3,000-year-old hymn reveals musical links across Bronze Age civilizations from India to the Mediterranean

More than 3,000 years ago, in the port city of Ugarit on the eastern coast of the Mediterranean, the scribes inscribed a song in the Hurrian language on a clay tablet. The Hymn to Nikkal is the earliest known musical score found to date. A recent study suggests that this brief composition could be of unprecedented importance: evidence of a shared global musical culture in the Bronze Age.

3,000-year-old hymn reveals musical links across Bronze Age civilizations from India to the MediterraneanAn entrance to the royal palace at Ugarit, where the oldest song in the world was found. Credit: Disdero / CC BY 3.0

The study, conducted by University of California, Santa Barbara’s Dan C. Baciu, and published on the Preprints.org server, compares the Hymn to Nikkal with the Rig Veda, one of the oldest Indian sacred texts. Using computer-ᴀssisted rhythm and melody mapping, Baciu’s study demonstrated astonishing parallels between the two pieces. Baciu explained that one in five Rig Veda verses ends with the same cadence as the Hymn to Nikkal. The odds of this occurring by accident are less than one in a million.

Cadences—repeated melodic or rhythmic units—act as musical punctuation, marking verse endings. Two cadences dominate in the Hymn to Nikkal: one simple and heartbeat-like, and one more intricate. These same two models are used in the Rig Veda, with one most frequently ending verses and the other linked closely to the Triṣṭubh meter, according to Baciu. This duality of the simple and the complex, he argues, is a deliberate artistic choice.

What astonished researchers is not only the shared rhythm but also the echoed melodic tendencies. Ancient commentators on the Rig Veda described its melodies as mounting upon accented syllables and falling thereafter—a structure also found in the Ugaritic hymn. When reconstructed digitally, the two pieces resonated with such similar characteristics that their kinship became unmistakable.

3,000-year-old hymn reveals musical links across Bronze Age civilizations from India to the MediterraneanA drawing of one side of the tablet on which the Hymn to Nikkal is inscribed. Public domain

The discovery opens questions about the ways in which music was spread over long distances in ancient times. Situated at the crossroads of Near Eastern and Mediterranean trade, Ugarit connected Mesopotamian and Anatolian cultures. The Mitanni kingdom is referred to by historians as a probable cultural bridge between Ugarit and India. This Hurrian-occupied Bronze Age state, linked with Indo-European-speaking communities, would have been the channel through which Vedic traditions and musical forms were exchanged.

“The Mitanni left us two gifts,” Baciu wrote. “One is the earliest evidence of Vedic culture outside India. The other is this hymn, which demonstrates how music was able to unite civilizations.”

3,000-year-old hymn reveals musical links across Bronze Age civilizations from India to the MediterraneanThe Rigveda Samhita, dated to 1500–1200 BCE. Credit: Ms Sarah Welch / CC BY-SA 4.0

The implications go far beyond the interest of historians. The study suggests that music—more ephemeral than stone monuments or royal decrees—spread faster and more enduringly than political alliances. As kingdoms came and went, treaties dissolved, rhythms endured. Indeed, the same cadence patterns emerged centuries later in Greek lyric poetry, most famously in Sappho’s works, and much later in European literature, echoing even in the verses of German poet Friedrich Hölderlin in 1801.

The Rig Veda itself, even now recited by more than a billion Hindus at weddings and rituals, has maintained musicality with remarkable fidelity. Though accents have evolved over millennia, its cadences remain recognizable. This consistency shows how oral traditions preserved not only words but also musical structures with remarkable precision.

Baciu’s research suggests that music may have been the first global language, spreading more easily than armies or trade caravans.

Concepts of a global musical culture challenge classic notions of isolated civilizations. They also resonate with present-day questions regarding the unity of culture in divided times. Just as Ugarit’s rhythms linked India, the Caucasus, and the Mediterranean over mountains and deserts, music today still has the power to transcend borders.

While scholars caution that more evidence is needed—the presence of prehistoric musical scores is rare—the Hymn to Nikkal presents a tantalizing vision of a Bronze Age world where people, thousands of miles away from each other, may have traded not just goods but songs.

More information: Dan C. Baciu. (2025). In the Beginning was Music! Direct Evidence for Global Musical Connections in the Bronze Age. Preprints. doi.org/10.20944/preprints202506.1669.v2

Related Posts

First confirmed artifacts from Emperor Nintoku’s 5th-century tomb in Japan

First confirmed artifacts from Emperor Nintoku’s 5th-century tomb in Japan

For the first time since the late 19th century, artifacts believed to originate from the Daisen Kofun burial mound, traditionally regarded as the tomb of Emperor Nintoku,…

40,000 Celtic artifacts and rare bronze warrior figurine unearthed at Manching in Bavaria

40,000 Celtic artifacts and rare bronze warrior figurine unearthed at Manching in Bavaria

Archaeologists have completed a three-year excavation at the Celtic oppidum of Manching in Bavaria and uncovered more than 40,000 artifacts that provide new information on life in…

Huei Tzompantli skull structure reveals new insights into sacrificed victims after a decade of analysis

Huei Tzompantli skull structure reveals new insights into sacrificed victims after a decade of analysis

A decade after its discovery in the Historic Center of Mexico City, the Huei Tzompantli of Tenochтιтlan—an immense structure built with human skulls—continues to yield new knowledge…

Submerged Roman bathhouse in Baiae may be part of Cicero’s villa

Submerged Roman bathhouse in Baiae may be part of Cicero’s villa

Three meters underwater in the Gulf of Naples, archaeologists found a remarkably preserved Roman bathhouse in the submerged ruins of Baiae, the Roman Empire’s most notorious resort….

Fossil teeth in Ethiopia reveal new Australopithecus species that lived alongside early Homo ancestors

Fossil teeth in Ethiopia reveal new Australopithecus species that lived alongside early Homo ancestors

Researchers in northeastern Ethiopia have made a thrilling discovery of fossilized teeth that may belong to a new branch of humanity, shedding more light on a critical…

4th-century earthquake victims in Heraclea Sintica reveal care for disabled in Roman world

4th-century earthquake victims in Heraclea Sintica reveal care for disabled in Roman world

Archaeologists working at the site of Heraclea Sintica, a Roman city in what is now southwestern Bulgaria, have uncovered the remains of six men who perished in…