Saed News: Near Baghdad, archaeologists have come across a jar that hides a great secret within it. A jar that was not made for drinking, but perhaps for generating electricity—at a time when the very word "electricity" had not yet been invented.
Saed News History Service reports that in 1936, in one of the ancient neighborhoods near Baghdad, something was discovered that still casts a shadow of mystery over it. An object that appears to be just a simple clay jar, but when examined more closely, the story changes completely.
Inside this jar was a rolled copper tube and an iron rod. The jar’s mouth was sealed with bitumen, and the iron rod protruded right from the top, as if this assembly was meant to be more than just an ordinary container.
This discovery was named the “Baghdad Battery.” It is said that if an acidic liquid like lemon juice or vinegar was poured inside, it could produce a voltage close to 1 volt. In today’s world, this voltage is insignificant, but 2,000 years ago? At a time when no one had even spoken of “electricity”? The story takes a different turn.
Perhaps this device was used for metal plating. Or maybe not. Perhaps it was something sacred, a religious tool, a container for scrolls or hidden texts. Maybe we are over-imagining. Or maybe not... We really have uncovered something from a forgotten world.
Scientists are still unsure about this jar. Some consider it a “real battery,” while others think it has nothing to do with electricity. But one thing is certain: no one expected that buried in the soil of Iraq, something resembling a battery would emerge from the depths of history.
And now the question remains: Did people in the distant past in the Middle East manage to harness electrical power? Or are we just dealing with a strange coincidence? Or perhaps something about the history of science and civilization has been overlooked... something that is either too early or too late to discover.