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The Age Of Agade- Inventing Empire In Ancient Mesopotamia |link|

Under Agade's rule, the city of Akkad, the imperial capital, became a center of learning and culture. The king himself was a patron of the arts, and his court attracted scholars, poets, and musicians from across the empire. The Akkadian language, which was the lingua franca of the empire, became a vehicle for literary and intellectual expression.

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For a thousand years after his death, scribes copied "The Legend of Sargon." Princes were taught his life story as a manual for leadership. Even the Assyrian King Sargon II (722–705 BCE), a millennium later, took his throne name in a deliberate act of damnatio memoriae reversal, trying to channel the ghost of the original usurper. Under Agade's rule, the city of Akkad, the

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