoo
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13 posted on 02/27/2003 6:23:20 PM PST by Bob J (Join the FR Network! Educate, Motivate, Activate!)
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To: blam
Have you read the verses about what those who carried it were to wear?
14 posted on 02/27/2003 11:10:17 PM PST by D-fendr
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To: ffusco
Only problem so far, is that no such ancient electroplated items were found. Also why no wires or other conductors to hook the battery up? Maybe it was used for novelty purposes... sticking your tongue to one of those would be enough to get a tingle.
15 posted on 02/28/2003 3:02:43 AM PST by The Red Zone
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To: The Red Zone
"Have you read the verses about what those who carried it were to wear?"

No, but I've read enough to believe that electricity could be involved.

16 posted on 02/28/2003 8:38:44 AM PST by blam
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To: Little Bill
I believe one of Von Daniken(spelling) books
had this slant.
17 posted on 03/02/2003 4:52:01 PM PST by HuntsvilleTxVeteran (Anything from ABCNNBCBS is suspect!)
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To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran
How whre the battries grounded? In order to have an earth ground you have to go negative to Black Box and then positive to source, we are missing a pole.
18 posted on 03/02/2003 5:05:46 PM PST by Little Bill (No Rats, A.N.S.W.E.R (WWP) is a commie front!!!!)
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To: Little Bill
You are correct that you have to have 2 connections
to pull power out of a battery but I looked at the
drawing it only has the iron rod coming out of the
top.
Perhaps the copper was connected via a wire which
they have not found.
I don't believe there was enough power in this
chemical reaction battery to plate metal.
I think it was a shaman's trick to to impress
his following.
19 posted on 03/02/2003 9:00:04 PM PST by HuntsvilleTxVeteran (Anything from ABCNNBCBS is suspect!)
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To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran
The drawings that I have seen over the years has shown one pole if I rember correctly the thing could work if connected in a series, but it is like cutting one of the tines off of a plug.

Another point of interest is the awareness of metal nobility, if it was a plating device.

20 posted on 03/03/2003 11:26:21 AM PST by Little Bill (No Rats, A.N.S.W.E.R (WWP) is a commie front!!!!)
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