Jump to content

Baghdad Battery

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Battery of Babylon)
Drawing of the three pieces

The Baghdad Battery is the name given to a set of three artifacts which were found together: a ceramic pot, a tube of copper, and a rod of iron. It was discovered in present-day Khujut Rabu, Iraq in 1936, close to the metropolis of Ctesiphon, the capital of the Parthian (150 BC – 223 AD) and Sasanian (224–650 AD) empires, and it is believed to date from either of these periods.

Its origin and purpose remain unclear. Wilhelm König, at the time director of the National Museum of Iraq, suggested that the object functioned as a galvanic cell, possibly used for electroplating, or some kind of electrotherapy. There is no electroplated object known from this period, and the claims are universally rejected by archaeologists. An alternative explanation is that it functioned as a storage vessel for sacred scrolls.

Ten similar clay vessels had been found earlier. Four were found in 1930 in Seleucia dating to the Sassanid period. Three were sealed with bitumen and contained a bronze cylinder, again sealed, with a pressed-in papyrus wrapper containing decomposed fiber rolls. They had been held in place with up to four bronze and iron rods sunk into the ground, and their cult meaning and use are inferred. Six other clay vessels were found nearby in Ctesiphon. Some had bronze wrappers with badly decomposed cellulose fibers. Others had iron nails or lead plates.

The artifact disappeared in 2003 during the US-led invasion of Iraq.[1]

Physical description and dating

[edit]

The artifacts consist of a terracotta pot approximately 140 mm (6 in) tall, with a 38 mm (1.5 in) mouth, containing a cylinder made of a rolled copper sheet, which houses a single iron rod. At the top, the iron rod is isolated from the copper by bitumen, with plugs or stoppers, and both rod and cylinder fit snugly inside the opening of the jar. The copper cylinder is not watertight, so if the jar were filled with a liquid, this would surround the iron rod as well. The artifact had been exposed to the weather and had suffered corrosion.

Austrian archeologist Wilhelm König thought the objects might date to the Parthian period, between 250 BC and AD 224. However, according to St John Simpson of the Near Eastern department of the British Museum, their original excavation and context were not well-recorded, and evidence for this date range is very weak. Furthermore, the style of the pottery is Sasanian (224–640).[2][3]

Albert Al-Haik noted original reports from the 1936 dig at Khuyut Rabbou'a giving the location as an area northeast of Baghdad, "some two miles off the Baghdad eastern bund."[4] W. B. Hafford gives context to the discovery of the artifacts in his reaction video to Milo Rossi's video on the subject.[5][6]

Comparable finds

[edit]

Similar vessels, which can be distinguished primarily by their contents, had previously been found and examined more closely:

Four sealed clay vessels were excavated at Seleucia in 1930 under the archaeological direction of Leroy Waterman, University of Michigan.[7] Three of these finds, dated to the late Sassanid period (5th to 6th centuries AD), were sealed with bitumen. These vessels contained a bronze cylinder, again sealed, with a pressed-in papyrus wrapper. Although writing could not be found on any of these largely decomposed fiber rolls, on the other hand these clay containers had been staked out with up to four metal rods made of bronze and iron sunk into the ground, their cult meaning and use are inferred.[8] The fourth jar, also sealed, contained broken glass.

In 1931, a German-American excavation expedition led by Ernst Kühnel found six more clay vessels in the immediately neighboring Ctesiphon, including three sealed find objects, each with one, three and ten wrapped and sealed bronze rolls. Inside these bronze wraps were already badly decomposed cellulose fibers. Another clay vessel contained three sealed bronze cylinders. In the other two vessels, which were also sealed, there were plates of originally pure lead coated with lead carbonate in a find specimen; in the other ten heavily corroded iron nails, on which traces of a wrapped organic fiber material could be detected.[9]

Theories concerning operation

[edit]

Its origin and purpose remain unclear.[2] Wilhelm König was an assistant at the Iraq Museum in the 1930s. He had observed a number of very fine silver objects from ancient Iraq, plated with very thin layers of gold, and speculated that they were electroplated. In 1938 he authored a paper[10][11] offering the hypothesis that they may have formed a galvanic cell, perhaps used for electroplating gold onto silver objects.[2] This interpretation is rejected by archeologists and scientists.[12]

Corrosion of the metal and tests both indicate that an acidic agent such as wine or vinegar was present in the jar.[2] This led to speculation that the liquid was used as an acidic electrolyte solution to generate an electric current from the difference between the electrode potentials of the copper and iron electrodes.[3]

Supporting experiments

[edit]

After the Second World War, Willard Gray demonstrated current production by a reconstruction of the inferred battery design when filled with grape juice. W. Jansen experimented with benzoquinone (some beetles produce quinones) and vinegar in a cell and got satisfactory performance. [citation needed]

In 1978, Arne Eggebrecht, a past director of the Roemer- und Pelizaeus-Museum Hildesheim reportedly reproduced the electroplating of gold onto a small statue. There are no (direct) written or photographic records of this experiment. In an article from the BBC, Dr Bettina Schmitz, a researcher based at the same museum, said, "There does not exist any written documentation of the experiments which took place here in 1978... The experiments weren't even documented by photos, which really is a pity...I have searched through the archives of this museum and I talked to everyone involved in 1978 with no results."[2]

Controversies over use

[edit]

Lack of electrical connections

[edit]

Though the iron rod did project outside of the asphalt plug, the copper tube did not, making it impossible to connect a wire to this to complete a circuit.[13]

Electroplating hypothesis

[edit]

König himself seems to have been mistaken on the nature of the objects he thought were electroplated. They were apparently fire-gilded (with mercury). Paul Craddock of the British Museum said "The examples we see from this region and era are conventional gold plating and mercury gilding. There's never been any irrefutable evidence to support the electroplating theory".[2]

David A. Scott, senior scientist at the Getty Conservation Institute and head of its Museum Research Laboratory, writes: "There is a natural tendency for writers dealing with chemical technology to envisage these unique ancient objects of two thousand years ago as electroplating accessories (Foley 1977), but this is clearly untenable, for there is absolutely no evidence for electroplating in this region at the time".[14]

Paul T. Keyser of the University of Alberta noted that Eggebrecht used a more efficient, modern electrolyte, and that using only vinegar, or other electrolytes available at the time assumed, the battery would be very feeble, and for that and other reasons concludes that even if this was in fact a battery, it could not have been used for electroplating. However, Keyser still supported the battery theory, but believed it was used for some kind of mild electrotherapy such as pain relief, possibly through electroacupuncture.[3][15]

Bitumen as an insulator

[edit]

A bitumen seal, being thermoplastic, would be extremely inconvenient for a galvanic cell, which would require frequent topping up of the electrolyte for extended use.[12][16][17]

Alternative hypothesis

[edit]

The artifacts are similar to other objects believed to be storage vessels for sacred scrolls from nearby Seleucia on the Tigris.[18] The object was looted along with thousands of other artifacts from the National Museum during the 2003 invasion of Iraq.[1]

In March 2012, Professor Elizabeth Stone of Stony Brook University, an expert on Iraqi archaeology, returning from the first archaeological expedition in Iraq after 20 years, stated that she does not know a single archaeologist who believed that these were batteries.[19][20]

MythBusters TV program

[edit]

The Discovery Channel program MythBusters built replicas of the jars to see if it was possible for them to have been used for electroplating or electrostimulation. On MythBusters' 29th episode (23 March 2005), ten hand-made terracotta jars were fitted to act as batteries. Lemon juice was chosen as the electrolyte to activate the electrochemical reaction between the copper and iron. Connected in series, the battery produced 4 volts of electricity. When linked in series, the cells had sufficient power to electroplate a small token and to deliver current to acupuncture type needles for therapeutic purposes, but not enough to deliver an electric shock to MythBusters co-host Adam Savage who was instead pranked by co-hosts who hooked him up to a 10,000 volt cattle fence shock generator.[21] Archaeologist Ken Feder commented on the show noting that no archaeological evidence has been found either for connections between the jars (which would have been necessary to produce the required voltage) or for their use for electroplating.[22]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Haughton, Brian (26 December 2006). Hidden History: Lost Civilizations, Secret Knowledge, and Ancient Mysteries. Red Wheel/Weiser. ISBN 9781564148971 – via Google Books.[dead link]
  2. ^ a b c d e f Frood, Arran (February 27, 2003). "Riddle of 'Baghdad's batteries'". BBC News. Archived from the original on March 20, 2012. Retrieved April 6, 2012.
  3. ^ a b c Paul T. Keyser, "The Purpose of the Parthian Galvanic Cells: A First-Century A.D. Electric Battery Used for Analgesia" Archived 2019-07-30 at the Wayback Machine, Journal of Near Eastern Studies, vol. 52, no. 2, pp. 81–98, April 1993. Includes images of the artifact and similar objects.
  4. ^ Al-Haik, Albert (1964). "The Rabbou'a Galvanic Cell". Sumer. 20: 103–104.
  5. ^ Hafford, W. B. [@Artifactually Speaking] (2022-08-24). The Baghdad Battery? Archaeologist Reacts!. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  6. ^ Rossi, M. [@Miniminuteman] (2022-07-31). Awful Archaeology Ep. 6: The Baghdad Battery. Archived from the original on 2023-05-09. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  7. ^ Leroy Waterman: Preliminary Report upon the Excavations at Tel Umar, Iraq. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor 1931.
  8. ^ Aus frühesten Veröffentlichungen J. M. Upton: The Expedition to Ctesiphon, 1931–1932. In: Bulletin of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 27, S. 188–197; Emmerich Paszthory: Stromerzeugung oder Magie. In: Antike Welt. 16, 1985.
  9. ^ Ernst Kühnel: Die Ergebnisse der Zweiten Ktesiphon-Expedition. In: Forschungen und Fortschritte. Nr. 8, 1932; Ernst Kühnel: Die Ausgrabungen der zweiten Ktesiphon-Expedition. hrsg. Islamische Kunstabteilung der Staatlichen Museen in Berlin. 1933.
  10. ^ König, Wilhelm (1938): Ein Galvanisches Element aus der Partherzeit?, Forschungen und Fortschritte, 14: 8–9. (pdf).
  11. ^ König, Wilhelm (1939): Im Verlorenen Paradies – Neun Jahre Irak, pp. 166–68, Munich and Vienna.
  12. ^ a b "The batteries of Babylon: evidence for ancient electricity?". Bad Archaeology. Archived from the original on 2016-11-11. Retrieved 2021-05-25.
  13. ^ Lenny Flank. (May 17, 2015). "The Baghdad Battery" Archived 2019-09-01 at the Wayback Machine, Hidden History (blog). WorldPress.com
  14. ^ Scott, David A. (2002). Copper and Bronze in Art: Corrosion, Colorants, Conservation. Getty Publications. pp. 16–18. ISBN 978-0-89236-638-5. Archived from the original on 2021-05-31. Retrieved 2020-10-20.
  15. ^ Oxford University Archived 2019-09-01 at the Wayback Machine, Elizabeth Frood editor (on eScholarship website): Eggebrecht's account
  16. ^ the Baghdad Battery Archived 2018-12-06 at the Wayback Machine on The Iron Skeptic website
  17. ^ "The Baghdad Battery – and Ancient Electricity". Michigan State University students website. October 12, 2010. Archived from the original on November 9, 2013. Retrieved March 9, 2015. MSU students cite the now offline SkepticWorld.com website article (archived January 16, 2012) and offer their viewpoint.
  18. ^ Keith Fitzpatrick-Matthews (26 December 2009). "The batteries of Babylon: evidence for ancient electricity?". Bad Archaeology. Archived from the original on 11 November 2016. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
  19. ^ Stone, Elizabeth (March 23, 2012). "Archaeologists Revisit Iraq". Science Friday (Interview). Interviewed by Flatow, Ira. Archived from the original on April 16, 2019. Retrieved April 6, 2012. My recollection of it is that most people don't think it was a battery. ... It resembled other clay vessels ... used for rituals, in terms of having multiple mouths to it. I think it's not a battery. I think the people who argue it's a battery are not scientists, basically. I don't know anybody who thinks it's a real battery in the field.
  20. ^ Prof. Stone's statement, listed as a 'red flag' among 5 red flags why it was not a battery Archived 2013-11-15 at the Wayback Machine (with sources, on Archaeology Fantasies website)
  21. ^ "Ancient Batteries: Discovery Channel". MythBusters. 2013-02-11. Archived from the original on 2013-04-15. Retrieved 2023-11-22.
  22. ^ "Ancient Alien Astronauts: Interview with Ken Feder". Monster Talk Podcast. July 27, 2011. Archived from the original on August 31, 2019. Retrieved June 1, 2013.
[edit]