It … The Baghdad battery. It is 5-6 inches high and encapsulates a copper cylinder. Both the copper cylinder and the iron rod are held in place with an asphalt plug. Baghdad Battery Pyramids Egypt Mystery High Tension Electrical Engineering Glyphs Archaeology Inventions Relief. Suspended in the center of this cylinder—but not touching it—is an iron rod. The Baghdad Battery, sometimes referred to as the Parthian Battery, is the common name for a number of artifacts created in Mesopotamia, possibly during the Parthian or Sassanid period (the early centuries AD), and probably discovered in 1936 in the village of Khuyut Rabbou’a, near Baghdad, Iraq. On the other hand, Ivan Troëng, a Swedish writer in a book Kulturer Føre Istiden, 1964, captioned "The picture from Hall 5 [sic] of the Dendera Temple obviously shows electric lamps held by high-tension insulators". The Baghdad Battery is one of the most controversial find of all time.This artifact could be proof that the ancient inhabitants of Earth already had electricity Discovered in 1936, the Baghdad Battery has generated much controversy in the scientific and theoretical community. But Later in 1934, an unexpected archeological finding in Iraq prove that there shall be a great man who wasn’t the first to bring electricity to humankind. These batteries prove that in ancient times, there was electricity.
J.-C., découverte en 1936 dans un village près de Bagdad dans l'actuelle Irak [1].Cette poterie est renommée depuis que quelques archéologues, tels que Wilhelm König (de), aient émis l’hypothèse qu’elle aurait pu servir de pile électrique. The book got noticed by electrical engineers. One of the most interesting and highly debated artefacts of the Baghdad Museum in Iraq is a clay pot. It was … Even if this theory seems ridiculous at first, you should know that there are some ancient electric batteries discovered in Baghdad. The discovery I’m talking about is known as the Baghdad battery or Parthian battery. Read Later ; Print. La « pile électrique de Bagdad » est le surnom donné à une poterie datant du III e siècle av. This thing didn’t have anything common with modern batteries. The Baghdad Bettery or also known as the Parthian Battery is the name archaeologists attribute to the number of artifacts created in Mesopotamia, during the dynasties of Parthian or Sassanid or Persian Empire period. Given that no traces or marks left by the torches were found inside the pyramids, this theory of electric lighting could be true. The Baghdad battery keeps company in woo circles with pseudoarcheology favourites such as the Coso artifact, the belief that the Pharos lighthouse was powered by electricity, the Dendera lamp, the Ark of the Covenant, the Abydos helicopter, and the construction of the Giza pyramids.