Shurupak
Shurupak was also the city of ancient Sumer, also called Kurupakku. Shurupak is a modern teleparast, located in the south of Nipur on the banks of the Euphrates River in Aladdin City, Iraq. It was first unearthed by German Orient in 1902, and in 1931 the University of Pennsylvania oversaw Eric Schmidt and excavated an additional six weeks of Shurupak. Shurpak was dedicated to Sud and was called Ninil, the goddess of grain and air. Shurupak became a barn and distribution city and has more warehouses than any other Sumerian city. The first excavated layers from Shurpak date back to 3000 BC. It was abandoned shortly after 2000 BC. Schmidt discovered a pottery of the night, which was measured in the early years of the second millennium BC, and a single Isin-Larsa cylindrical seal. Surface discovery was mainly of the early dynasties. On the WB-62 edition of the Sumerian list were two king of Shurpak. They are Ubara - Tutu and Jiu Sedra.