Babylonian Life and History - E. A - Wallis Budge
Babylonian Life and History - E. A - Wallis Budge
Babylonian Life and History - E. A - Wallis Budge
1 X
E. AASSISTANT IN
WALLIS BUDGE,
THE DEPARTMENT OF ORIENTAL
M.A. (CANTAB.)
ANTIQUITIES,
BRITISH
MUSEUM
THIRD EDITION
PATERNOSTER ROW, 65
ST.
PAUt S CHURCHYARD
AND
164 PICCADILLY
The
done
is
it is
that
:
which
shall
is
be
which
,
shall be
9.
done
and there
*** *
*
* *
*
;
INTRODUCTION.
THE following pages have been written with the view of offering to the Bible student, in a small compass, a little of the history of Babylon, her thought, religion,
and manners, and consequently the means whereby he may understand better some of the allusions of ,the prophets and Bible historians. When they wrote, they knew they were addressing a nation fully acquainted
with the knowledge necessary for the understanding of inhabitants of the West are obliged their words.
We
to have recourse to whatever contemporaneous records we can find for the explanation of the history of the
time which
is
Conse
quently the notices of Bible events and Bible history which are obtained from the nation which had so much
to
particular value.
The cuneiform
bute, and that
is,
writings possess one wonderful attri they are records of events written at
Manuscript histories can be tampered with, letters altered or erased, additions inserted, whole parts cut out, and, starting with every
the time of their occurrence.
thing correct, a careless scribe will make mistakes that For after generations will never be able to put right.
INTRODUCTION.
example, in the oldest Egyptian papyri, words, and even whole chapters, are written in such a way as to prove that the scribe cannot have understood what he was
Fortunately, alterations in these cuneiform writing. documents have been rendered impossible, because they have been buried under the dust and dirt of centuries, out of the reach of the hands alike of the destructive Arab and Tourist/ and, in a measure, unaffected by the hand of slowly but surely destroying Time.
The decipherment of the clay tablets is not by any means easy; the unbaked, which have recently been brought to England from Babylon and Sepharvato, being The writing is complex and peculiarly hard to copy. difficult, and in many cases the sharp edge of the writing
has been sadly rubbed, while the wedge itself is partly or wholly filled in with dust and silica. When the tablets
are
they often
into dust or
Very much that has been done ment is quite certain, but there
uncertain.
in cuneiform decipher
is
much
that
is
still
body of cuneiform scholars is working hard to clear up these doubts, some of which day by day disappear. We greatly need more sylla baries and bilingual tablets, on which we may find the
words explained which at present are unknown. little patience and forbearance too from those who are sceptical as to the results obtained from cuneiform decipherment are necessary when cuneiform has been studied as long as Greek and Latin, there will be very little in it unknown.
;
The
small
INTRODUCTION.
and discussions among Assyriologists occasionally appear in English and foreign journals should not be used as an argument against
differences
The
which
the general truth of the decipherment of the Assyrian inscriptions, for in many cases .they only deal with
philological details which in no wise affect the, main It is true that much structure of the interpretation. remains to be done for Assyrian grammar and lexico
graphy.
When new
it is
very
probable that alterations in mir ideas respecting the exact signification of some words will have to take place ; but
the more Assyrian
is
it
be evident
how
well and thoroughly the early labourers in the field of Assyrian research did their work. The general system and plan of work thought out by Sir Henry Rawlinson,
his
and
immediate followers, Hincks, Norris, and Oppert, never be overthrown; and it is upon the broad ijll foundation laid down by these scholars that every one
else
has
built.
tions
See what the decipherment of the Assyrian inscrip has already done for Bible history It has told us it has of the land of Abraham us a version of the given story of the flood it has told us of Babylon and Nineveh
I
it
has brought us face to face with Sennacherib, Tiglathit has revealed to us Pileser, Sargon, and Esarhaddon
;
the
home, the language, and the thought of the haughty Nebuchadnezzar it has given us some of the beliefs, superstitions, religion, learning, and wisdom of the fellow
;
citizens of
Abraham, the
friend of
God
it
has caused
intimately a branch of the great Semitic race akin to the Jewish nation from which sprang the Christ, and it carries us back through the long dark vista of
us to
know
INTRODUCTION,
and shadowy time to a period when mankind was learning its letters, and step by step was slowly
centuries
advancing to
civilization.
of the
names
of the cities
and
now made
clear,
of officers.
meanings of the names of the kings and Thus, Nebuchadnezzar is Nebo pro
(
landmark/ Nabopolassar is Nebo protects the son/ Nabuzaradan is Nebo gave a seed, Sargon is the established king/ Esarhaddon is Assur gave a brother/
tects the
c c
Sennacherib
Pileser is
is
confidence
is
f
the moon-god increases brothers/ Tiglathis the son of the Sharra temple */
Chedorlaomer
is
so on.
It
is
Sargon
I.
necessary to refer here to the inscription of of Sippara, and to state plainly that the
opinions of Assyriologists are divided as to its antiquity. deeply learned French scholar denies that the first
of the
latter
character in the
form
this
name is rightly read, and says that the name is not what it should be and with
;
statement a famous English Assyriologist The arguments, however, which they briijg agrees. forward are not conclusive, in my opinion, although future discoveries may prove them to be right. In favour of the inscription there are many points among
;
form of the characters of the inscription and the inscription itself, and above all the date given by Nabonidus in his cylinder. The Assyrians $nd Babylonians kept a good and strict reckoning of events
others, the
1
Schroeder,
p. 240.
INTRODUCTION,
past,
and their general correctness goes to show that is no reason to doubt the accuracy of the state ment of Nabonidus. Moreover, the date is found on more than one cylinder clearly and carefully written. The king could have no object in giving a false an
there
tiquity to his
kingdom, or rather
;
in limiting
it
to the
time of Naram-Sin and Sargon I. There were kings of Babylon before this time why then did he choose
these two monarchs,
of greater antiquity, if he had wished merely to say that his kingdom existed for ever? Finally, I think
we have
that the inscription is of the period of about B.C. 3800. If in future days new inscriptions come to light, and
sufficient
ward,
I
I for
evidence to the contrary can be brought for one will cheerfully give up the belief in what
fact.
now think a
The land that is to-day a howling wilderness was once a flourishing country its cities were queens, and their inhabitants were the richest of the rich. But now
;
cities are ruined, its temples desolate, their gods broken, and the makers have passed away together with their works. European travellers tell of the desola
its
and misery of the land the wretched Arab prowls around the mounds which are the ruins of the former
tion
;
the ancient highways of the country are empty, closed, a nd want, misery, and scarcity are the kings of the land to-day. It is a land with no
cities
;
its
emporiums are
progress, a land
given over to a
its
ancient pagan religion, with its belief in genii, ghosts, What was good in it has ghouls, and monsters.
10
departed, with
its
INTRODUCTION.
might, its power, and its glory. The 1 wood devil* dances there, and, as Isaiah prophesied, God it is the home of the satyr and the screech-owl.
has forsaken
In this
it,
and
its
been made
I
book but few references by name have works of other Assyrian scholars, as allowed would not admit of it. Here, however, the space
little
to the
take the opportunity of expressing my obligations to every scholar who may find his work used or quoted.
are also due to Dr. Richard Garnett, of the British Museum, for reading the proof-sheets of the book,
My thanks
As new
will
E. A.
WALLIS BUDGE.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
I.
Babylonia.
from
derived Extent of country. Its great antiquity. Names of Babylon in the in Its old name. capital city.
Name
scriptions
and
their meanings.
Meaning of Babel.
Talmudic
Its size. Its \valls and their discussion thereon. Its situation. names. Translation of a long Nebuchadnezzar inscription obtained from two barrel cylinders in the British Museum. Nebuchadnezzar List of temples of rebuilt the Tower of Babel, col. I, line 53.
wrote an account of them. Nebuchadnezzar s prayer. great temples of Babylon. Meaning of their names. Birs-Nimrud the siteiof Borsippa. Babylon andBorsippa according Their bad name among the Jews. Remains of to the Talmud. Nebuchadnezzar s buildings. The tower in seven stages. Their Plajn of JDuru the same as the plain of Dura of colours, etc.
Babylon.
He
The two
Daniel.Its
Euphrates.
Its
name.
17
CHAPTER
II.
and extent.
and walls. Comparison of these Temple of Jupiter Belus. accounts with those of the cuneiform inscriptions. Extract from East India House inscription. Nebuchadnezzar used cedar covered with gold for the ceilings of his temples. Inscriptions of this monarch near Riblah. Want of definite history concerning his
Syrian,
campaigns
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
29
J2
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
III.
Method of reckoning time in use among the Babylonians. The eponym canon. Sir H. Rawlinson s discovery. Rimmon-Nirari I.,
Contract tablets. inscription to be dated. canon. The Assyrians kept a strict^, account the goddess Nana. Babylonians ma.de their Nabonidus mentions help of astronomy. Naram-Sin, who reigned 3200 years before his time. Inscription of Sargon I., B.C. 3800. Extract from inscription of Nabonidus, Legend about Sargon. Babylonian kings Naram-Sin, Ur-Bagas, Dungi, Ismi-Dagan, Libit-Istar, and others. Hammurabi, the good His canal, his good policy. Contract tablets dated in his king. Revival of commerce in Babylonia. The kings his suc reign. cessors. Tablet giving list of kings after the flood ,
B.C. 1330, caused his Extract from eponym of events. Image of calculations by the
34
CHAPTER
IV.
B.C. 1330-668.
Rise of the Assyrian Empire under Rimmon-Nirari, B.C. 1330. Translation of his inscription. Extent of his empire. TiglathHis immense kingdom. His hunting expeditions in Pileser I. Lebanon. Rise of the Jewish power under David and Solomon. Shalmaneser II. Tribute of Jehu. Assurnasirpal, king of Assyria. The bronze gates of Balawat, Wars between the Assyrian and of Assyria sends the Tartan Babylonian kings. Sargon against Ashdod. Hezekiah and Merodach-Baladan.-- Sennacherib His wars with Merodach-Baladan. Sennacherib destroys Babylon. Terrible to buildings and libraries. boast of the The; damage Rabshakeh. Sennacherib s death. Esarhaddon, the kind and merciful king. His respect for the Babylonian temples. Trans lation of an inscripti on in Babylonian ...
1
, ? .
46
CHAPTER
V.
B.
NEBUCHADNEZZAR.
668-560.
Assurbanipal s wars with Elam. His care for the libraries. Fall of The vengeance of the Babylonians.- Nebuchadnezzar s Nraeveli, Wai:, with the Egyptians. Josiah, king of Judah, Nebuchadne^zfirs buildings and canals. The Inscription on a bronze step of Tyre.The destruction of slt Jerusalem and captivity of its f Nebuchadnezzar and Daniel. Biblical names of Adam pwteflt Abel, Abraham, and Methuselah found on the tablets
l>
67
CONTENTS.
13
CHAPTER
VI.
THE CUNEIFORM ACCOUNT OF THE CAPTURE OF BABYLON BY CYRUS. THE CAUSES WHICH LED TO IT. B.C. 560-530.
PAGE
Rab-Mag.
Nabonidus, king of Babylon, and Belshazzar, master of the army. Cyrus. Rise,, of his power. Death of the mother of Nabonidus. Chief events of the years of the reign of Nabonidus.. Extract from an inscription of this monarch. His researches. His restorations of the temples. Nabonidus a sun-worshipper. Arrival of Cyrus at Babylon. His cylinder. Part of cuneiform
Translation of it. text relating to the capture of Babylon. Cyrus the shepherd, the good king. His conciliatory policy. His His restoration of the, cities and temples. kindness to the Jews,
Belshazzar s feast
76
CHAPTER
VII.
Prophecies relating to
its fall
90
CHAPTER
VIII.
Manner
of signs.
in
syllabaries in
Polyphony of the characters. The signs. two and three columns. Bilingual lists of words. Their shape, Bilingual reading books. Method of making tablets. size, colour, and texture. Writing instrument. Babylonian mathe Their method of counting. Extract from a table of cube matics.
Comparison
Compound
roots.
Babylonian astronomy. Translations of their reports. Names of gods to whom they were dedicated. List of months. Invention of the calendar. Babylonian observatories. Comets". Belief in evil spirits Incantations. tablets. Ma"gical Eclipses.
14
CONTENTS.
PAGE
Seals of witnesses, etc.- Translations of nail marks, Phoenician and Greek signatures, two slave contracts. The banking firm of Egibi and Son. Great
current in the time of Isaiah.
Contract tablets.
The latest dated contract importance of these dated documents.Text of a contract tablet. Dr. Oppert s translation of it Translation of contract tablet of the xyth year of Translation. Translation of a Babylonian boundary stone or Nabonidus. Portents. Standard inscription. Omen tablets. landmark. their shape, number of sides, etc. Discovery of cylinder
tablet,
Cylinders,
Gistubar legends
104
CHAPTER
THE BABYLONIAN
IX.
RELIGION.
The belief degenerated. Babylonian belief in spirits. Their pure Greeks borrowed from their myths, Difficulty of reducing their a system. Babylonian Trinity, Anu, Ea, and Bel. religion into Marduk, the son of Ea. Marduk, the saviour of mankind. Ea Ea received through Marduk taught men learning and knowledge. Her two forms. the prayers of man. Istar, the lady of war. Her search after Tammuz in Hades. Her address to Esarhaddon,
Hymn
originator
to Istar.
Extract therefrom.
all things*
Ea
and maker of
The
ship of Ea.
His weapons
Tablet representing worship thereof. Hymns to the sun. Sin, the moon-god, Ninip, Nergal, Nebo, and Rimmon. The seven evil spirits. Babylonian hell and heaven. Enjoyments of the Babylonian after death. Description of hell, the Tiamat Her rebellion against the gods, land of no return. Marduk, the son of Ea, sent to do battle with hen- His armour.
and power.
Sun-god worship.
The fight. Paraphrase of the Babylonian account. Tiamat, the c old serpent/ the devil. Temptation of Adam. prototype of the Babylonian seal giving representation of it. Babylonian account The penitent sinner ... of the Creation. 125
CHAPTER
X.
Babylonian names.
Cremation.
Commerce.
rag.
The
and writing.
Engrav148
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
(Bel)
[Frontispiece].
name
40
43
name
Stone object containing an Inscription of Nebuchadnezzar L, B.C. 1120 of recording a grant of privileges to Ritti-Marduk, king
(about),
Found
at
Abti-Habbah
(Sepharvaim)
by
51
Nebuchadnezzar
Bronze Step
(?)
of Nebuchadnezzar II.
dated 8th day of Babylonian Contract Tablet with Seal-impressions, of Babylon Sebat, accession year of Neriglissar, king
of Babylon Terra-cotta Cylinder containing the History of the Capture the Great, king of Persia
77
by Cyrus
83 99
B. c.
280-261
priests
...
s disk or
and
133
I 53
Babylonia.
Nebuchadnezzar s prayer. The two great temples of Babylon. Meaning of their names. Birs-Nimrud the site of Borsippa. Babylon and Their bad name among the Jews. Borsippa according to the Talmud, Remains of Nebuchadnezzar* s buildings. The tower in seven stages. Their colours etc. Plain of Duru the same as the plain of Dura of Daniel. Euphrates. Its name. Sippara the Biblical Sepharva im. Its name and meaning. River Tigris and Nineveh.
-,
very
far back, at
exact date can be assigned to this event, but, judging by the evidence gained from the inscriptions, it must have been at a time when all the nations around were in a state of rude barbarism. Egypt existed, no doubt, and had already become a settled empire, and its people had reached a remarkably high state of civiliza At present is seems as if these two peoples, the tion. Babylonians and Egyptians, were the only nations who Jiave left definite traces of their very early civilization. B
existence.
No
Babylon began
its
In later days Babylonia was comprised between the 3oth and 36th parallels of latitude, and the 43rd and 5 ist degrees of longitude. What its extent was in the very early days of its career is unknown. The name Babylonia is derived from its capital city.
Its old
I.
e,
the
name was Kaldu, the people were called Kaldai, Kasdim of the Old Testament. They took their
ancestor called
name from an
Hebfews took
Chesed
1
,
just
as
the
theirs
and many others. Still more anciently it was designated the two names Sumir and Akkad, i.e. South and North Babylonia. Babylon, the city, is called by various names in the inscriptions. They are as follows
by
& Stf
2,
3.
in
<^
Assyrian
A
53
The
first name reads KA DINGIRRA Kl, that is, the place which gate -H of god + the place, meaning is the The second name reads TINTIR gate of God. the wood of life. The third is E KI, Ki, that is,
par
the house It is according to others, the hollow. quite true that it can mean hollow/ but the Babylonian meant that it was the most important dwelling-place in the world, in fact, the metropolis of the universe. The two forms of the name given under No. 4 are simply translations of No. i, and are read, bab Hani and bti&rilu respectively. The mere look of the name
1
tells what it means. The first sign &;a representation of a gate with its posts and bars,
^jj^^y-fcjjiy
<Jg[
second represents a star, the third is the sign of genitive case, and the fourth is ^Iways added fcfixsjc name of a country. The form o^r
4
Babylon
J3at>$|
Gen.
xxii. 22,
CUNEIFORM INSCRIPTIONS.
commonly met with
Assyrian
Semitic
.
19
is
dingirra-ki.
Babylon or Babilum (in Assyrian) means, then the It has been generally stated that Babylon gate of God/ means confusion/ but the inscriptions prove this to be
3
incorrect
in
the history of the matter is that the Semites the name of the city. There is a root
Hebrew, bdlal, which means to confuse, to mix/ and from this word they derived the name Babylon,
will
because the confusion of tongues took place there. It be remembered that in a Talmudic discussion the
question,
Why is
c
replied, Because it is confused in Scripture, in Mishnah, and in Talmud. And the Rabbi explained the words dark places in the verse He nath set me in dark places 1 / by saying that it meant the doctrine of Babel/
Johanan
e
c gate of God is the designation (among of the city from the earliest to the latest times others)
The name
Babylon was situated uponf tfefe It was called M% and the town tf
Marduk/
size of
Unfortunately no very trustworthy account of the Babylon has come down to us. Only one thing
is certain, and that is that it was of enormous extent. Every historian differs as to his measurements, as will be seen in the following chapter when huge numbers
;
are given the suburbs of the city are probably taken into consideration. fTThe* city was surrounded by two walls, the one called Imgur-B^l, the other Nimitti-Bel. They are mentioned by Herodotus. The outer wall is said to have been built by Belus, and repaired by
NebuchadnezzarJ
is
came
Lam.
ill 6.
2,
20
it will give an idea of the extent of the works under taken by Nebuchadnezzar the Great.
COLUMN
i. 3.
I.
Nebuchadnezzar, the King of Babylon, exalted prince, the worshipper of the god Marduk, supreme lord, the beloved of the god Nebo, unwearied prince of the gate, restorer of the temple SAG-ILI, and the temple
ZIDA,
to the god Nebo and the god Marduk his lords worship has performed before their persons, the exalted one, who causes the ituti to be deep, the
who
7.
$.
messenger of the great gods, the eldest son of Nabu-pal-usur (Nabopolassar), 10. the King of Babylon am I, n. Prince Marduk, the great lord, then caused me to hold firmly 12. a sceptre (?) to rule the people [as a] shepherd 13. to restore the fortresses, and to renew the
9.
;
temples
14. greatly
he encouraged me.
trust in Marduk, 15. I put lord, 16. fiis supreme fortress, the citadel his
my
my
my judge,
high place, [the
walls]
17.
1 8.
ip;
30.
Upon
the threshold of
its
great gates,
aa,
a$. the wMoti .never had any king predecessor 34* Ttie qasty (jof the fortress), its ditch (moat),
my
made.
,0. tie
my
begetter, built
bulwark
and completed
for a
(?).
CUNEIFORM INSCRIPTIONS.
37. As for me, the paths of the ancient quay 28. once, twice 39. I built up with bitumen and brick *, and
21
30. the
31. I
quay which
its
my
father
had worked
at
ex
cavated.
caused
flat slabs.
and
32. I raised
33.
up
summit
I
like a mountain.
The quay
34. within
35.
36.
37.
38. 39. 40.
41.
completed. the quay with bitumen and brick the father my begetter had worked at ; its buttresses with brick (?) along the river of Sippara I bound together and I fully completed its banks. As for me, his eldest son (i. e. eldest son
Babylon
of
42.
43. 44. 45.
46.
47. 48.
Nabopolassar) ; the beloved of his heart, the paths along the quay with bitumen and brick, in addition to the quay which my father had made, % I renewed. In the temple of SAG-ILU the kissra I set. The palace of heaven and earth, the seat of tran
quillity,
Bel, the
49. the
gate of Hilisud, the seat of the goddess Zirpanitum^ 50. and the temple of ZI-DA, the dwelling-place of the divine king of heaven and earth, 51. I caused them to be covered with shining gold, and 52. I made them brilliant as the day. 53. The temple, the foundation of heaven and earth, the tower of Babel 54. I built anew.
1
I. e.
22
55. 56.
The temple
beloved of
I
of
(temple)
Nebo
built
COLUMN
1.
II.
2.
3.
with gold and sculptured stones I made like the brilliance of heaven. [it] I caused it to be covered over with durable cedar and
gold
4.
Life.
The
Nebo
*
caused to be erected before those three. great temple, the temple of the lady of the headland within Babylon, he gives the sceptre of the 7. the temple (called) world, the temple of Nebo of Harie, 8. the temple of Namgan, the temple of the wind within Kumari, 9. the temple of the dwelling before the temple of the lady of heaven, near the fortress 10. I rebuilt within Babylon, and 11. I reared up their ^ummits 12. the which never had any king my predecessor done. 13. Four thousand cubits square, the citadel with walls
5.
I
6.
The
Babylon at the ford of the rising sun. 1 6. I caused to surround. 17. I dug out the moat, I emptied away the water that had gathered there, i$v,I made its bed of bitumen and brick, and I excavated 19. the quay which my father had worked at, the lofty fortress with bitumen and brick t, I built up like a mountain upon its sides. 22. The height of the fortress of Borsippa thoroughly
23, I rebuilt.
CUNEIFORM INSCRIPTIONS.
24.
23
with
weapons of
my enemies
Sun-god
27. I rebuilt his temple within Borsippa. 28. The temple of the Sun, the temple of the
of Sippara, 29. the temple the established seat, the temple of the
god
30. of the city Batz,
temple of the eyes of the god Anum, the temple of the god Dar 32. of the city of the planet Venus, 33. the temple of heaven, the temple of Istar of Erech, 34. the temple of the Sun, the temple of the Sun-god of
Larsa,
35. the
31. the
god of Ur,
36. these temples of the great 37. I rebuilt ; and
38. I caused their beautiful adornments to be completed. 39. The restorations (or furniture) of the temples of
new places of Babylon which more than before 42. I have made extensive 43. and I have reared them up even to their summits. 44. An account of all my magnificent works 45. and of my restorations of the temples of the great gods 46. above what the kings my fathers wrote and 47. upon a stone tablet I wrote
40. the
41.
;
48. I set
it
up
I
49.
of all my works have written upon the stone tablet 51. with understanding mayest thou look upon 52. and upon the glorious things of the gods
50.
The account
which
24
53..
May
and of Marduk.
COLUMN
i.
2,.
III.
As
me
on,
3.
reverently,
and not
failing
him
4. I
5. 6.
7.
completed his beautiful [works]. [I rebuilt] (?) for the god the king of Marad his temple within Marad the .... which had been built from a remote time ;
its
my lord
8.
which no former king had ever seen, 10. I took hold of, I uncovered and n. upon the foundation stone, the beloved of the Moon9.
iz.
my
I laid
down
its
foundation,
13. I
14. I
made an
inscription in
my name
and
placed it within it. God the king of Marad, lord of all warriors, 15. 16. to the brickwork which my happy hands
[have
made]
be favourable joyfully and my life to a far distant day 19. with abundance of glory, 20. fixity of throne and length of rule 21. to eternity do thou lengthen.
17.
1 8.
22.
disobedient,
23. smash their weapons, 24. devastate the lands of the enemies, 25. sweep them all away. 26. Thy mighty weapons 27. 28.
which benefit not my enemies may they draw near and may they fight
CUNEIFORM INSCRIPTIONS.
29. for the subjugation of
25
my
enemies,
may they go by
and earth
my
32.
sides.
30. In the presence of Marduk king of heaven works pronounce blessing 31. upon
my
command my
prosperity.
&7T0A^"4he teraple of life. A third temple existed, which was called the temple of the firmament of heaven and earth. The temple of Zida had four gates the names one was called the gate of the rising sun of the others are difficult to interpret, and no satis This temple factory translation has yet been given. was dedicated to Marduk, and is the same as that said to be dedicated to Belus by the Greeks. Herodotus says that the two principal buildings in Babylon were this temple of Belus and the royal palace he says moreover Now as this temple that the river ran between them. 1 of Belus of seven spheres was so large (being a stade
;
;
;
Within Babylon there were two temples of great these were the objects chosen for restoration by all the Babylonian kings one was called E-SAGILI, .the temple of the lofty head; the other
importance, and
(
:
The only square), we ought to find some remains of it. spot, however, where ruins are found such as one would expect to find of such an edifice is at a place called
is
this,
O Bel, Babylon is thy dwelling, Borsippa thy crown, it leads us to suppose that Borsippa was in cluded in Babylon. In the Talmud, Babel and Borsippa are mentioned together as places which do harm to the The question is asked, What is Borsippa? that is, law. What does the word mean? Now just as the Jews made a pun on the name Babylon, so they made one on Borsippa, and the answer is given, Borsippa is, bor shappel i. e. a dry well. This question is followed up by
c l
This place site of the old Borsippa. eight or nine miles distant from the site of the old Babylon, and as in a hymn we find an expression like
Birs-Nimrud, the
I. e.
606
feet
9 inches.
26
another
it is
Why
is
?
;
Because
whose waters are dried up that is, it makes a man forget all that he has learnt, and they said
like a cistern
c
that the air of the tower caused forgetfulness or oblivion. call Borsippa Babel, and Babel Elsewhere they said,
We
Borsippa.
there is a huge oblong mass of unbaked l TO feet high; the north, south, east, and west brick sides are 200, 183, 200, and 136 yards long respectively. Remains of a facing of burnt brickwork are still to be found at the base, and in the tunnels which were excavated by Sir A. Layard. These burnt bricks bear the name of Nebuchadnezzar. The one stage that remains is coated with blue slag, the other stages have decayed.
i
At Babel
uoo yards in the ruins of the probably At Birs-Nimrud, however, there are ancient palace. ruins which "may be parts of the temple of Belus. They consist of a large mound, whose north-west, south-east, north-east, and south-west sides are 643,
The mound
called
Amram, which
is
in breadth, is
and 376 feet long .respectively. Its height is 133 feet, and upon its top there is a large mass of brickwork. This huge edifice was built in seven stages. The first stage is 272 feet square, and 26 feet high The second stage is originally its colour was black. 230 feet square, and 26 feet high it was orange-coloured. The third is 1 88 feet square, and 26 feet high it was coloured bright red. The fourth is 146 feet square, and The fifth 15 feet high it was coloured bright yellow. was 104 feet square, and 15 feet high it was coloured The sixth is 62 feet square, and 15 feet pale yellow. high ; it was coloured dark blue. The seventh is 20 feet
643, 420,
; ;
it was silver-coloured. These square, and 15 feet high stages were dedicated to Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, the Sun, have Venus, Mercury, and the Moon respectively. in the British Museum fragments of coloured glazed bricks from this spot. This temple was called the
;
We
See Rawlinson
Herodotus, vol.
ii,
p, 577,
CUNEIFORM INSCRIPTIONS.
27
Seven Spheres according to some, and the Seven its ruins were thoroughly Lights according to others excavated and examined by Sir Henry Rawlinson, and the above measurements are his. In a geographical list three places in Babylon are mentioned called Duru, and very possibly one of these may be the plain of Dura, in the province of Babylon/ mentioned by Daniel 1 Through Babylon ran the great river/ the river Euphrates. The Bible also calls 2 The Baby it Euphrates/ and the river Euphrates
:
<
lonian
name was Purat, or P^lrat^t its old Akkadian and this corre Pi^ra-minu^ the great stream Its to the name given it in Gen. xv. 18, etc. sponds meaning in Assyrian texts appears to be the water. The explanations of the meaning of this word generally given that are not derived from these native sources are incorrect. The Euphrates was called the soul of the land. One of the most important parts of Babylon was It was a double town, situated upon the Sippara. One part was called left bank of the Euphrates. Sippara of the sun-god/ and the other Sippara of Its old name was Zimbir> and it became Anunit. Its exact meaning is uncer Semiticised to Sippara. tain, and the name Sippara has nothing to do with the Hebrew word sepher, a book/ with which it has been often compared. Sippara is the same town as the Sepharvaim of 2 Kings xvii. 34, 31, and the dual * termination is a reminder of the double form of the
;
name
city.
Its
name
e
in
the inscriptions
is
ut-kip-nun-kL
;
The
his
31,
god of the city was Samas, or the Sun-god Kings xvii. temple was called E-babbara, and in
chief
2,
we
the Sepharvites burnt their children in fire to Adrammelech and Anammelech, the gods of The Euphrates was called the river of Sepharvaim. and Sippara is also Called Agade in the Sippara; notice farther on. inscription of Cyrus, which we shall
read that
Chap.
iii.
i.
Jer. xiii. 4, 5, 7
xlvi. 2, 6.
38
This name is probably the same as the Accad of Gen. x. 10; it means according to some the fire crown/ and may perhaps refer to the sun-god worship. It has been recently shown that the correct reading of the cuneiform sign for Akkad is Uru, and I think that there is no doubt that this is the Ur from which Abraham came. The temple of Anunit which existed in the city was built by a king called Sagar-ak-ti-as, and was called E-ul-bar.
Around the city of Babylon (according to Herodotus) was a moat, and the soil which was excavated from this was made into bricks, for the wall The builders used hot bitumen for cement, and pieces of this bitumen, with the impression of the king s sta mp on the brick upon them, remain to this day, and are in the National Collection. As to the hanging gardens, there seems to be a representation of them upon a sculpture, and their dimensions are known from other sources. The next most important river in Babylonia was the
Tigris.
It It is called in
corresponds appears to mean this river the city Nineveh was situated. The name is non-Semitic, and means the dwelling-place of the god Ninua. Each of the kings Assurbanipal, Esarhaddon, and Sennacherib built palaces there. Other cities of
to
the inscription Jdiklat or Diktat. the Hiddekel of Gen. ii. 14, and the river with the high banks/ On
CHAPTER
II.
and
extent.
Views of other Classical authors Its gates, houses streets, defences^ and walls. Comparison of these accounts with those of the
-,
cuneiform inscriptions. Extract from East India House inscription. Nebuchadnezzar used cedar covered with goldfor the ceilings of his temples. Want of definite history Inscriptions of this monarch near Riblah.
concerning his Syrian campaigns.
HERODOTUS tells us that the city Babylon stands on a broad plain, and is an exact square, 130 furlongs in length each way, so that the entire circuit is 480 furlongs. It is surrounded, in the first place, by a broad and deep moat, full of water, behind which rises a wall 50 royal cubits in width, and 200 in height. And here I may not omit to tell the use to which the mould dug out of the great moat was turned, nor the manner wherein the wall was wrought. As fast as they dug the moat, the soil which they got from the cutting was made into bricks,
.
and when a sufficient number were completed, they baked the bricks in kilns. Then they set to building, and began with bricking the borders of the moat, after which they proceeded to construct the wall itself, using throughout for their cement hot bitumen, and interposing
bricks.
a layer of wattled reeds at every thirtieth course of the On the top, along the edges of the wall, they constructed buildings of a single chamber facing one another, leaving between them room for a four-horse In the circuit of the wall are a hundred chariot to turn. gates all of brass, with brazen lintels and side posts V Herodotus then goes on to say that the river
1
Rawlinson
Herodotus, vol.
i.
pp, 297-301.
30
and swift stream which rises Euphrates, a broad, deep Armenia, divides the city into two parts. The city wall is brought down on both sides to the edge of the The houses are mostly three and four storeys stream. the streets all run in straight lines, not only those high but also the cross streets which lead parallel to the river, down to the water side. The outer wall is the main defence of the city. There is, however, an inner wall of less thickness than the first, but very little inferior to it The centre of each division of the town in strength. In the one stood the was occupied by a fortress. of the kings, surrounded by a wall of great palace in the other was the sacred precinct strength and size of Jupiter Belus, a square enclosure 2 furlongs each way, with gates of solid brass, which was also remaining In the middle of the precinct there was a in my time. tower of solid masonry, a furlong in length and breadth, upon which was raised a second tower, and on that a The ascent to the top is third, and so on up to eight. on the outside, by a path which winds round all the On the topmost tower there is ,a spacious towers of unusual temple, and inside the temple stands a couch with a golden table by its side. size, richly adorned, Below, in the same precinct, there is a second temple, in which is a sitting figure of Jupiter, all of gold/ Other historians give different lengths for the circuit
in
; ;
Clitarchus, 365^ Ctesias, 360 furlongs city. Q. Curtius, 368; Strabo, 385. There are also conflicting statements as to the height of the walls of Babylon. The statement of Ctesias goes to confirm that of Herbdotus, for he says they were 50 fathoms high. Pliny gives 200 feet and others 75 as the measurement. Sir Henry Rawlinson thinks that Herodotus referred to hands, four of which were equal to the cubit, and does not think that the height of the walls of Babylon exceeded 60 or 70 English feet. One thing is certain, and that is that the defences of Babylon must have been remarkable in their day for their strength. One
;
of the
3!
1 of the greatest evils prophesied by the prophet Jeremiah was the broad walls of Babylon shall be utterly broken, and her high gates shall be burned with fire/ The cuneiform inscriptions do not bear out the account of the classical writers as to the height of the walls and the extent of the city. The chief authority on the buildings of Babylon is the large inscription of Nebuchadnezzar preserved in the India House. It consists of ten columns, and is engraved on a short column of black basalt in 619 lines. In the first column he gives a list of his own titles, mentions his father Nabu-pal-usur, and speaks of his delight to do the works of the gods Nabu, Marduk, Istar, and others. He attributes his enthronement and origin to the god Nebo. In the second and third columns an account of the restoration of the great temple of Marduk, the prince of the gods, is given. It appears that various parts of the temple had fallen into decay, so the pious king collected all sorts and kinds of beautiful and precious stones, and began the restoration. He rebuilt -the gates of E-Zida and E-Sagili, he brought cedar wood from Lebanon to embellish the temple (like the Jewish king Solomon) the inner walls he covered over with pine and lofty cedar wood; in Borsippa he built the temple of Zida, and In column 4 parts of it he covered with bright silver. he gives a list of the temples he built, and of their gods. At the end of this column he mentions the two walls, an outer and an inner, which formed the defences of his city.
s ;
He
says
66. of
Imgur-Bel
which Nabu-pal-usur
king of Tintirki (Babylon), the father
70. the
71.
my
begetter
Jeremiah
li.
58.
33
COLUMN
1.
V.
He
excavated
its
ditch (with)
2.
3.
4.
6. 7.
he bound
5 The
ditch arahti
he made, and
with buttresses (?) of brick 8. the bank of the Euphrates 9. he bound, but 10. he did not complete (his work),
text here becomes very difficult, but is clearer speaks of Imgur-Bel and Nimitti-Bel. Nebu chadnezzar followed up his father s buildings, and joined the parts of the fortresses which he built with those that He built the wall of Babylon with his father began. brick across the river westward. On the eastern side of the river he built a fortification the like of which no It was 4000 cubits long other king had ever made. (?).
The
when
it
The moat which he had built he caused to be filled with water as deep as the ocean, to keep off insolent enemies who were hostile to the children of Babylon. The end of column seven gives an account .of the
He built the lofty place of within Babylon; it extended from the eastern canal to Imgur-Bel, and from the Sippara River to the Japur-Sabu. The exact meaning of all the words in which the description of the decorations is Inside Nimitti-Bel, given is very difficult to make out. the inner defence of the city, Nebuchadnezzar built a defence 400 cubits long (?), which he completed in fifteen days. In the eighth and ninth columns a summary of his deeds is given, and the religious king attributes all his glory and all his greatness to the god Marduk, In the tenth is a prayer for the general security of the empire, and for the long rule of the king over the dark races,
building
of his palace.
Royalty
33
For details as to the buildings undertaken by Nebuchadnezzar the reader is referred to the translation of the inscription given in Chapter I. There can be no doubt as to the extent, magnificence, and beauty of these temples and their decorations. A short time ago some at a inscriptions of Nebuchadnezzar were discovered states spot not far from Riblah and in them the king that he cut down cedar trees in Lebanon, and had the
;
wood transplanted
to his own land for the beautifying of the temples of the great gods his lords. Among the ruins of Babylon there are bricks by the thousand, every one of which bears the impression of the name of Nebuchadnezzar, the son of Nabopolassar, and this alone
will
From
too an inference can be drawn as to the enormous number of men that were compelled by him to serve with the service of bricks/ In the Book of Daniel Nebuchadnezzar is regarded as a builder- king, and the The inscriptions support this view most completely. and ex history of other nations tells us of his wars the inhabitants of peditions undertaken to subdue Palestine and elsewhere, but about his military exploits the inscriptions are almost silent the only piece of his history at present known is found upon a small fragment of clay about half the size of a man s hand.
this
:
c
CHAPTER
III.
B.C. 3800-1330.
goddess
of Image of Babylonians made their calculations by the help of astronomy. Nabonidtts mentions JVaram-Sin> who reigned 3200 years before his time. Inscription of Sargon 1., B. C. 3800. Extract from inscription of Nabonidus. Legend about Sargon. Babylonian kings
the Babylonians. The eponym canon. Sir H. Rawlinsoris discovery. Rimmon-Nirari /., B.C. 1330, caused his inscription to be dated. Contract tablets. Extractfrom eponym canon. The Assyrians kept a strict account events. the
Nana.
Naram-Sin, Ur-Bagas^ Dungi^ Ismi-Dagan, Libit-Istar, and others. Hammurabi, the good king. His canal, his good policy. Contract tablets
successors.
dated in his reign. Revival of commerce in Babylonia. Tablet giving list of kings after the flood.
The kings
his
Babylonian empire is certainly one of the oldest and the question, How old is it ? has been asked over and over again. This question is extremely difficult to answer, even with a moderate amount of
in the world,
THE
It will accuracy, considering our present knowledge. perhaps be well, before we begin our sketch of the history of Babylonia, to give an idea of the way in which the Assyrians and Babylonians managed their chronology. They reckoned twelve lunar months to each year, and each of these had either twenty-nine or thirty days. Their year began about the vernal equinox, as Mr. Smith said, the new moon next before the equinox marking the commencement of the new year. Whenever the twelfth month ended more than thirty days before the equinox, they inter calated a thirteenth month. This was called Ve-Adar, and they had also an intercalary Nisan and Elul. These
5
B.C.
3800-1330.
35
however, are only found on Babylonian dated a king s reign was reckoned
after his accession to the throne; though there are instances in which this rule Now just as there were has not been adhered to. archons at Athens and consuls at Rome who were elected annually, so among the Assyrians there was a custom of electing one man to be over the year whom Generally each district they called Kmu> or eponym.
and important town had its limu^ so there is no doubt that the custom was widespread and well known. Babylonian and Assyrian documents were more gene rally dated by the names of these eponyms than by
that of the reigning king. common way of reckoning in olden times was by referring to some important event which at that time was well known. An instance of this is given in the Bible 1 where we read of the words of Amos which he saw concerning Israel two years before the earth
quake. In 1862 Sir Henry Rawlinson discovered the frag ment of the eponym canon of Assyria. It was one of the grandest and most important discoveries ever made, for it has decided definitely a great many points which otherwise could never have been, cleared up. Fragments of seven copies of this canon were found, and from these the chronology of Assyria has been definitely
There is an settled from B.C. 1330 to about B.C. 620. historical inscription of Rimmon-Nirari I. in the British Museum (for a translation of it see page 46), which is dated on the side by the name of the eponym of the
After the fall of the Assyrian year about B.C. 1330. about B.C. 630, the dated Babylonian contract empire, tablets serve to keep our reckoning correct down to a The following few years before the birth of Christ. extract from the eponym canon will explain itself
:
Amos
i. i.
C 2
Name
Principal events of
of eponym.
the king of Assyria the tartan chief of the palace rab-litur the tukulu the governor
the year.
753 Assur-nirari
752 751 750 749 748 747 746 745
Samsi-ilu
Marduk-salim-anni
Bel-dayan
in the land.
in the land.
in the land.
Samas-mukin-durug Rammanu-bel-ukin
Sin-salim-anni
Nergal-nasir
Nabu-bel-usur
in the land. expedition to Zimri. expedition to Zimri. peace in the land. revolt in Calah. Tiglath-PUeser ascend ed the throne on the 1 3th day of lyyar. He marched to neigh bourhood of the river in the month Tisri.
The historical inscriptions of the Babylonian and Assyrian kings often give notices of events which took For instance, place a great number of years before. of Assyria, tells us in his large Assurbanipal, king into Elam. inscription that he made an expedition Now Kudur-nantmndi, an ancient king of Elam, had carried off from Assyria or Babylonia the image of the goddess Nana. While Assurbanipal was in Elam the goddess put it into the heart of the king to carry her 1 or the temple of heaven. image back into E ANNA The king, mindful of the wishes of the goddess, carried back the image which had been brought to Elam one thousand six hundred and thirty-five years before. Assurbanipal reigned from about B.C. 668 to B.C. 626 (about), and therefore a very good guess can be made at the date of this raid of Kudur-nantwndi, king of Elam, upon Babylon. It must never be forgotten that the Babylonians were a nation of star-gazers, and that they kept a body of men to do nothing but report eclipses, appearances of the moon, sun spots, etc., etc.
,
It
must be borne
in
mind
that
means
read in Assyrian bitu. When prefixed to the names of cities and countries, it means place or house, and is the same word as Beth in the names of For example, Beth-letem, Beth-boron, Beth-shemesh, places in the Bible. Beth-el, Beth-dagon, etc.
B.C.
3800-1330.
37
Their calculations then may be relied upon for a large imount of accuracy generally. Now this brings us back to the earliest date we are
ible to fix in the history of Babylonia.
king called
554>
Nabonidus began to reign over Babylon about B.C. and as he was anything but a warlike king he appears to have spent his time in meditation and retirement. He appeal s also to have been an archaeologist and an He was a votary of enthusiastic student of antiquity. the Sun-god and adorned his temple with the most
3
beautiful decorations.
most important to us, to be inscribed; giving an account of all his works and pious deeds to the gods, and the greater part of them were brought in fragments to Eng land by Mr. Rassam in 1883. Among other things, he tells us that he uncovered the part of the temple which Assurbanipal, king of Assyria, had made, and that he saw the inscription which the Assyrian king had caused Nabonidus did not remove it, but, in to be put there. accordance with the request upon it, he cleansed it, and He then put the inscription back offered up sacrifices. in its place, together with one of his own, and restored
the place to
former condition 1 Nabonidus then made excavations under the temple of the Sun-god, the judge of heaven and earth, in Sippara, which Nebuchadnezzar, a preceding king, had made. He sought for the foundation stone, but found it
its
.
The concluding
lines inscribed
the British
Col. 10,
1.
Museum
read thus
and
descendants Assur 109. May he whomsoever, among the kings my Istar shall proclaim for the dominion of the country and its
no. when this temple of Riduti has become old and decayed in. may he repair its decay, the inscription in my name, my
112.
113.
people,
father,
and
my
may he
114.
chamber (altar) may he cleanse, may he offer up sacrifices, may he place (my inscription) with his own. And may the great gods whose names are written down in this
inscription
38
not, and as the temple had much decayed, he brought out the Sun-god and. placed it in another temple Nabonidus made further excavations, and having gone to a depth of 15 square or earth cubits he made a great As his account of it is of such importance to discovery. us and to chronology I his own
generally,
quote
words
LINE
COLUMN IL
5?T
bit
55.
>>
*@r
ad
-
*f
Id -
spj
e
-
^y
ma.
I
>gy
excavated
*fl<y
56.
tfT; Tte-me"
-^
.gT
H
-
en- su
la
bi
^
u
-
ri
ba
^
-n
^y -ma
ancient
foundation
stone
sought,
15^
fifteen
57.
ammati
square
ga
ga
ri
*
u
T
cubits
*ar
sap
*r-
^IT
il
-tT
yy
foundation
r sdn
r-
ma
the
^r
- na
te-me-en
stone
3>
[for]
D.R Na
58.
HP-
<
gp
abil
H^
-
D.P.
sar
gi
^
na
of
the
Serffm
iRrm
>
rr
r-
^-T^T.R^^T ET
hundred years no
. { .
-
thousand two
sarra
a-lik
^^
mah
- ri
ya
li
mu
."
my
predecessor
had
seen.
du<x
B.C.
3800-1330.
39
accepted as correct, it fixes the date of the very early king Naram-Sin, and it also gives his father s name. We have at present no notice of an anterior date or king. very short time ago a small, perforated, oval-shaped object, made of mottled, pinkish-grey, hard stone, arrived It was found to contain a at the British Museum.
legend in what is called technically line Babylonian writing, that is, writing in which the characters are formed more by lines than by the ordinary wedges. This style of writing is found upon stone gate sockets of the earliest times, and goes back to a period in the history of the nation when they were beginning to discontinue the use of the hieroglyphic or pictorial system of writing, which was found too cumbrous and
difficult.
The legend
:
Baby
5H
$*
Zf
.
*
>*>>-,
Sargon
fcJnT
Agade
to
Sippara
have dedicated.
was brought from Sepharvai m (Abuand was discovered by Mr. Rassam. It is of habbah), the utmost importance, for it is an inscription without doubt made by the father of Naram-Sin, the Sargon mentioned in the inscription of Nabonidus. Now Nabonidus began to reign about 554 B.C., and he
The
stone
says that Naram-Sin reigned 3,200 years before his time; these two numbers added together make a total of which is the date of Naram-Sin s building 3,7 JJ4 years, thp temple of the Sun-god at Sippara. Here, then,
40
It would be absurd fairly accurate chronology begins. to suppose that there were no Babylonian kings before Sargon or Naram-Sin the only difficulty in the matter is to estimate the number of years which must havejpassed
;
B.C. 3800.
before the Babylonians had arrived at the high state of culture and civilization necessary to enable them to
The
most beautifully drilled and polished, and the characters are carefully and remarkably well executed.
^Babylonian history, then, as known to Sargon I., king of Agade, B.C. 3800.)
is
extant respecting this king, to the he was born in a city on the banks of the Euphrates, that his mother conceived him in secret, and brought him forth in a humble that she placed him in an ark of place
;
us,
rushes
with pitch ; that she cast him upon ark that the river carried lim along; that he was rescued by a man called Akki, vho brought him up to his own trade; and that from :his position the goddess Istar made him king. Sargon I. vas a .mighty warrior, and in chariots of bronze passed He rebuilt the palace at hrough difficult countries.
and closed
it
B.C.
3800-1330.
41
Agade, and the temple dedicated to the goddess Anunit. Naram-Sin conquered a city called Apirak, and made wars in a country called Magan. The name of the king of Magan is lost, so it is impossible to say where this
country was, as there are three different lands of
Magan
mentioned in the inscriptions. The most important king who reigned after Naram-Sin was called Ur-Bagas. He built in the city Ur a temple to the Moon-god Sin, and also at Larsa a temple dedicated to the Sun-god } and at Nipur and Lagas he reared up many fine building and temples. king called Dungi reigned after Ur-Bagas over Babylonia, whose chief works were building a tower at Ur, a temple at Erech, and repairing some of his father s
works.
There are in the British Museum some bronze images and a mutilated torso in black marble of this king. The next rulers of Babylonia we find sprang from Karrak, a city which became of great importance under the ruling hands ;of Ismi-Dagan and Libit-Istat, After
these kings, several patesi or viceroys (as the word is of royalty translated) ruled, making Zergulla their seat and government. The most important among these was Gudea. There are to be seen very many fine cylinders ind inscribed cones which were made in his reign.
Another very important king was Simti-Silhah, who :ame from Larsa. He appears to have been an Elamite, and under his rule Larsa became a most important city. His son, Kudur-Mabug, and his grandson, Rim-Agu, carried out his policy, and succeeded in making them
list of selves masters of a large part of Babylonia. of Babylonia following after Rim-Agu gives the kings following particulars of this period
:
Sumu-Abi Sumulau
reigned 15 years.
...
...
...
,,
35
Zabu, son of Sumulau, built the temples of Samas and ... Anunit, in Sippara
14
42
About
B.C.
Kassite), called Hammurabi, made Mabug and his son, Rim-Agu. became master of all Babylonia.
He
Rim-Agu
appears
is
dated:
day of Sebat, in the year when Hammurabi the king in the and Bel marched victoriously
service of
Anu
Hammurabi was a
He
Museum
deed of sale, was written on both sides of a flat piece of clay, which piece of clay was then covered over completely with other clay, and upon this the deed was again inscribed. It must have been about this time that Abraham went forth from Ur of the ChaldSes.
contract, or
The
Hammurabi reigned 55 years. He was followed by Samsu-iluna, his son, who reigned 35 years. Ebisum was the next king, he reigned 25 years. He had a son The next called Ammi-satana, who reigned 25 years. two kings were called Ammi-sa-duga and Samsu-satana, who reigned 21 and 31 years respectively. There are no details of the reigns of these kings. On a bilingual tablet lately discovered there are nearly a hundred kings names given and some day, when the other parts are discovered, it is hoped that it will be possible to recon struct the chronology of that early time with accuracy. The names of the kings who reigned subsequently to
;
ITS
B. c.
2300.
B.C.
3800-1330.
45
commonly accepted
:
nasir, 5-
Sin, a
usum-same, ii. Sargina, is. Bau-ellit. The first part of the column is broken off. It is to be noticed that the above names are Semitic. About 1700 years B.C. we find a Kassite dynasty ruling in Babylon, the first king of which was called Agu-kakHis sway extended rimi, the son of Tassi-gur-umas. over Babylon, Asnunak, Padan, Alman, and Guti. He was king of Kassi and Akkadi, and he restored the temples of the gods Marduk and Zir-panitum. He also prays to Anu and Anunitum, Bel and Beltis, Ea and Damkina, to grant him a long life. About the year 1450 we find a king called Kara-Indas ruling over Babylon, and he made a covenant with Assur-bil-nisi-su, the king
of Assyria, regarding the boundaries of their dominions. The next king, Burna-Buryas, reigned about B.C. 1425 He likewise made a covenant of peace with Bursur-Assur, the then king of Assyria. Burna-Buryas is called king of Gan-duniyas/ a district which has been He identified by some with the Garden of Eden. married Muballitat-Serua, the daughter of Assur-uballit, king of Assyria. His son was called Kara-Hardas, and he reigned over Babylon. During his reign (we are told by a tablet of synchronous history), men of the Kassi revolted and slew him/ and they placed Nazi-bugas, the son of nobody/ upon the throne. The Assyrian king went to Babylon to take vengeance upon the murderers, slew Nazi-bugas, and placed the son of MiliBurna-Buryas, Kuri-Galzu, upon the throne. or Mili-Sihu,the son of Kuri-Galzu, next reigned, Sipak,
4
and after him Merodach-Baladan I. reigned. Mr. Smith attributed to this king a boundary-stone which is now This king was attacked by Bel-Nirari, in the Museum. king of Assyria, and was defeated.
46
CHAPTER
IV.
B.C.
1330-568.
Rise of the Assyrian Empire under Rimmonari, B.C. 1330. Translation of his inscription. Extent of his empire. Tiglath-Pileser f.-l His immense kingdom. His hunting expeditions in Lebanon. Ri^ Of e the Jewish power under David and Solomon. Assttrnasirpal kin? of Tribute of Jehii.The bronze Assyria. Shalmaneser XL Balawat.Wars between the Assyrian and Babylonian kings gates of Sarpon of Assyria sends the Tartan against Ashdod.Hwekiah and MerodachBaladan. Sennacherib. His wars with Merodach- Baladan.c/ienb destroys Babylon. Terrible damage to buildings and libraries The boast of the Rabshakeh. Sennacherib s death. Esarhaddon, the kind and merciful king. His respect for the Babylonian Translation temples. an inscription in Babylonian. of
Mr
Senna-
ABOUT B.C. 1330 the kingdom of Assyria began to be most enterprising and spirited powerful and mighty. ruler called Rammanu-Nirari held sway, and he has left us an account of his conquests in a beautifully executed inscription dated in the eponymy of Shalman-Karradu. As it^is not very long, and is a good specimen of an Assyrian historical inscription, I reproduce here Professor
Sayce s translation of
it.
OBVERSE.
1.
RIMMON-NIRARI,
god, the holy conqueror, established by heaven (and) earth (and) the gods, 3. establisher of fortresses (and) demolished buildings 4. of the host of the Cassi, Gutium,
2.
5. 6.
7.
8.
and Subari, destroyer of all enemies above and below, the trampler on their countries from Lubdi (?) and Rapiku to the confines of Zabidadi and Nisi,
Lulumi,
B.C.
1330-668.
47
10.
11.
12.
13. 14. 15.
1 6.
17.
1 8.
19. 20.
21.
22. 23. 24.
the (remover) of boundaries and landmarks, the (overthrower) of Kings and Princes (whom) the gods ANU, ASSUR, SAMAS, RlMMON, and ISTAR to his feet subjected the supreme worshipper of BEL. The son of PUDIL, established by BEL, Vicegerent of ASSUR, the conqueror of the lands of Turuci and Nirkhi as far as the frontiers of furthest castles, ruling the mountains and the forests of the frontiers of wide Gutium, of the Gunukhlami and the Suti, their streams and lands the remover of boundaries and landmarks.
;
\&s>
The grandson of BEL-NIRARI, worshipper of Assur also, who on the army of the
Cassi
25. laid his yoke, and the spoil of his foes 26. his hand captured, the remover of boundaries
The great-grandson 27. and landmarks. 28. of ASSUR-YUBALLIDH, the powerful King as a worshipper in Bit-Kurra I fixed. 29.
whom
The
30.
restoration
32. the sweeper away of the armies 33. of the widespread Subari,
34. the
35.
At
remover of boundaries and landmarks. that time the ascent to the temple of ASSUR
my
Lord, 36. which (was before) the gate of the men of my country.
REVERSE.
1.
2.
3. 4. this
5. its
and the gate of the stars (called) Judges, which existed in former times, was decayed, and was stopped up and was ruined
;
48
6.
cemented,
7. I
8.
made, and my
9. for
future days.
The
future Prince
10. at the
11. shall
my
inscriptions (and)
my
written
name
god ASSUR
written
The let him restore. 13. to its place Whoever 14. his prayers heareth.
15. shall erase
1 6.
my
name
wash
and
his
own name
my
out, 17. fo destruction shall devote, 1 8. in the flood shall lay, in the fire
19. shall burn, in the water shall lay, 30. with the dust shall cover,
3,1.
descend and place, then I appoint these curses 24. (even) the enemy, the stranger, the wicked one and the injurer,
22. shall cause to
23.
25. the hostile tongue, and whosoever 26. a rival shall urge on and excite,
27. 28.
Kharsak-kurra, gods ANU, BEL, HEA, TSIRU, 30. the great gods, the spirit of heaven, 31. (and) the spirit of earth, in their ministry,
29. the
32. mightily
33.
34. 35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
may they injure him, and with a grievous curse quickly may they curse him his name, his seed, his forces and his family in the land may they destroy the glory of his- country, the duration of his people and his landmarks, by their august mouth, may it go forth, and may RlMMON in inundation malign inundate (with) whirlwind,
;
B.C.
1330-668.
49
the wind dry up, and amongst his offspring destruction, want of crops, 41. famine in his country may he lay, with 42. curse (and) rain his country like a whirlwind may he fill, a mound and ruins may he turn ; may RiMMON 43. to in his evil devouring his country devour.
may
44. (Dated)
the
month
of
the
eponymy
SHALMAN-KARRADU.
After the time of Rimmon-Nirari the history becomes and all that is known with certainty is that Tukulti Ninip, king of Assyria, conquered Babylonia. Following in his steps, the Assyrian king Assur-Danan attacked and defeated Zagaga-suma-iddina, king* of and Babylonia, and captured the cities of Zaba, Irriya,
doubtful,
Agarsal.
The next king of Babylonia appears to have been Beland during his life the Elamites made zakir-iskun several fierce attacks upon Babylonia, under the leader ship of Kudur-nan-hundi. About this time Nebuchadnezzar the First became wars against Assurking of Babylon, and he made three of Assyria. The particulars of the ris-isi (or Him), king in the second we read first campaign are not given Nebuchadnezzar burnt his baggage and retreated that and in the third he was defeated by the Assyrians, and Assur-ris-isi was the grand forty of his chariots taken. son of Assur-Danan, and the father of Tiglath-Pileser I.,
;
;
king of Assyria,
reigned about B.C. 112,0. Marduk-nadin-ahi, the next king of Tiglath-Pileser the Babylon, fought; h*e marched into Assyria, pillaged and carried off the images of the gods Ramtemples, manu (Rimmon) and Sala. Tiglath-Pileser, however, made an attack on Babylon, gathered together his army, and captured it, overrunning at the same time all Baby He captured both parts of the city Sippara, also lonia. Upe and Rapiku. Under the powerful rule of Tiglath-Pileser I., Assyria
I.,
who
With
50
became a truly mighty empire. He attacked and de feated on all sides the nations that had rebelled after the death of his father. His armies marched through diffi
cult countries, and crossed the rivers on rafts of inflated skins. penetrated as far west as the shores of the
He
(which place" Assur-bel-kala ascended the throne of Assyria, Marduk-sapik-kullat being king over Babylonia. When the latter died the Babylonians set Rammanuabla-iddina, son of nobody/ upon the throne. very important inscription of this monarch exists on a fine large white stone, which records that a grant of land was made to Ritti-Marduk, king of Bit-KarziAn English translation was yabku, in this reign. made by Mr. Pinches and myself, and appeared in the Proceedings of the Society of Biblical Archeology for April, 1884 a copy of it is given below.
cared also for the well-being of his people, for hei which Assur-Dartan had. made to brind| water to the city Assur, and put it in good repair. undertook various buildings, and from one of the towers: which he made for one of these were obtained three| cylinders which record the principal events of five years* of his reign. After this king s death took
re-cut the canal
B.C. i TOO)
He
Mediterranean Sea, and he records that he went into a ship at Arvad, and killed a dolphin. During his journey through the Lebanon forests and mountains he slew one hundred and twenty lions and many other animals.
H<p
about
Translation of an inscription of Nebuchadnezzar I., 1 1 20, recording a grant of land and privileges to Ritti-Marduk, king of Bit-Karziyabku
B.C.
:
1.
2.
3.
4.,
5.
the king of the gods sent Nebuchad nezzar the glorious prince the mighty, the offspring of Babylon, the chief of kings, the warlike ruler, the governor- of Eridu the sun of this country rejoicing his people, protector of the boundaries, the establisher of the sons [of Babylonia],
When Marduk
STONE OBJECT CONTAINING AN INSCRIPTION OF NEBUCHADNEZZAR I., B.C. 1120 (ABpux), RECORDING A GRANT OF PRIVILEGES TO RlTTI-MARDUK, KING OF BlT-KARZIYABKU. FOUND AT ABU-HABBAH (SEPHARVAIM) BY MR. H. RASSAM.
B.C.
1330-668.
the
who
to
judges
with
righteous
7.
the warlike
MAN who
make
army,
8.
9.
to.
[i.
the bearer of the mighty bow, fearless in battle, his weapons struck down the power of the country of Lullubi, the subduer of Phoenicia, the spoiler of the Kassites, the anointer of kings, the prince, the beloved of the
who with
god Marduk
C2.
[the words Marduk the king of the line inform this line in the texi\
gods sent
(see
13.
4.
15.
6.
he sent forth his weapons to revenge Akkad. From Der the fortress of the god Anu he made destruction for the distance of thirty kasbu
(i.
e.
sixty miles).
17.
1
8.
In the month, the month Tammuz, he took the road, the burning (?) blazed like fire, and covering (?) the roads there sprouted forth under
growth (or jungle) there was no water of any sort, the places thereof were destroyed. 20. The strength of the great horses remained, 21. and the zeal of the warlike hero returned. 22. The mighty king went forward, the gods sustained
19.
him,
23. 24.
25. 36.
and Nebuchadnezzar marched on, none opposing him. He turned not back from the strength of the field, the wooden growth he cut down. Ritti-Marduk lord of the house of Bit-Karziyabku,
who
i
27. (to)
he burnt
his fortress.
far as the
28.
The
29.
30.
strong king marched speedily, he captured as bank of the river Ula. kings of every region gathered together, they
the
fire
blazed forth.
54
31.
The
was darkened by
their clouds of
dust,
storm broke. In the storm of their battle 33. 34. a hero, the possessor of a chariot, could not recog nize the companion with him. 35. Ritti-Marduk, lord of the house of Bit-Karziyabku, 36. who his fortress, Bit-Imitti he burnt 37. (to) the king his lord he did not give up
his fortress,
38".
39.
40.
he feared not the battle, he marched to the enemy, and to the enemies of his lord he came down with fury. By the comtnand of the gods Istar and Rimmon,
lords of battle,
41. evil
surrounded him, then to the king of Elam his country was subjugated. 42. But king Nebuchadnezzar took his part powerfully 43. he captured the land of Elam and spoiled its goods. 44. When he returned to Akkad with glory and joy of
;
upon Ritti-Marduk, lord of the house of Bit-Karziyabku, 46. who with those hostile and inimical to the king his
47.
As
lord [had contended]. regards all the cities of Bit-Karziyabku, of the land of Namar,
which by a former king had been freed, through enemies, against their agreement, had come under the boundaries of Namar, 49. Nebuchadnezzar, the king, his lord, restored, and 50. the king pacified the princes, [he gave] the cities their freedom as in days of old. 51. In the whole boundary of the country of Namar, the % messengers of the king, 52. and the chief, the governor of Namar, shall not enter
48.
the city,
53. 54.
no master of the horse, foals, or mares, shall cause to go into the midst of the cities
B.C.
1330-668.
55
56.
57. 58. stallion keepers shall not enter the city, 59. stallions shall not be taken among the mares, (and) 60. the fruit of the plantations and the sakal trees shall
oxen and sheep by the king and governor shall not be taken, a measure (?) or homer of fodder (?) an ass shall not be given to the tax-gatherer,
of
Namar
COLUMN
1.
II.
The
2.
Bit-Samas and of the city Ilu-Ba& be made, the bridge shall not be made, the road shall not be
castle of
shall not
opened.
3.
4.
5.
6.
From the people of Nipur, (and) of Babylon, for the army of the king, as many as dwell in the cities of Bit-Karziyabku,
whether
in
town
men shall not take place. From the time when the god Tuk
in the
7.
(?) spoke to him boundary of the country of Namar, Nebuchadnezzar king of multitudes, the cities of
8.
all
Namar,
9.
those
10.
cities
chief,
for a compensation to the governor of Namar, 11. at the freeing of those cities.
:
he appointed
the
i a.
13.
Here follows the list of witnesses Nazi-Marduk son of Kurkame the kalu (i.e. man) of Akkad. Arad-Nana the son of Damik-Rammanu the recorder
of the land.
14.
5<5
15.
1 6.
man
of the
the
17.
1 8.
Samas-nadin-sumi
the
son
of Atta-ilu-ma
19. 20.
governor of the city Isin. Bau-sum-iddina the son of Hunna the governor of Babylon. Balatsu-Gula son of Arad-Ea the prefect. Marduk-ken-abli son of Himile the satam of the
treasure-house.
21.
22.
23.
24.
Arad-Gula the son of Kalbi governor of Usti. Tdb-asab-Marduk the son of E-saggil-zir governor of the land of Halman. Bel-nadin-sumi the son of Kirban the governor of Namar. And Nebuchadnezzar the prince of Namar are the
witnesses.
25.
The
scribe
who wrote
this
tablet
was
[called]
GASSU.
Kirban, or anyone else, governorship of the land of
Namar,
Namar, small [and] great all there are [of] 30. the cities of Bit-Karziyabku, 31. which the king in the boundary of the country of Namar has freed, 32. shall not fear the king and his gods, and shall bring [them] back and establish the [old] boundary 33. and shall destroy the name of god and king, and another shall write, 34. whether a sdkla or a sdkka, or a or an evil
sama,
man,
35. shall
instigate,
and
shall
stones,
36. (or) with fire shall burn, or in the river shall sink, or shall hide-it in a field unseen :
"
B.C. 1330-668.
57
that man,
may
all
38. curse
him
angrily,
king
mightily
o heaven and earth, and the goddess the mighty one of the house of righteousness, Gula, his landmark, expel his seed. 40. destroy the great chief of heaven and earth, 41. May Rimmon, lord of watercourses and rain, his rivers with slime. 42. fill up and he establish hunger and want for him,
my
nng
I* 44
May may
by
45.
and
evil,
by day and
may he
down
his
of his wretched city. mountains, Sumaliya, lady of the shining on the heights, and walks upon the dwells 47. she who
46.
May
may
48.
"Smmanu,
Nergal
49.
50.
the gods the |od Sin, and the lady of Akkad, of Kirban, of the house the great gods, in strength of heart, 51. may *2. for evil destine him, and house which he another become master of the
m^ku, D
may
53.
54
may
"
his weeping from him, 56 .may he not accept he cut off his life speedily; 57. may his hands enter the destruction of his house may 58.
May
by
_ shall build, [and may he be] his eye. a running a sharp goad in his side, and face to his conqueror, he bow down his
59.
60.
mly^LLe.
long as his
his seed.
afflictions to
him
as
,
exist
may he
expel
58
The Elamites pillaged reigned for seventeen years. His suc in his reign, and did great mischief. Sippara son of Kutmar,^ who^ reigned cessor was Ea-mukin-ziri, Next came Kassu-nadin-ahi, son of for three months. six years, and after him E-UlbarSappai, who ruled for son of Bazi. He reigned for fifteen years, his sakin-sumi, brother Ninip-kudurri-usur reigned for two years, and another brother, whose name is uncertain, for three months. An Elamite dynasty then assumed the govern
ment of the country
for six years.
doubtful until the time of a son of Iriba-Marduk. We find that a king called Sibir marched into Assyria and king called Nabudestroyed a city called AdliL next reigned, but he was defeated by Ramsum-damik find manu-Nirari, of Assyria. After Nabu-sum-damik we over Babylon, a king called Nabu-suma-iskun ruling who likewise was defeated by the Assyrian king. An ruled Babylon Assyrian king, Tukulti-Ninip IV., then
The
history
is
again
II.,
Merodach-Baladan
Jewish nation and kingdom rose under David and Solomon. Curiously to great power nations around were powerful enough, none of the
enough
quiet, all his
to attack or to
of
David
after
king of Zobah.
Egypt was
and the unfriendly Assyrian little by little lost importance until the empire revived under Assur-
nasir-pal.
While Assur-nasir-pal was ruling over Assyria, NabuHe joined in league abla-iddina held sway in Babylonia. with the Suhi, and they attempted to resist the power of the Assyrian king. They were, however, unsuccessful, and were defeated after two days battle. Zabdan, the brother of the king of Babylon, was taken captive, together with the chief of the host, Bel-pal-iddina. The leader of the Suhi and seventy of his followers fled by way of the river. Afterwards the Babylonian king made
B.C.
1330-668.
59
king of Assyria, the son dead. This king was a votary of the Sun-god, and in the so-called { Sun-god tablet he relates that a wicked enemy, called the Sutu, had invaded Babylon before his time, had attacked the temple of the Sun, and had wrought considerable damage and destruction therein. Other kings before his time had executed several considerable repairs, but
no one had done so much as he did. He apportioned a fixed revenue from the royal farms for the support of this temple, and presented the priests with valuable
garments.
claimant to the throne was the son of Nabu-pal-iddina, but it Marduk-suma-iskun, was also claimed by an usurper called Marduk-bel-usati, who, aided by the populace, took possession of the country. The Assyrian king, Shalmaneser II., took the part of the lawful heir to the throne, and marched to his assistance. The heir fled to Halman, but was followed by the the rebel was defeated at GanAssyrians and slain nanati by the Assyrian king, who then marched to Babylon. It must not be forgotten that it was this king who made Jehu, the son of Nimshi, pay him tribute ; and on the black obelisk, which stands in the British Museum, the picture of Jehu kneeling down doing rever This king ence to the Assyrian lord may be seen. erected most magnificent gates covered with plates of bronze, having in relief upon them beautifully executed scenes from his wars and expeditions. Bau-ahi-iddin and Marduk-balatsu-ikbi were the next kings of Babylon. Little is known of either save that the latter was king during the reign of Samsi-Rammanu over Assyria, who made many raids on Babylonia. In one of these raids he took Dur-papsukal, and in another he defeated the Babylonian army. Babylonian history is now silent as to the names of its kings but we know from the annals of the sister kingdom Assyria,
.next
legitimate
;
;
The
that
60
Nirari
Shalmaneser IIL, and Assur-Dan against III. was the son of SamasBabylon. Rimmon, who died about B.C. 812. Shalmaneser III. made three expeditions against Babylon between the years B.C. 783 and B.C. 767. Here comes a blank in Babylonian history for about twenty years, and the next king we find to be Nabu-nasir. No mention is made of him in the inscriptions, but he is
Rammanu-Nirari
brought to light by Ptolemy s canon. Tiglath-Pileser III. was king of Assyria during his reign, and he captured the fortress of Kuri-galzu (a town built by an early Babylonian king of that name), together with that part of Sippara dedicated to Samas, the Sun-god. The people of these places, he tells us, he took away to people his city of the fortress of Assur/ which he had founded. Nabu-nasir died about B.C. 734, and was succeeded by He in his turn Nabu-nadin-ziri, who reigned two years. was succeeded by Nabu-suma-ukin, who reigned but a few weeks. The inscriptions of Tiglath-Pileser, the king
*
become masters of the country. But now a new king of Babylon arose
of Assyria at this time, seem to point out that there were many important chiefs living in Babylonia each He mentions three, maintaining his city and army. Nabu-usabsi, Zakiru, and Ukin-ziru. This latter chief is probably the Chinzirus of Ptolemy, who appears to have become sole king of Babylonia about B.C. 730. The canon of Ptolemy inserts the name Ilulaeus (Assyr. Ulaa) after Ukin-ziru. For the last two or three hundred years Babylonia had been the scene of perpetual fights and battles, at one time winning, at another The losing. energies of the people had been strained to their highest pitch to maintain their position, but little by little the Assyrian power had dominated until the Assyrians had
called
Merodach-
Baladan, or Marduk-pal-iddina, i. e. Marduk gave a son. He was the son of Yakin, the Yugaeus of Ptolemy s canon, and appears to have been a man of great ruling In arms he was no match for the ability. great Sargon,
B.C.
1330-668.
6l
king of Assyria, who began to reign about B.C. 732, for about B.C. 712 we find him sending an ambassador to Hezekiah to solicit aid against him. He then sent to Humba-nigas, the king of Elam, and supported by him the Babylonians rebelled. The Assyrian king, Sargon, conquered them and ravaged the country. This is one of the most interesting periods of Assyrian history, for the great king of Assyria comes into very close contact with the Jews. Isaiah in his twentieth chapter tells us that he sent his Tartan to besiege Ashdod, and took it ; and on a fragment of clay cylinder of Sargon a most graphic description is given of the means taken by the Assyrian king to capture the city. The siege took place. B.C. 711, and the following is Sargon s account of it In my ninth expedition I went to Philistia and Ashdod, and to the land beside the Great Sea (i. e. the
,
Mediterranean). Azuri, king of Ashdod, hardened his heart against bringing tribute to me, and he also sent to the kings round about who were unfriendly to Assyria, and worked wickedness. I shattered his power over his people, and carried off spoil (??). After this I appointed his brother Ahmuti to be lord of the realm. I fixed the taxes and tribute which he should pay to me like the other His wicked people, however, kings round about him. hardened their hearts against the payment of tribute ; they revolted against their king, and because he had been loyal and good to me they drove him away. After this they established Yaman, a usurper, in the kingdom ; and they seated a man who was not the lawful heir on the throne of their lord. They assembled their forces for war, and they fortified the town against me. They made an excavation like a ditch all round the city to a depth of 34 feet, and into it they directed all the springs of the city, to form a moat. All the inhabitants of Philistia, Judah, Edom, and Moab, dwelling by the sea,
to bring treason.
6*2,
king of Egypt
them
and entreated
his assistance.
Then
I,
Sargon, the
of Assur and Merodach, majestic prince, the worshipper for the honour of Assur, passed over the Tigris jealous and Euphrates at their flood time. Yaman, who relied to my authority, upon himself, and who would not submit heard of the advance of my expedition to the land of
the Hittites
He
fled to
and the might of Assur overwhelmed him. Meroe, near Egypt, to a far-off place, and was
;
no more seen. Hezekiah did not support Merodach-Baladan, who then sent to Kudur-Nahhunte, king of Elam, and they became allies. Having prepared his army, he made strong his fortifications to resist the march of Sargon of Assyria. But his city Dur-athara was captured, himself put to flight, and obliged to seek refuge in his own country Beth-Yakur. On the road thither he retreated to a city called Ikbi-Bel, and Sargon having captured Merodach-Baladan and Babylon marched against it. his followers forsook Ikbi-Bel and took refuge in DurYakin, which they strongly fortified. This was useless, carried oft however, for Sargon took the city Merodach-Baladan and all his family. Sargon died B.C. 705, and was succeeded by his son, Sennacherib. He reigned quietly for two years, when a man called by Eusebiu s Hagisa (probably Mardukand"
of the inscriptions) came to the throne, Sennacherib being deposed* Merodach-Baladan gathered his armies together, attacked this rebel and slew him. He then set himself upon the throne. Sennacherib reassembled his armies and marched from Nineveh against him, and utterly routed Merodach-Baladan at the city of Kisu, and compelled him to seek refuge in Guzummanu. Afterwards he gathered together what ever people were willing to follow his fortune, and led them to a district called Nagitu, down by the Persian Sennacherib placed upon Gulf, where he died an exile.
zakir-sumi
B.C.
1330-668.
63
the throne of Babylon a young man called Bel-epus. Another Babylonian rebel arose called Suzub, the son of Gahul, but Sennacherib soon suppressed him and ravaged He was taken captive and sent to Nineveh. his country. Sennacherib was now occupied in trying to destroy Merodach-Baladan s settlement in Nagitu; and, while labouring for this object, Suzub escaped, and, aided by the king of Elam, marched to Babylon and became He was routed by the Assyrians and obliged to king. keep in hiding, but soon after he gathered together another army and again taking Babylon, proclaimed himself king. He met the Assyrian army in battle at Halub, on the Tigris he was utterly defeated, and the son of Merodach-Baladan, Nabu-sumu-iskum, who had joined him, fell into the hands of the victorious Assyrian army. Suzub fled, and Umman-Minanu, his helper, the king of Elam, retreated to his own kingdom. Sennacherib s account of his attack upon Hezekiah,
;
is
so important, that
we
give a translation
marched against the land majesty and lordship over whelmed Elulaeus, king of Sidon, and he retreated to the sea, and I subjugated his land. The supremacy of the arms of Assur, my lord, overwhelmed Great Sidon, Little Sidon, Beth-Zitti, Sarepta, Mahallib, Ushu, Ekdippa, Akko, and his strongholds, his fortresses, his lands, and his garrison submitted to me. I set Eth-Baal on the throne, and I imposed upon him a fixed annual tribute. Menahem of Samsimurna, EthBaal of Sidon, Abdiliti of Arvad, Urumilki of Byblos, Mitinti of Ashdod, Pudil of Ammon, Chemosh-Nadab of Moab, Malikram of Edom, and all the kings of Phoenicia and the sea-coast made offerings unto me and kissed my feet. I carried away the gods of the ancestors of Sidka king of Askelon, who had not submitted to my yoke, himself, his wife, his sons, his
In
third
my
campaign
of Chatti.
The
terror of
my
64
them.
set Sarludari, the son of Rukibti their former king, over I imposed tribute upon him, and he became
Continuing my expedition, I marched against Beth-dagon, Joppa, Bene-Berak, and Azuru, cities be longing to Sidka, which had not submitted to me at the I captured these, and carried right moment away spoil from them. The hearts of the chief priests and of the people of Ekron, who had cast into iron bonds their king Padi, who was a faithful vassal of Assyria, and had delivered him to Hezekiah of Judah, who threw him into prison, feared, and they called to their aid the governors of Egypt, with countless numbers of archers, chariots, and horses belonging to the king of Miluhha. I did battle with them before the city of Altaku, and defeated them. The commander of the Egyptian host, the sons of the Egyptian king, and the commander of the host of the king of Miluhha, I captured alive with my own hand. I advanced against the town of Ekron, I slew the ringleaders of the rebellion, and I transported those of the inhabitants who had taken the part in it rest of the people I pardoned. I caused their king Padi to leave Jerusalem; I set him upon the throne and made him tributary to me. Hezekiah, the king of Judah, however, did not submit to me. I besieged and captured forty-six of his towns and innumerable in their
tributary.
;
and I carried away 200,150 of their inhabitants Hezekiah himself I shut up in Jerusalem I as^ spoil. raised mounds against him. The towns from which I had transported the inhabitants I separated from his territory, and diminished it by giving them to Ashdod, Askelon, Ekron, and Gaza; I increased their annual tribute. The terror of the majesty of my might over whelmed Hezekiah, and I carried away as spoil thirty talents of gold, eight hundred talents of silver, precious stones, ivory seats and couches, skins of animals, rare woods his daughters, his wives, and his retinue, to
vicinity,
;
garrisons
Nineveh. Sennacherib
vengeance
most
B.C.
1330-668.
65
He pulled down the temples, removed walls severe. and towers, and hurled them into the river Araxes. Everything capable of being destroyed he destroyed. It is very hard to form even an idea of the damage which this king must have done. In Babylon was the accumulated learning of ages and of hundreds of gene rations of the children of men. The libraries were the repository of all the science and knowledge which the most civilized of the Semitic races had. The books of astronomy and observations of the heavenly bodies were all there, in addition to their beautiful collection of myths and stories of the childhood of the world. With every other great building, the libraries must have suffered, and very possibly many of the stones and legends which have supplied the other nations of the world with the groundwork of their mythology, perished under the needlessly cruel vengeance which Sennacherib wreaked upon the city, the gate of God. Every one is familiar with the boastful speeches of the Rabshakeh 1 (in Assyrian &Zm and ^ft^ without doubt they were the very words which the king himself had commanded to be spoken. In deeds he was cruel, in speech haughty, and every word of his inscrip
.
|>-
fc<),
am
the mighty
Sennacherib deposed Bel-epus, and raised to the Baby lonian throne his son, Assur-nadin-sumi. The particulars of these battles belong properly to the history of Assyria, but it is necessary to touch upon them briefly for the Assurright understanding of the history of Babylon.
nadin-sumi reigned about six years, and was succeeded by Nergal-edir, who, in his turn, was succeeded by MusesibMarduk. Sennacherib was murdered about B.C. 68 1, and his son, Assur-nadin-sumi, whom he had appointed over Babylon, had died about B.C. 694. Another son, Esarhaddon, came to the Assyrian throne B. c. 680, but, meanwhile, a son of Merodach-Baladan, called Nabu-zir1
Kings
xviii.
19-35.
66
napisti-esir,
had seized his father s dominions near the Persian Gulf, and wished to rule Babylonia. The sons of Sennacherib after his death quarrelled as to the succession.
this quarrel
While
attacked the city of Ur, which was ruled over by Ningaliddina. His siege was unsuccessful, however, for Esarhaddon, having defeated his brothers, marched against him, and Nabu-zir-napisti-esir was compelled to take
His brother, Nahid-Marduk, submitted refuge in Elam. to Esarhaddon, and was appointed by him to the
govern
ment of the sea-coast. The judicious king, Esarhaddon, went to Babylon and began to repair the damages which his father had done. He not only was merciful and kind, but he did his best to show that he honoured the ancient city Babylon. He built ten temples there, and
there are inscriptions in the British Museum in Babylonian as well as in Assyrian, which go to prove that he wished to conform to the usages of the as people and their
he could. His mild but firm policy pacified the excitable and angry -breasts of the various tribes ever ready for war, and rendered his short reign of thirteen
far as
.
kings
years very glorious. During his reign he associated his son, Assurbanipal, with him in the kingdom of Assyria,
o7
CHAPTER
V.
and
canals.
Josiah) king ofjudah. Nebuchadnezzar s buildings The siege of Tyre. The Inscription on a bronze step.
destritction
Daniel.
Biblical
ofJerusalem and captivity of its people. Nebuchadnezzar and names of Adam, Abel, Abraham, and Methuselah
found on
the tablets.
FOR ten or a dozen years we have peace in the land. After this a king of Elam, called Urtaki, made a league with Bel-basa, king of the Gambulu, and began to make
war against Assurbanipal and his brother. Assurbanipal hearing of this, sent an army to fight these kings, and it succeeded in driving Urtaki back into Elam, which
country he subsequently conquered and placed Ummana son of Urtaki, upon the throne. Another serious His brother s spirit trouble now awaited Assurbanipal. chafed at the idea of his being in subjection to him, and knowing that the king of Elam was ill-disposed
igas,
to Assurbanipal, the sacrilegious monarch opened the treasuries of the temples of the gods Bel, Nebo, and Nergal, and taking out their gold and silver he sent it to Umman-igas, the king of Elam, and prayed for his assistance to make a war against his brother, Assurbani
The Elamite king was quite ready to take up arms against his benefactor, and raising a large army, he, together with the Babylonian king, began a series of
pal.
desperate and fierce wars. The Elamite king had no sooner left his city on this expedition, than his own son, Parritu, rebelled, and, attacking his father, slew him, He, sending his head as a present to Assurbanipal. however, followed the policy of his father Umman-igas, E 3
68
and joined the Babylonian faction. The Assyrian army and took conquered the Babylonian king and his ally Babylon about B.C. 648. The king set fire to his palace, and perished in the flames.
Assurbanipal severely punished the insurgents, but one Nabu-bel-zikri, the ruler of the sea-coast, a grand son of Merodach-Baladan III, found his way to Elam, and took refuge with Inda-bigas, its king, who, being well disposed to Assyria, sent an ambassador to its king to inform him of the event. -Naturally enough, Assurbanipal demanded that Nabu-bel-zikri should be Before this request could be delivered up to him. brought to the Elamite king, he and his family had been slain by Umman-aldas, who had ascended the throne.
Assurbanipal sent to this new king, demanding that Nabu-bel-zikri should be given up he, fearing this insult, called for his armour-bearer, and they ran each other through with their swords. Umman-aldas, the king of Elam, sent the body of Nabu-bel-zikri, together with the head of the armour-bearer, to Assurbanipal. Samas-rsum-ukin reigned over Babylon about twenty years, and was succeeded by Kandalanu, who reigned about twenty-two years. Then followed peace until about B.C 626, when another revolt broke out in Babylonia, and the Assyrian king sent a general called Nabu-pal-usur to quell it.
;
Nabu-pal-usur was a general of great ability and tact and the government of Assyria appear to have made him Governor of Babylon on account of the skill which he showed in ruling Babylon and suppressing the
;
He afterwards became king of Babylon, and great and mighty, as in days of old. When, however, he found that he had armies under his own control, and the power to do with them as he pleased, he it^xt turned his successful troops against their old enemies the Assyrians. The Babylonians were only too glad to assist their vigorous leader Nabu-pal-usur in his meditated attack upon Nineveh. Instead of being
rebellion.
made
it
69
the general in the service of the government of Assyria, he now became a most formidable rival and opponent of its king. Assyria had been the ruling power for some time, but her power and her glory were diminishing, and she found herself powerless to resist or control the iron-willed rule of her opponent, Nabu-pal-usur (Nabopolassar). He was wise enough to see that Assyria could not be completely crushed by one nation, and he therefore made a league with Pharaoh Necho, of Egypt, and asked the Median king, Cyaxares, to give his daughter Amytes to Nebuchadnezzar, his son, to Thus a league was made, and about B.C. 609 the wife. kings marched against Assyria. They suffered various defeats, but eventually the Assyrian army was defeated, and Shalman, the brother of the king of Assyria, slain. The united kings then besieged Nineveh. .During the siege the river Tigris rose and carried ,away the greater The Assyrian king gathered part of the city wall. together his wives and property in the palace, and The setting fire to it, all perished in the flames. enemies went into the city and utterly destroyed all
they could lay their hands upon. With the fall of Nineveh, Assyria as a power practi The Babylonians remembered the cally ceased to exist. taken upon them by Sennacherib, and the Vengeance destruction he wrought and there is very little doubt but that Nabopolassar took care to avenge this treatment. About this time Josiah, the king of Judah, went out x The with his small army against the Egyptian hosts
;
monarch
,
is
known
to
all,
2 In the fourth year of Jehoiakim Nabopolassar, king of Babylon, sent his son, Nebuchadnezzar, to make war against the Egyptians; war, for some reason or
other, having
been declared.
While Nebuchadnezzar
;
Kings
2. Jer. xlvi.
yo
hastened back to Babylon to receive his father s crown. The battle which Nebuchadnezzar fought with the about B.C. 608. Egyptian king took place at Carchemish When Nebuchadnezzar reached Babylon he found When he had that the throne had been kept for him. established in the kingdom he set his various become
work
And as a builder he remains almost unsurpassed. He surrounded Babylon with two huge walls, an inner and an outer. The outer wall he simply repaired, but the He reared a huge palace in inner he built entirely. 1 and dug the great canal, the remains of fifteen days which Sir Henry Rawlinson traced from Hit to the
,
and Egyptians, at captives, Jews, Phoenicians, Syrians, to make Babylon the greatest city in the world.
miles.
H
D;P.
Na -
bi-
um
ku
du
ur
ri
su
ur
Nebuchadnezzar
sar the king
-ka
dingi
ra
ki
of Babylon
-
{i
>^2>-3?T
^M 5
za-
ni
in
the restorer
3.
-^^r
ablu
the
^w
eldest
asaridu
m
sa
f
D.P.
^m EESST
Nabu - abla Nabu -pal.
son
of
u
4-
- ki su - ur sar a- na - ku ,tin- tir usur the king of Babylon (the seat of life) am /.
Tf
^"T
f ^T
D.P.
the
^
-
ssT
um
x
the
na For
Na
god
bi-
bil -
^
ni
T^
si - i -
-TT<T
ri
Nabo,
supreme
is
lord
mentioned by
1 See Col. 8, line 63, of his large inscription, and this Berosus.
73
^
mu
-
-<
"iT
*
-
sa
ri
fo tengthener
6.
u - um of the day of
ku
ma-
la
ki
ya
my
i
zi
DA
bit
su
na
Bar -
si -
pa
ki
E-Zida
<
his
Srif
temple
in
Borsifpa
<T-
ssTT
is
&-
fifl
-
es
si -
tf/w
After
/ built (made)
pu
us
Nebuchadnezzar had returned from Syria, threw off his yoke together with Phoenicia, Judaea from the king of Egypt. He marched expecting help He at once against Tyre, but was unable to take it. therefore left an army encamped before the city, and went to Jerusalem \ Jehoiakim, who was king of Judah and although at that time, rebelled (a Kings xxiv. i) he afterwards submitted, it was to no purpose, for Nebuchadnezzar put him in fetters and established 2 Soon after Nebuchadnezzar Jeconiah in his stead came to Jerusalem again, removed Jeconiah from the Zedekiah throne, carried him to Babylon, and made
;
.
3 The Babylonian king, however, met king in his stead with much resistance from the Tyrians, for it took thirteen years to capture the city. So good an historian as Mr. Grote thinks it never was taken Jeremiah and 4 and speaking Ezekiel both prophesy its downfall
. ;
,
that iron-willed Nebuchad generally it seems impossible nezzar should be defeated in this matter, having all his army and the whole naval force of Phoenicia to help him. Three years before the fall of Tyre, however, and in
the ninth year of Zedelciah, Jerusalem rebelled, hoping to obtain assistance from the new king of Egypt, Pharaoh
1
Compare
2
3 3 *
Kings
xxiv. 11-17.
Jer. xxvii.
3-6
Ezek. xxvi.
74
this end in view the Jewish king, But before help sent messengers to Egypt. Zedekiah, could come from this quarter Nebuchadnezzar had 2 and hearing that the Egyptian besieged Jerusalem
Hophra
and with
was on the march, he raised the siege and went to do battle with it. Some say that Pharaoh Hophra was defeated, others that he retreated as the Babylonians advanced. Nebuchadnezzar returned to the siege of and after two years the city surrendered in Jerusalem, Zedekiah s eyes were the nineteenth year of his reign 3 4 Nebuchadnezzar put out and he was carried to Babylon destroyed the temple, the city and its walls, and trans
force
. .
5 ported the greater part of the people to his own land few years after this he again marched through Syria and Palestine into Egypt to make war with the Egyptian king, ravaging the country far and wide. As usual he was successful, and obtained much spoil and many captives 6 Nebuchadnezzar is the subject of the liveliest interest to us, for it was this king that threw the three children into the fiery furnace and it must never be forgotten that he was very kind to the prophet Daniel was called 7 Belteshazzar; this is Jeremiah.
.
i.
e.
Beltis
The
Daniel
1
question has been asked over and over again, Is s name found in the inscriptions ? The answer is,
5-11
;
Jer. xxxvii.
Ezek.
xvii.
15-20.
is
The
Biblical
Pharaoh Hophra
I
(otherwise
known
j[
"O
as
Apfies)
the
$tjft
or
%S2
of the Hieroglyphs.
Jer. xxxvii. 5, 3 Jer. lii. 12. 4 *I will bring him to Babylon to the land of the Chaldeans, yet shall not see it, though he shall die there. 1 Ezek. xii. 13. 5 lii. 2 Kings xxv. 8-12. Jer. 12-30 ;
he
Compare
11-16.
7
Jer.
xlvi. 3,
Dan.
iv. 8.
it
s In cuneiform
would be
>
75
No but this fact is easily explained. When an eastern king performed any great work or deed, or carried on any war, not only his own share in the labour, but the share of his generals was attributed to him, and every one s glory became merged in that of the monarch. There is no reason whatever why the name may not be found in future days when all Babylon is excavated. Many another Biblical name is found on the tablets, for
c
Adam/ Ablu example, A bramu Abraham/ Adamu Abel, Muttt,-sa-ili (the man of god), Methuselah, and so on. When Sennacherib and his mighty army besieged did all the work, but his Jerusalem, the Rabshakeh name is not even mentioned in the account of the siege When Sargon besieged written by the king s orders. Ashdod, the Tartan did all the work, but the king claimed the glory. So, however great a man Daniel was in Babylon, and however important his work, it is not likely that Nebuchadnezzar would concede to him his The plain of Dura due and mention his name. mentioned in Daniel is probably one of the districts in Babylon which are called in the inscriptions Duru,
i.e.
fortress.
after a reign of 43 years, and was succeeded by his son, Amil-Marduk (the Evil Merodach of the Bible), B.C. 563. It is necessary to mention that the form of this monarch s name, Nebuchadrezzar xxix. 18, 19; xxx. 10), is the more (Ezek. xxvi. 7
Nebuchadnezzar died
for
and
CHAPTER
VI.
THE CUNEIFORM ACCOUNT OF THE CAPTURE BABYLON BY CYRUS. THE CAUSES WHICH LED
IT.
OF TO
B.C.
560-530.
>
Kali-Mag. king of Babylon, and Belshazzar, master of the army. Cyrus. Rise of hispottier. Death of the mother ofNabonidus. Chief events of the years of the reign of Nabonidns. Extract from an His researches. His restorations of the inscription of this monarch. Nabonidns a sun-worshipper. Arrival of Cyrus at Babylon. temples.
Nabonidus
His
Part of cuneiform text 7 elatingto the capture of Babylon. it. Cyrus the shepherd] the good king. His con His kindness to the Jews. His restoration of the cities ciliatory policy. and temples. Bible account of the fall of Babylon. Belshazzars feast,
f
cylinder.
Translation of
EVIL MERODACH, after a reign of two years, was assassinated by his sister s husband, Nergal-sarra-usur or Neriglissar. Some think that he was the
Nergal
Sharezer, the Rab-Mag, who was with Nebuchadnezzar at the siege of Jerusalem \ He reigned three years, and died B. C. 55^5. Rab-Mag is in Babylonian rub a
etnga,
His son, Labasi-Marduk (the prince/ Laborosoarchod of Ptolemy), succeeded him, and was assassinated after reign of nine months. The next successor to the throne was Nabu-Nahid, Nabonidus, the son of Nabu-balat-su-ikbi, who
"a
the glorious
slowly but surely the Babylonian empire began to decay. Cyrus was be coming a powerful king, and the inertness of Nabonidus prepared the way for his future capture of Babylon. Nabonidus dwelt in the city Tema, and to his son Belshazzar was entrusted the care of the army. In the first year of the reign of Nabonidus we find that he made
1
And now
began
Jer. xxxix. 3
nnd
13.
79
war with a king whose name is lost in the second there was a slight rebellion in Hamath. In his third year he went to a country called Ammananu. In his sixth year Cyrus, the king of Anzan, went to a country whose name is lost. Hearing of this, the soldiers of Astyages revolted in this year, and delivered him into the hands of Cyrus. On the cylinder of Nabonidus, quoted further on, the king says that Cyrus himself conquered Astyages but the statement which makes the soldiers of Astyages deliver their king into the hands of Cyrus agrees with that of Herodotus. Cyrus was pushing on his fortunes rapidly, for he captured the royal city in Ecbatana, and carried the silver, gold, furniture, and goods which he had taken In the seventh year of his reign there to Anzan, Nabonidus was still in Tema, while his army was in Akkad. We have no notice of what took place in the In his ninth year he was still in Tema, and eighth year. In the month Nisan of this his army was in Akkad. the mother of the king died there was mourning year for three days and much weeping. Cyrus, the king of
;
Anzan
Tigris
there.
The priests made in Akkad. gods of Babylon and Borsippa, asking for peace. In this year, on the aist of Sivan, Cyrus marched from the land of the Elamites into Akkad. Of the eleventh year of Nabonidus we know little, save that the king was in Tema, the army in Akkad, and that they sacrificed victims to the gods presiding over Babylon and The tablet which gives Borsippa, entreating peace.
Tema, and the army
sacrifices to the
these particulars also tells us that the god, Bel did not go to Babylon/ nor did Nebo come forth during these years, which means that even the worship of the gods began to be neglected. This would make the priests
carried angry, and as they were a caste which always dared great influence, it makes us wonder why the king to offend them.
80
In the seventeenth year of Nabonidus (B.C. 539) Cyrus captured Babylon but we must give some notice of the work of Nabonidus before we deal with this event.
;
Some
little
One of these fragments of some Nabonidus cylinders. is a very important document, and we shall describe here The cylinder is in three columns, briefly its contents.
and contains 159
well-written lines.
He
begins by
calling himself the son of Nabu-balat-su-ikbi, the mighty It appears that an enemy called the Sabmanda prince.
had gone to Harrari and had destroyed the temple of The god Bel wished Nabonidus to the Moon-god undertake the re-erection of this temple and the reestablishment of the city, and Marduk and Sin, the Moon-god, appeared to him in a dream and told him what Bel desired. The following is Nabonidus own
3
Marduk
the
17*
1 8.
the illuminator of heaven and earth, the strengthener of all showed me a dream. Marduk spoke with me (saying) Nabonidus, king of Babylon, with the horses of thy
chariots
19. rear up the walls of E-hulhul and of Sin 20. fix the dwelling-place within it. ^ i Reverently I spoke to the lord of the
.
22. that
23.
gods Marduk, house of which thou speakest I will build. The Sabmanda of which thou spealcest destroyed it,
strong was their might.
24.
the
Sabmanda
of
35.
which thou speakest they, their country and the kings going by their side
year with his small army he made Cyrus the king of Anzan his young servant to go;
8r
Sabmanda, he
his treasures
$9.
own
land.
his
Nabonidus began the Work of restoration, and brought army from Gaza, for the purpose. He tells us that Assurbanipal, the son of Esarhaddon, had restored it in his time. During the excavations for the necessary of the foundations, he found the cylinders which repairs had been deposited by Shalmaneser II. (who reigned about B.C. 860) and Assurbanipal. Nabonidus gave all his energies to the work, and had the bricks made like white marble/ i.e., he glazed them white. He set figures of the god Latimu on each side of the doors He then had the image of the Moonof the temple. brought from Su-anna and placed it in the shrine god He made an inscription, which he set at flarran.
by side with that of Assurbanipal, which he tells us he saw. Having done his duty to the Moon-god he next speaks of the Sun-god at Sippara. Nebu chadnezzar, it will be remembered, had restored the temple, but this inscription tells us that he looked for
side
3
the cylinders and found them not. Forty-five years after this restoration Nabonidus looked for them, and found them not. Thinking that the image of the Sungod had been placed in the wrong shrine, Nabonidus had it removed and set in another temple. After this he tells us that he excavated as much as eighteen cubits. and found the foundation stone of Naram-Sin, the son of Sargon, Which for three thousand two hundred years no king going before me had seen/ He goes on to say that Samas, the Sun-god, the great lord of E-parra, revealed to me the house the seat of the joy of his The king was very pleased with this success, heart.
f 5
and he
sacrificed
a victim.
5
pious king next restored the temple of Anunitum in Sippara), the lady who walks before the gods;. it
The
8s
was called E-ulbar. While excavating for the founda tions he found two foundation stones of earlier kings, Kudurri-Bel. This namely those of Sagasalti-Buryas and
to the remarkably interesting cylinder ends by a prayer gods Samas and Anunit. This brings us back to the tablet containing the annals After the eleventh year we of the reign of Nabonidus. know not what took place, for the tablet is broken, and we are at a loss for details until the seventeenth of the reign of Nabonidus, of which year the tablet
year
be over the gods were brought forth and sacrifices were made, all the images of the around gods they could find were taken in procession and only those of Borsippa, Cutha. and Sippara Babylon, were allowed to remain in their places. The tablet of annals gives the following account of this year At the end of the month Elul (August) the gods of Akkad, who we;re above the atmosphere, came down to The gods of Borsippa, Cutha, and Sippara Babylon. came not down. In the month Tammuz (June) Cyrus
; :
The
made battle in Rutum against .... of the river Nizallat. The men of Akkad made a revolt The soldiers took
Sippara on the I4th day without fighting, and Nabonidus away. On the i6th day Gobryas, the governor of Gutium, and the army of Cyrus came to Babylon without any opposition. Afterwards, having bound Nabonidus, he took him to Babylon. At the end of the month Tammuz the rebels of Gutium closed the gates of E-sagili ; but neither in that temple nor any other temples of the country was there found a weapon for its defence. In the month Marchesvan (October), the 3rd day, Cyrus came to Babylon, the roads were dark before him. He made peace to the city and promised peace to all
fled
Babylon. Cyrus appointed Gobryas to be governor in Babylon together with others. From the month Kislev (November) to the month Adar (February) they brought back to their shrines the gods of Akkad, whom Nabo,
TEKRA-CQTTA CYLINDER CONTAINING THE HISTORY OF THE CAPTURE OF BABYLON BY C\RUS THE GREAT, KING OF PF.RSIA.
F %
85
In the month of nidus had sent down to Babylon. Marchesvan (October) the dark, the nth day, Gobryas From the .... and the king (Nabonidus) died. of 27th of the month Adar (February) to the 3rd day the month Nisan (March) there was weeping in Akkad. 1 On the All the people were free from their chief Cambyses, the son of Cyrus, in the Temple of 4th day the Sceptre of the-World, established a festival. This is the brief history of the conquest of Babylon and it will be easy to see that as recorded in the annals it was brought about by other things than force of arms. There was a revolt among the troops of Nabonidus, and he fled, hence Sippara was easily taken, and the rebels who shut themselves up in E-sagili were without arms, therefore they were subdued without difficulty. There is a fragment of a cylinder in the British Museum which was drawn up by the command of Cyrus, and which 2 As this the taking of Babylon gives his account of famous record is so important, a paraphrase is here
.
given
first few lines of and only a few words import of them seems Nabonidus the rites of and that the ordinary
The
the fragment are much broken, are readable, but the general to be that under the care of the temples were discontinued,
offers and sacrifices were left Merodach, the lord of the gods,
At their respective shrines. grieved, and the gods left the sacred feasts which were celebrated within Kal-anna, Merodach did not appear, he had taken himself away Merodach was kind to the people of to other peoples. Sumir and Akkad, and he returned, and rejoiced all the He sought out a king for himself who would countries. s desire of the god what perform according to the heart He proclaimed the ever was entrusted to his hand.
1
unperformed.
At
this
In the inscriptions of Nabonidus no mention is made of any restoration of the temple of Marduk by him, and it seems that he neglected entirely This would of the worship of this very favourite deity of Babylonia. course arouse the indignation of the priests of Marduk.
2
Compare Job
iii.
19.
86
i&m^
P I &
J
o
63
i
M
c*
i
c^i
fe
r_
^ O O O .J
<
8
<
o S M
D O
12;
87
renown of Cyrus, the king of Anzan (Persia), throughout the length and breadth of the land, and he proclaimed He made all the people of Gutium, his glory to all. whom he had gathered to his feet, and all the dark
races
The god commanded him to make the march Babylon, he made him take the road to Tintir
wall.
whom he had caused his hand to take, to dwell under law and righteousness. Merodach, the great lord, directed his (Cyrus ) hand and heart he lived happily.
5
to his city
(Babylon),
His army was wide-spreading and far-reaching waters of a river, his forces were without number. He made them enter Kal-anna without fighting and without contest he made breaches all round the city, and he (the god) delivered Nabonidus, who did not reverence him, into the hands of Cyrus. All the people of Tintir and all the people of Akkad and Sumir, nobles and priests who had opposed the king, he crushed beneath him, and they carne and kissed his feet. And then the god Merodach, who by his service makes the dead to live, and who in difficulty and trouble aids every one, drew near to him favourably and made known his proclamation, saying, l am Cyrus the king .... the great king, the mighty king, king of Tintir, king of Sumir and Akkad, king of the four regions of the earth, the son of Cambyses, the great king, king of the city Anzan, grandson of Cyrus, the great king, king of the city of Anzan, great-grandson of Teispes, the great king of the city of Anzan, of the ancient seed of royalty, whose dominion (reign) Bel and Nebo had exalted
like the
;
according to the beneficence of their hearts/ After Cyrus entered Babylon with joy and gladness, he enlarged the royal palace, the seat of royalty, and Merodach, whom the Babylonians had grieved, daily reoiced the heart of h is follower. His wide-spreading forces j were spread over the land peacefully, and he repaired the cities and made joyful the children of Babylon. Cyrus was careful to repair immediately the temple of
88
the god Merodach, and the god was pleased to approach him favourably. All the kings of Phoenicia and round about brought their tribute, and kissed the feet of Cyrus. He restored the shrines and dwelling-places of the gods of the towns of Agade, Isnumnak, Zamban, and else where. The gods of Akkad and Sumir, which Nabo nidus had brought from their shrines for the final festival, Cyrus restored to their places. The last line or two of the inscription tells us that he prayed daily to Nebo and Bel that they would be pleased to prolong his days, to bless the decree for his prosperity, and that Merodach would regard him as his faithful follower and son. Such is the account given of this remarkable fragment It will be remembered that the of the fall of Babylon. old historian Herodotus tells us that Cyrus drained the river Euphrates nearly dry by means of a canal running into a lake, and that the Persians marched up through the river gates, which were carelessly left open by the No mention of this is made in the in Babylonians. but there is no reason why Cyrus should not scriptions have had recourse to this means as well as to fighting. have mentioned that Nabonidus had entrusted the charge of the Babylonian army to his son Belshazzar, and the Bible tells us that he was slain on the awful It makes no mention night of the capture of Babylon.
;
We
of Nabonidus. Josephus says, and when Neriglissar was dead the kingdom came to Baltasar, who by the Babylonians was called Naboandelus, and in another Nabonnedon/ part of his book he calls Nabonidus Now it is evident that the father .Nabonidus and the son Belshazzar became confused in the minds of the writers of the histories, but one and the same king is meant. It was natural that foreigners should consider Belshazzar to be the king, because he was master of the army. The Bible and Josephus record an event in this king s life which the inscriptions and Herodotus mention not.
It is said
1
,
made a
great feast to a
Daniel
v.
89
thousand of his lords, and drank wine before the thou sand. Belshazzar, whiles he tasted the wine, commanded to bring the golden and silver vessels which his father his ancestor) Nebuchadnezzar had taken out of the (i.e. temple which was in Jerusalem that the king, and his and his concubines, might drink therein. princes, his wives, In the same hour came forth ringers of a man s hand, and wrote over against the candlestick upon and the the plaister of the wall of the king s palace Belshazzar, king saw the part of the hand that wrote. exceedingly terrified at this, called for all the astrologers, soothsayers, and augurs, and demanded an interpreta At last came Daniel, the tion but none could read it. servant of the Lord, and read the awful dictum to the king MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN, i.e. God hath numbered thy kingdom and finished it thou art weighed in the balances arid art found wanting thy kingdom is verse divided and given to the Medes and Persians.
; :
or
two
later
we
read,
king of the Chaldeans, slain/ The Babylonians had heard for years of the conquests of Cyrus, but they felt secure when they remembered the walls of their city and the huge gates which broke
their line at short distances. They thought of their past and conquests, of their glories, of their old lines of kings; were insolently secure in their hearts. The prophets of all nations Israel denounced Babylon in their prophecies
;
took up the cry of joy at her downfall, and the cry Babylon is fallen resounded from city to city, and from one end of the earth to the other.
5
CHAPTER
VII.
IT fared better, however, with Babylon under the hands of Cyrus than it did when Sennacherib the king of Assyria was the conqueror. Cyrus, the tolerant
merciful
"
king, restored its temples, and made its inhabitants to dwell in peace and safety ; he re- organised the religious services in its temples, and endeavoured to make the people regard him as a kind reformer more than as a conquering king. He was a generous protector of the Jews, and obtained the glorious appellation of
anointed 1/ from the Lord God of Hosts, Who also spoke by the spirit of prophecy in Isaiah, and gave an exact description of the siege: Thus saith the Lord to His anointed, to Cyrus, whose right hand I have holden, to subdue nations before him and I will loose the loins of kings, to open before him the two-leaved gates and the gates shall not be shut I will go before thee, and make the crooked places straight: I will break in pieces the gates of brass, and cut in sundef the bars of iron and I will give thee the treasures of darkness, and hidden riches of secret places, that thou mayest know that I, the Lord, which call thee by thy name, am the God of Israel. For Jacob servant s sake, and Israel Mine
shepherd/ and
My
My
My
91
I I have even called thee by thy name have surnamed thee, though thou hast not known Me. I am the Lord, and there is none else, there is no God besi de Me I girded thee, though thou hast not known Me that they may know from the rising of the sun, and from the west, that there is none beside Me. I am the 1 Lord, and there is none else /
:
told Daniel prospered V arranged the affairs of Babylon, he turned his attention to the Jews, and in his first year 3 the Lord stirred up the spirit of Cyrus, king of Persia, that he made a proclamation throughout all his king
Under
his
rule
we
are
it
also
in
writing, saying,
;
Thus
saith
Cyrus, king of Persia, the Lord God of heaven hath given me all the kingdoms of the earth and He hath charged me to build HinV an house at Jerusalem, which is in Judah. Who is there among you of all His people? his God be with him, and let him go up to Jerusalem, which is in Judah, and build the house of the Lord God And of Israel (He is the God) which is in Jerusalem.
in any place where he sojourneth, of his place help him with silver, and with gold, and with goods, and with beasts, beside the freewill -Not offering for the house of God that is in Jerusalem. only did Cyrus speak from the heart to the Jews, but he brought forth the vessels of Jehovah (which Nebuchad nezzar had carried away from Jerusalem to the house of his gods), thirty chargers of gold, a thousand chargers of silver, nine-and-twenty knives, thirty basons of gold,
whosoever remaineth
let
the
men
basons of a second sort four hundred and ten, and other vessels a thousand, altogether 5,400 vessels, and 4 handed them over to Sheshbazzar, the prince of Judah . The actual decree which Cyrus made as to the re building of the temple is given in Ezra vi. 3-5. and is, Let the house of God at Jerusalem be builded, the place where they offered sacrifices, and let the foundations thereof be strongly laid the height thereof threescore
silver
4
1
3
-23
Ezral
1-4.
Ban. Ezra
vi. 28.
i.
7-11.
93
cubits and the breadth thereof threescore cubits, with three rows of great stones, and a row of new timber arid let the expenses be given out of the king s house. And also let the golden and silver vessels of the house of God, which Nebuchadnezzar took forth out of the temple which is at Jerusalem, and brought unto Babylon, be restored, and brought again unto the temple which is at Jerusalem, every one to his place, and place them in the house of God/ Josephus tells us that Cambyses, the son of Cyrus, was unfavourable to the Jews and stopped the building but in the reign of Darius the original decree of Cyrus was confirmed, and the building proceeded. Thus were confirmed the prophecies of 1 Jeremiah, recorded in the various parts of his book himself a monotheist, was no doubt much Cyrus, being attracted to the Jews with their one Almighty Jehovah but for all that he was most tolerant to the other nations who believed in many gods. It is generally thought that Cyrus was the sole king of Babylon after
;
he had captured Babylon. Daniel, however 2 says, and Darius, the Median, took the kingdom, being about threescore and two years old and Josephus tells us that both Cyrus, the king of Persia, and Darius, the king of Media, made war with Nabonidus. It is a very hard matter to settle the question as to who this Darius was, for the inscriptions make no men tion of him, and if he reigned his reign could only have been for a few months, as the canon of Ptolemy places Cyrus first year B.C. 538. There has been much argu ment on this point some chronologists make this Darius to be Astyages, the grandfather of Cyrus, others say- he was Cyaxares, the son of Astyages, others say he was a Median prince, and some say he was a general in the army of Cyrus, while a few think him to be Darius Hystaspes. The arguments which have been brought forward to prove these various theories it would be use less to repeat here, for it would occupy too much space, and when given nothing would be proved. We must
,
Jer. xxv. 12
Dan.
v. 31.
93
wait, and perhaps when Babylon is excavated we shall find tablets which will offer a solution of the mystery. The Babylonian contract tablets make no mention of the name of this Darius the Median.
*
Cyrus died B.C. 530, and his son, Cambyses (who had been associated with him during the last year or two of Whatever reason there his reign), reigned in his stead. may have been for disaffection among the Babylonians under the reign of Cambyses is unknown it has been thought that they wished to do away with their Persian lord and his rule. Shortly after his ascending the throne he made an expedition into Egypt, about B.C. 537, and conquered it.
;
Cambyses had left a Magus in charge of the affairs of Babylon, and this Magus with his brother, also a Magus, Some time previously Cambyses had murdered revolted. and Patizithes> one of his brother Bardes or Smerdis these Magi, knowing this fact, and having a brother very like the deceased BardeSj determined to make him per Then Patizithes persuaded his brother that sonify him. he would make all straight for him and set him on the He then sent heralds in all directions saying throne. that Bardes, the son of Cyrus, was king in the place of Cambyses. The news was announced by a herald to Cambyses, who was with his army in Assyria, and who then thought that Prexaspes, whom he had appointed to kill his brother Bardes, had deceived him and had not After a little consultation Cambyses under slain him. stood the real state of affairs, and resolved to set out immediately against the Magus. The story goes that while leaping on his horse to begin his journey, the blade of the sword wounded his thigh, and the bone became diseased, and the thigh mortifying he died, having reigned
;
"
The name
of the
Magus who
it is
;
assumed the power was called Gomates, and that he treated the people with great kindness
,
said
he was,
however, slain by Darius. Soon after the Babylonians revolted under the rule of Nadintu-Bel, who pretended, to be Nebuchadnezzar, the
94
Darius at once marched against and defeated the rebels in two battles. The Babylon rebel chief, Nadintu-Bel, was captured in Babylon by Darius and put to death. Darius, in his Behistun in
son of Nabonidus.
by Sir Henry Rawlinson, gives the statements about the revolt of Gomates following He who was named Cambyses, the. son of Cyrus of our race, he was here king before me. There was of that Cambyses a brother named Bardes he was of the
scription, translated
:
same father and mother as Cambyses. Afterwards When Cambyses slew Cambyses slew this Bardes. .Bardes it was not known to the state that Bardes was killed. Then Cambyses proceeded to Egypt. When Cambyses had gone to Egypt the state became wicked then the lie became abounding in the land, both in Persia and in Media and in the other provinces. "Afterwards there was a certain man, a Magian, named Gomates. He arose from Pissiachada, the moun tain named Arakadres, from thence on the I4th day of the month Viyakhana (the i2th month) then it was that
;
became king. There was not a man, neither Persian, nor Median, nor any one of our family, who could dispossess of the The state feared empire that Gomate^ the Magian. him exceedingly. He slew many people who had known the old Bardes; for that reason he slew the people "lest
e
To the state he thus falsely declared I am Bardes, the son of Cyrus, the brother of Cambyses." Then the whole state became rebellious from Cambyses it went over to him both Persia and Media and the other pro vinces. He seized the empire; on the 9th day of the month Garmapada (the 5th month) then it was he thus seized the empire. Afterwards Cambyses, killing himself, died. The empire of which Gomates the Median dis possessed Cambyses, that empire had been in our family from the olden time. After Gomates the Magian had dispossessed Cambyses of Persia and Media and the dependent provinces, he acted with his own party (?) he
he arose.
"
me
that I
am
95
auo-ht
Then
Ormazd brought help to I prayed to Ormazd me. On the loth day of the month Bagayadish (the 1st with my faithful men I slew that month) then it was, Gomates the Magian and the chief men who were his
;
against
There was not any one bold enough to say Gomates the Magian until I arrived.
The fort named Sictachotes, in the district followers. I dispos of Media, named Nisaea, there I slew him By the grace of Ormazd I sessed him of the empire. became king Ormazd granted me the sceptre. Darius restored all the temples which the rebel and established the Magian had injured or destroyed, of the old Achaemenian line. He gives his
; ;
royalty
My father was Hystaspes of genealogy thus: was Arsames; of Arsames the Hystaspes the father father was Ariyaramnes ; of Ariyaramnes the father was the father was Achaemenes. On Teispes; of Teispes account we have been called Achaemenians. that There are eight of my race who have been kings before Sir Henry Rawlinson gives the me, I am the ninth. line in a double series provisionally thus royal
;
5
Achaemenes.
I
Teispes,
3 Cyrus.
I
Ariyaramnes.
I
4 Cambyses.
5
8 Arsames.
(Hystaspes.)
9 Darius.
6 Cambyses.
been a private person, and Hystaspes appears to have his he certainly played a secondary part in the war of the rebellious Parthians. Darius son Darius against
Atrines the Susian, conquered Gomates the Magian, the Babylonian, Martes the Persian, Nadintu-Bel Phraortes the Median, Sitratachmes the Sagartian, and Aracus Phraates the Magian, Veisdates the Persian, some one else the Armenian, each of whom personated
96
and pretended to be a king. This Aracus, or Arahu, personated Nebuchadnezzar, the son of Nabonidus, in the year 515 B.C. He was the son of Handita, and his It was rebellion took place at a town called Duban. probably in the reign of this Darius that Daniel was cast
into the lions den.
Darius was most kind to the Jews, endorsing and confirming the decree of Cyrus which allowed the Jews He added to the gifts which to rebuild their temple. Cyrus had ordered to be made, and appointed them Young bullocks and rams and lambs, for the burnt offerings of the God of heaven, wheat, salt, wine, and oil, according to the appointment of the priests which are at Jerusalem, let it be given them day by day without fail that they may offer sacrifices of sweet savours unto the God of heaven and pray for the life of the king and of 1 his sons The prophets Zechariah and Haggai lived find Babylonian during the reign of this king. contract tablets dated in the thirty-fifth year of the reign of Darius, which fact goes to prove that his reign was
;
.
We
long and successful. Under him Babylon remained an but it became absorbed entirely into important town the Persian kingdom. Darius died about B.C. 485, and was succeeded by his son Xerxes, who was favourable and tolerant to the J.ews. Josephus tells us that this was the king who gave Nehemiah permission to go and build the wall of Jerusalem. No cuneiform documents have yet been discovered which give the history of Babylon at this period, and therefore we have to rely solely upon the statements made by the classical authors on the subject. The con tract tablets, however, again come to our help, and record the names of Philip of Macedon and his celebrated son, Alexander the Great, and this shows that the latter was considered the legal king at the time the documents were made. We must wait until Babylon is thoroughly exca vated for fresh light concerning its history at this time. Seleucus became king of Babylon after the death
;
Ezra
vi. 9, 10.
97
Alexander the Great, and with him the era of the At present nothing is known of him from the cuneiform inscriptions. He died about B.C. 281-380, and his son, Antiochus, reigned in his stead. This king was, as he styles himself, the eldest son of Seleucus the Macedonian/ the king of E-ki (Babylon). He restored the famous temples of SAGILI and ZIDA, and his pure hands brought the bricks for this from the land of Hatim. On the 2oth day purpose of the month Adar, in the 43rd year of the Seleucian era (i.e. about 270 years B.C.), he laid the foundation of the temple in Borsippa dedicated to the god Nebo, the eldest son of Marduk, the offspring of the god Aneana,
Seleucidae begins.
*
the queen, the opener of the hands of (her) offspring. The wife of Antiochus was called Stratonice, and his son was called Antiochus after himself. The small cylinder which gives the above facts uses the Greek word k&klos under the form ku-uk-ht.. This is very important, for it shows that the Greek had so far influenced the Babylonian at that early age as to cause him to use Greek words to express what he could have expressed so easily in his own Semitic tongue. Antiochus prays Nebo, the eldest son, to grant and establish by thy command the prosperity of Antiochus, He Seleucus his son, and Stratoirice the queen. from about B.C. 281-380 to B.C. 261-360. Like reigned Cyrus, he had the good policy to restore the temples of the gods, and to sacrifice to the ancient divinities of the nations which it was his lot to conquer. This little cylinder was brought to England^ by Mr. Rassam from Babylon, and the writing upon it is the most curious and complex of all the various styles
and kinds of Babylonian varieties. The cylinder is is so curious, we figured on page 99, and as the writing a few lines of it with a transcript in have reproduced reader may ordinary Babylonian and Assyrian, that the be able to observe how different the style is a trans Though the literation and translation are also added. the reign of Antiochus given upon this account of
;
9#
cylinder is very short, yet it is most valuable, for it shows that Antiochus wished to conciliate the Babylonians by rebuilding their temples, and also to restore to the city a little of its former glory.
CYLINDER OF ANTIOCHUS.
r
D.P.
An-
ti
--ku-
us
sarru
rab
Antiochus
king
great
sarru
dan
nu
sar
kissati
sar
king
great
E
3-
ki
SQ^
,
X
E
king of
><
multitudes
king of
sar
matati
countries.
Babylon
\\
za-
^
ni
-
king of
S^
in
-
Sf?!
-
restorer of
E
da
Sag
-
ili
Sagili
zi
Zida
ORDINARY BABYLONIAN.
T
D.P,
Hf-
An
^
ti
4J$fc>
Hi
ku
-
^H<T
zg>
ITrab-
us
sarru.
Antiochus
2.
6fc>
king
great
8ff? 9*.
sarru
dan-nu
^ Sj^Spf^c^yV
kissati
sar
sar
ki
sar
-matati
za-
Sag
ili
Zi
da
restorer
of
E-Sagili
and
E-Zida.
B.C. 280-261.
RULE OF THE
PERSIANS.
IOI
ASSYRIAN*
D.P.
An
ti
ku
us
sarru
rab
Antiochus
2.
king
great
sar E - ki sar matati kissaii sar multitudes king of Babylon^ king of countries* king mighty king of
sarru
dan - nu
2a-ni-
H^^MM ^^in&XH^MnOTH^HT E
in
SAG
ILI
Zi
da
restorer
of
E-Sagili
and.
E-Zida,
Thus* little by little, Babylon faded away; and the with a venerable and hoary antiquity was at last broken and utterly crushed by the Persian and the Greek. For ages had Babylonia been a battle-ground she had looked on and seen for contending nations nation after nation vanish and disappear. Ages before Abraham came from Ur of the Chaldees, was Babylon a city she was flourishing when Joseph arid his people were in Egypt before Homer sung or Romulus founded Her mythology, his city she was an established power. distorted, formed the base for the beautiful superstructure of the Greek myths and fables her learning and know of the nations her ledge furnished food for the minds and, together with Egypt, she taught the successors,
city
; ; ; ;
Her children were always nations around their letters. in the infancy of their nation they dared to insolent make a tower whose top should reach unto heaven/ notice of this event is recorded in the Assyrian
;
we read Small and great mingled on the mound, Babylon went to sin corruptly. Their work made they laid down all day long, of their tower they an end entirely in the night. In his anger he poured out secret counsel, and set his face to scatter abroad. He gave a command to make their counsel of none After they had become a mighty nation they effect/ dared to brave the threats and denunciations which hurled against Isaiah, Jeremiah, and other prophets
inscriptions, for
:
102
them. Babylon was the home of luxury and refine ment, and her children only cared to toil for self-grati Isaiah in his prophecy called her fication and delight. 1 the -golden city / and with his majestic language
describes her downfall, saying Thy pomp is brought down to the grave, and the noise of thy viols: the worm is spread under thee, and the worms cover thee/ art thou fallen from And of her king he says how art thou Lucifer, son of the morning heaven, cut doAvn to the ground, which didst weaken the nations For thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into throne above the stars of God I heaven, I will exalt will sit also upon the mount of the congregation in the sides of the north ;, I will ascend above the heights of the clouds I will be like the Most High/ And the prophet The fir trees rejoice at thee, and the cedars of goes on
: *
:
How
my
Lebanon. Hell from beneath is moved for thee to meet thee at thy coming V And again Isaiah says Come down, and sit in the dust, O virgin daughter of Babylon, sit on the ground there is no throne, O daughter of the Chaldeans for thou shalt no more be called tender and delicate. Take the millstones, and grind meal uncover thy locks, make bare the leg, uncover the thigh, pass over the rivers. Thy nakedness shall be uncovered, yea, thy shame shall be seen I will take vengeance, and I will not meet thee as a "man .... Sit thou silent, and get thee into darkness, O daughter of the Chaldeans for thou shalt no more be called, The lady of kingdoms 3 The renown of Babylon filled the earth; but her haughtiness and pride brought along with them their own punishment. Her king, Nebuchadnezzar, trod down the land of Palestine, and wasted Jerusalem with fire and sword he sacked the temple and brought out from thence the vessels of the Lord, and marched back to his He made the captive Jews capital with joy and glory. assist in building the walls of his town, and probably the "walls of the temples of his pagan gods. His fate and
:
: :
:
Isa. xiv. 4.
3
following verses.
103
the fate of his city have been accurately described by And Babylon shall be Jeremiah in his book, saying
:
come heaps, a -dwelling-place for dragons, an astonish ment and an hissing, without an inhabitant. Her- cities are a desolation, a dry land, and a wilderness, a land wherein no man dwelleth, neither doth any son of man And I will punish Bel in Babylon, and I pass thereby. will bring forth out of his mouth that which he hath swallowed up and the nations shall not flow together any more unto him yea, the wall of Babylon shall fall. As Babylon hath caused the slain of Israel to fall, so at Babylon shall fall the slain of all the earth. Thus saith the Lord of hosts The broad walls of Babylon shall he utterly broken, and her high gates shall be burned with fire and the people shall labour in vain, and the folk in the fire, and they shall be weary V We, the people of to-day, see how very surely all these We look for Sodom and threats have been fulfilled. Gomorrah, and their place is not known, and but for the enterprise of our nation and the inscribed bricks of Babylon, its exact site would still remain unnoticed and And Babylon, the glory of kingdoms, the unknown. beauty of the Chaldees excellency, shall be as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah. It shall never be inhabited, neither shall it be dwelt in from generation to
: : :
generation neither shall the Arabian pitch tent there ; neither shall the shepherds make their fold there. But wild beasts of the desert shall He there ; and their houses and owls shall dwell shall be full of doleful creatures there, and satyrs shall dance there. And the wild beasts of the islands shall cry in their desolate houses, and dragons in their pleasant palaces and her time is near to come, and her -days shall not be prolonged The prophet with his God-directed voice pronounced the fate of the city and it has come to pass ; God cursed the land, and can it recover ?
:
Jer.
11.37,43,44,49,58.
104
CHAPTER
VIII.
groups of wedges in Babylonian writing which form syllables were originally pictures of objects. At first, when but few inscriptions were inscribed, they were carefully done, and bore some rudje resemblance to the It is uncertain what material was used ^o objects copied. /or writing upon besides stone, metal, clay, etc., but that cuneiform writers had a substance which they used for the purpose besides these is certain, and this is, perhaps, represented on a sculpture in the ^British Museum (Assyrian Gallery, No. 84). An official is por trayed noting down the amount of spoil upon a scroll
"
"the
of sdtrie material. Trie word $ften translated is called in Babylonian likMsi, and has the determinative for wood before it, which shows that it was some vegetable substance. Now when da^; became th& material generally used for writing purpbsis, it was found difficult to form circles ; and therefore tlif^original
made
papyrus
i.e.
Q,
in
difficult to write,
105
As the scribe find the Assyrian form of this to be *|. wrote from left to right (the wedges being in a slanting all the wedges direction), custom gradually discarded that could not be written easily in this direction, with a few exceptions. The following small table of characters will show how the forms of the characters varied, and how they became simplified. In column i a few of the characters are given, selected from inscriptions of the
Column 2 gives a short list early Babylonian empire. of characters found on the inscribed clay cylinder of Antiochus, B.C. 380. Column 3 shows the ordinary form of Babylonian writing as found upon contract and other
and column 4 the ordinary Assyrian upon the tablets of Assurbanipal s library.
tablets
;
,
as
found
4.
1.
2.
3.
ORDINARY
B.C. 20OO.
NINEVITE
B.C. 280.
OR
ASSYRIAN.
BABYLONIAN,
Hf-
sr
In
v
r
some
cases
the character
still
Thus
^ ******
I06
sented a
it
is
also placed
and the home of a star, i.e. the heavens before a god s name. The sign for
;
^5==^ the wedges at the ends representing and those joining them cross-bars. Sometimes posts, two signs are placed together to express a word, and their two meanings added together give a new one. Thus d^= represented a circular object, and ^ meant but 5$^ meant month/ -called after the thirty round moon and its thirty days, tjyfy means house/ and fcV., great but pfff f f- means palace/ or great house. -^tJ means mouth/ and U water; but v means to drink/ can be called dingir, sa, essa, ana, etc. only when it is read ana it means sky OE heaven when sa, star; when dingir^ god -when
;
;
>->f-
gate was
essa,
divinity of corn
(?).
(It is
very
difficult at
times
to discover the right reading of the signs having this quality of polyphony, and hence we find the same king called Assur-izir-pal, Assur-akh-bal and Assur-nasir-pal
by different scholars. This diversity of reading has un fortunately been made a strong ]point of by the adversaries of cuneiform decipherment but thanks to the discovery of new texts these difficulties vanish day by day. The Babylonians and Assyrians drew up what are technically called syllabaries/ that is, lists of words, At times we find them signs, objects, and sentences.
;
in
in
tTT
(*)
and often
the signs in the right-hand coluipn explain the in the left as meaning destiny/ while the smaller signs are a.^oss showing that it is to be read Zipl when used with tm s meaning. No. 2 gives a short sentence of two words in Akkadian, and explains them
In
i
single
jigR
107
Assyrian as meaning the going forth of the sun. No. 3 has the character to be explained in the middle column, the signs on the right hand read katamu, and show that the sign meant cover, while those on the left tell one that its sound is dnl.* -Syllabaries in three columns have been found written in Akkadian, Sumirian, and Assyrian. The bilingual lists were exceedingly useful to foreigners who came to Assyria, and they were used by the native children and others; and to us to-day they are among the most important necessaries
in
decipherment of the
inscriptions.
drawn up in two must have been enormous. Indeed,, at one languages thus written. But, period nearly all documents were
The quantity
though these syllabaries were necessary and explanatory for the students of Assyrian or Babylonian and Ak kadian, yet there was another indispensable, and that Some of these have come down *was a reading book. to us among other things, and the following is an extract from one of them
:
he
fixed.
a complete price. an incomplete price. his complete* price. his incomplete price.
for his complete price. for the ending of his incomplete price.
(Tablet
K 46-)
Among
that
came Babylon in writing short upon which the scribe exercised himself on others lists of signs and the^sight of the sentences, and the ill-formed and badly-written attempts remind one of of to-day in their copy books. first attempts of children of imagination to picture the Jt requires no great stretch with his oblique eyes and thick little Babylonian boy
;
the last collections of unbaked clay tablets were trial tablets, i.e. -tablets from
I08
form bending over his piece of moist clay, laboriously %and clumsily impressing his wedges thereon. Human nature is so persistently the same. And now we must speak of the manner in which the Fine clay was selected, kneaded tablet was formed. and moulded into the shape of the required tablet. One The writing -wa side was flat, and the other rounded. then inscribed on both sides, holes were pricked in the The holes allowed the clay, and then it was baked. steam which was generated during the process of taking to escape. It is thought that the clay used in some of the tablets was not only well kneaded, but ground in some kind of mill, for the texture of the clay is as fine ,as some of our best modern pottery. The wedges appear to have been impressed by a square headed instrument. So much for the writing materials and Vejementary matters; we now come to the literature itself.. Babylonians were essentially calculators, as their"
"
wedge,
<
10,
<[<
would be V- The wedge f represented ]f$ y 60 as well as one. Tables of squares and cubes were found at Senkerek the Square of 60, 3,600, was given, vtfhich shows they had need of these high numbers for
y>~
An
example
I
is
will
make
this
!B? T
TT
H l$= !y
<*o.
>
the cube of
,,8
27 64
125
2
3
^
TV
*
TTT
do,
do.-
V W W ^ W
<
4
5
da
do.
216
343 512
do.
do.
7
8
w
;
,-
.-^
fi
do.
do.
729 i coo
9
10
,,
109
Astronomy mixed with astrology occupied a large number of tablets in the Babylonian libraries, and Isaiah 1 to Babylon, Thou art refers to this when he says wearied in the multitude of thy counsels. Let now the
astrologers (the viewers of the heavens, Marg\ the starThe gazers, the monthly prognosticates, stand up/ largest astrological work of the Babylonians contained and was compiled by the command of seventy; tablets, S argon of Agade, thirty-eight hundred years before It was called the illumination of Bel. Their Christ.
<
"
observations were
made
:
in
towers,
ziggtirate?
The
The The
The The The
star
star of the
rain.
fog and
star
oppo
site
(3.)
life. The The stars at sunrise are for windy rain and flood, The report of Nabu-kul-la-ni. The M6on and the Sun were seen with one
(3.)
another on the i6th day: hostility sehds etc. The sixth day of Nis*an the day and the night were balanced (i. e. equal). (There were) six kasbu of day (and) six kasbu of night.
3
king to king
May Nebo
to the king draw near.
and Merodach
my
lord
This latter report refers to the vernal equinox. They divided the day equally into two parts, and assigned one kasbu equalled two hours of six kasbu to each
;
Isa. xlvii.
3,
110
time.
The Babylonian year was divided into 1 2 months of 30 days each, with an intercalary month every six years. Every seventh day was a rest day, and on these days it was forbidden to do certain things. Each day was lucky or unlucky, and was under the protection of tablet calendar in the British Museum some god. ii 17. 2389) gives all the lucky and unlucky (76 The following are examples of days in the year.
astronomical reports and portents 1. The Moon and the Sun are balanced.
:
The country
is
established.
Food
2.
3.
4.
continuously in the mo uth of the people continues. The king of the land the throne perpetuates. The Moon and the Sun are separated. The king of the land enlarges (his) ears.
5.
1.
(The report) of Sumai. No. II. The Moon and the Sun are balanced.
is
The country
established.
is
2. 3.
Daily food
in the
4.
The king of the land the throne perpetuates. The Moon and the Sun are separated. The king
the country the ear
enlarges.
56.
The
Moon and
8.
9.
The face (is) firm, the heart of the land good, the gods of Akkad or prosperity
heart.
(is)
10. devise.
n. Joy is in the soldier s 12. The heart of the king 13. The cattle of Akkad
14. in the desert safely lie
15.
good.
1.
2.
down. (The report) of Istar-sum-esses. No. III. The Moon and the Sun are balanced. Daily food is in the mouth of the people.
Ill
4.
5. 6.
7.
8.
The The
king-of multitudes the throne perpetuates. fourteenth day (the Moon) is seen. favourable wind. Prosperity In the midst of a cloud to the king my lord. did not see (it). (the moon) goes. The Moon at its appearance in clouds was hidden.
We
9.
i 1
o.
1
.
13.
13.
14.
In a thick cloud
(this is
No. IV.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
The Moon out of its reckoned-time is seen. The tariff is small. The twelfth day with the Sun it is seen, and contrary to their calculated time the Moon and the Sun
with one another are seen.
7.
8.
strong enemy ravages the land. The king of Akkad under the enemy is placed. The twelfth day with the Sun (the Moon) is seen and
;
;
the twelfth day it is seen and evil to Akkad, 10. prosperity to Elam and Phoenicia. 11. Evil to Akkad it (is).
9.
(The report) of Balas"i. The months were called after the signs of the Zodiac, and each was dedicated to some god. The following is
13.
list
1.
Nisannu
[March]
[April]
was dedicated
to
Anu and
Ea.
Sin.
Bel.
2.
Aim
Sivanu
3.
[May]
[June] [July]
4.
5. 6.
7. 8.
,9,
Duzu
Adar.
c
Abu
Ulnlu
Tasritu
The Queen
of the
Bow.
Arah-samna Kislimu
Tabitu
Istar.
Samas. Merodach.
Nergal. Papsukal.
10.
12.
[November] [December]
[January] [February]
n. Sabatn
Addaru
great gods.
JI2
The Akkadians invented the calendar, and for their time were great astronomers. They built observatories in all the great cities, and reports like the above were They were the inventors of regularly sent to the king. the Zodiac. They found out that the sun was spotted, and they knew of comets. During the reign of Nebu chadnezzar I. it is related that a comet arose whose body shone like the day, and from its brilliant body a tail like the sting of a scorpion extended/ They were
c
for
able to calculate eclipses, and had long lists of them, they were supposed to portend future events. There are fragments of two planispheres in the British Museum with figures and calculations inscribed upon them. The yoke of the sky, and the ecliptic was called the the long road; such was the wisdom of Milky
Way
the Babylonians. Geology was represented among the Babylonians by lists of stones, earth, etc., and Geography by lists of From a tablet brought to the countries and lands. Museum in 1881 it appears that their cardinal points were rather different from ours, our N.W. being their N., S.W. their W., S.E. their S., and N.E. their E. Natural history was represented by lists of animals, insects, and
birds,
drawn up in two languages. The history given in the former pages of this book is derived from their own If we except the physical sciences, it can easily records. be proved that the greater part of our learning was
to them.
known
Another very important branch of Babylonian litera ture was formed by the magic tablets. There were whole series of these in their libraries, arranged upon shelves, and each tablet bore as a colophon its number in the series and the -first words of the first line. The Babylonian must have passed his life in perpetual terror of evil spirits and demons, and so we find addresses to every kind and sort of spirit to avert evil from the reciter. There is a large incantation tablet in the Kouyunjik Gallery of the British Museum which gives a number of formulas ending with O spirit of heaven, mayest thou
113
The spirit of earth, mayest thou exorcise. implore protection against the evil spirits which cause sickness in the different parts of the body. The first three paragraphs entreat the compassion of the heaven and earth generally, the fourth prays spirits of
the spirits to avert the ulcer spirit, the fifth is against the sickness of the head and disease of the heart/ the sixth is against the evil eye and evil breast, the seventh entreats the spirits of heaven and earth to exorcise the demons which were supposed to attack children ; and so on to the end of the tablet. Two other paragraphs are worthy of note, the sixteenth and twenty-seventh ; the former directs the placing of the god of a sick man before the rising sun, or the figure of a propitious bull, the latter to free him by its influence from his sickness to Ninkigal, or Proserpine, to expel the evil spirit prays from the sick man, and to put a beneficent one in its The tablet concludes finally with the sick man place. by an offering of grace and peace, like refined copper, becoming pure. May the Sun-god give that man life. Marduk, eldest son of the abyss, peace, and happiness be to thee. spirit of heaven, mayest thou exorcise spirit of earth, mayest thou exorcise/ The belief that evil spirits took possession of human bodies was current in our Lord s time, for we read 1 And in the synagogue there was a man which had a spirit of an unclean devil ; and other allusions to this demoniacal In possession are scattered throughout the Bible. Isaiah s time, too, the belief was prevalent, and these baneful spirits were supposed to dwell particularly in 2 The screech owl also shall Isaiah says desert places. The rest there, and find for herself a place of rest. and the same word -translated screech owl is word is found in Babylonian; it means the night spirit/ The which was especially malignant and harmful.
1
liliih>
Rabbis have many stories about her. Another very important branch of Babylonian
ture
is
litera
formed- by the
1
contract .tablets.
2
The Semite
Luke
iv. 33.
114
was always a
and was always able to lend money more needy brother or foreigner. The historical documents, indeed, reveal the immense wars undertaken by the various kings, and the other tablets
or produce to his
;
record their learning, either actual or theoretical but these tablets open to our view the very innermost work One serious draw ings of their commercial business. back exists, and that is that very many of the words are Contract tablets are of all shapes, quite unknown to us. their colour varies, sometimes oval, oblong, square black, then brown, dark and light, and all intermediate shades. Sometimes they are baked, often they are not. have many thousands in our national collection, as many as 5,000 were unpacked at one time. They record loans of money and produce, the sale of houses, fields, and wheat, marriage deeds and dowries, sales of slaves, notices of loans paid, promissory notes, and all sorts and kinds of traffic carried on by one Babylonian with At times we find that the contract tablet has another. been placed in a clay envelope, and upon the outside a copy of the contract within has been inscribed. There is in the British Museum a fine collection of these, which belong to a period as far back as 2400 B.C. On the one side (obverse) the contract and contracting parties names are stated, on the other (reverse) comes the list of witnesses, and at the bottom follows the date, the name of the king and his country. Often these tablets bear the poor impressions of the seals of the witnesses impressed the mark of his nail. Often we find signatures in Phoenician, sometimes the reverse is in Greek, and jupon one tablet we find some curious writing which at present no one has been able to make out. As the tablet is interesting we give a translation of it :
;
We
i; E-sagila-lissi
2.
3.
son of Nabu-kusur-su, Bel-balat-su son of Nidintum, and Ina-E-sagila-lilbir son of Belederu in the joy of their heart, Nana-Babili-sininni, their
<
servant
115
whose right hand with the name of Ina-E-sagilathe slave dealer son of Bel-ederu, is inscribed, for one maneh eight
lilbir
5.
shekels of silver
6.
7.
refined, for the price complete to son of Lisir they have given*; the
of the
9.
men
and
Ina-E-sagila-lilbir received.
E-sagila-lissi, Bel~balat-s*u
10. 11.
12.
13.
Nana-Babili-sininni
E-sagila^lissi
is
made,
(?)
and
Ina-E-sagila-lilbir,
14.
have collected
15. to
Urmanu
(?)
and
shall give.
REVERSE.
16.
17. Bel-Iddin,
1 8.
19.
Bel-upahhir son of Bel-balat-su son of Ikubu Nabu-iddannu, son of Nabu-balat-su Sua, the son of Nadin ; Nabu-balat-su, son of Umas Bel-eres, son of Samsaa.
:
Witnesses
line of
unknown
characters.]
;
Ea-epus, the scribe, son of Nabu-ludda Babylon, 22. month Adar, day eleventh, year 23rd Artaxerxes king of countries. That is to say, Urmanu bought the female slave Nana-
maneh and eight shekels of refined from the three men, E-sagila-lissi, Bel-balat-su, and Ina-E-sagila-lilbir* and a clause is inserted whereby
Babili-sininni for one
silver
it
provided that if any one claims the slave Urmanu compensation. The above and the following translations are specimens of slave contracts, which were made by my colleague, Mr. Theo. G. Pinches.
is
shall receive
i.
%.
3.
Sum-iddina, son of Sula", son of the priest of Gula, an the joy of his heart, Itti-Bel-guzu his servant, whose left wrist to the name of Meskitu
H2
Il6
mana
5.
6.
of silver
com
plete price to
7.
8.
9.
Iddina-Nabu, son of Nabti-pi-sin, son of the black smith he has given. The day when a claim upon this slave be made, Sum-iddina the slave shall forfeit, and to Iddina-Nabti shall give. The silver, one and twothirds
10. of a
11.
15.
1 6.
17.
1 8.
19.
ai.
22. 23.
mana which is by the one shekel piece, coined, the price of Itti-Bl~guzu his servant, Sum-iddina by the hands of Iddina-Nabu has received. Witnesses Bel-iddin, son of Nabft-rimanni, son of Sin-naslr Nabti-usur-napistu, son of Nabti-sum-sir son of Nabunnaa ; Nabft-sab-sunu, son of Bl-akiirba, son of TunS. ; Kiribtu, son of Lisiru, son of Blu-Usumgallu ; Kuddcla, son of Marduk-irba, son of Sin-kudurri-usur Irba-Marduk, son of Gula-zir-tpuS, son of the priest of Gula Nabft-uhi-u son of Nabft-kissir, son of Ilu-damur Alj-iddin, son of Bli-Sunu, son of Egibi Bl-temenna (?) son of Sum-ukur, son of Nergal-balit, son of Arad-Gula, son of Irani Nabu-bullitsu, son of Basia, son of Siatu Bel-iddin, son of Nabu-usitik-urri, son of the Chaldean. In the
:
>
24. of
dwelling Meskitu, daughter of Bel-lumur, son of Rammanusea, wife of Sum-iddina 25. the seller of the slave. Bel-idannu, the scribe, son of Buzazu, Babylon, month Adar, day i6th, year 2oth, 26. Darius, king of Babylon, king of countries.
s
In Babylon during the reign of Nebuchadnezzar there man called Egibi, and he was the founder of a firm of bankers who made it their especial business to carry on the commerce of the city. have au
lived a
We
117
enormous number of the documents of this firm, beginning in the reign of Esarhaddon, and going on through the reigns of Nebuchadnezzar, Na.bonidus and other kings down to the time of Darius. The tablets are dated month after month and year after year, and thus they afford us a sure method of fixing the chronology There is a of that very uncertain period of history. small contract tablet in the Museum at Zurich, dis covered by Dr. Oppert, dated in the 5th year of Pacorus, king of Persia, who reigned about the time of Domitian. There is a little dpubt about the reading of one of the characters in the name, but if it is correct, it will prove that the use of cuneiform did not fall into decay until I give here Dn Oppert s trans after the Christian Era. lation of the curious little document
3
Owed 40
will
pay
into the
hands of
month lyar, 40 tetradrachma, in the temple of the Sun, in Babylon. Witnesses Urrame, son of Puya Allit, son of Airad ;
;
Kistar, son of Sinam Zir-Idin, son of Hablai, writer. in the 5th Babylon, in the month of Kislev, the 3rd day, of Pikharis, King of Persia.
;
In the British Museum, however, there are tablets dated 2t8th year of the era of Arsaces, that is, B. c. 29. Some have tried to show that Egibi is the Babylonian form of Jacob, which would lead one to suspect the but this is not certain at family to have been Jews The following is a copy of one of the contract present. characters dated in the 6th tablets in
in the
;
Babylonian
:
..
century
B. C.
OBVERSE.
Literally translated,
i.
it
reads
suma-epus
>
Il8
3.
BABYLONIAN"
LIFE
AND
HISTORY.
3.
4. 5.
the son of Sin-damak and the woman Rimat their mother, daughter of Suzub son of the priest of the altar/ in the joy of their heart, Nabu-e-du-ahi, the woman Bani-tum-umma his wife, the woman Klsrinni and the woman Gisinni his
*
sister(s)
four people, for two manehs of silver for the price 7. complete to Nabu-ahi-iddin the son of Sula 8. the son of Egibi has given, bu^it H-hi-i pa-kir-ra-nu
6. in all
9.
10. 11.
1 2.
and mar ban-u-tu of the people Bel-ahi-iddin and Nabu-ahi-bul-lit the sons of E-sagili-suma-epus the son of Sin-damak and the woman Rimat their mother have brought one but double they bring.
REVERSE.
i.
the altar priest . -ridu the son of Marduk-nasir the son of the priest of the god, 3. Marduk-basu-anni the son of Bani-ya the son of Ellat-nahid 4. the son of Dup-zir the son of Nergal-ukin the son of e Sin heard my prayers/ 5. Bel-iddin the son of Bel-sibsi the priest of the god Zariku 6. Rimmon-ibni the son of Zariku-zir-epus the son of the priest of the god Zariku 7. the scribe Ri-mut the son of Nabu-suma-iscun the son of Gahul. 8. Babylon, month Elul, day i6th the year of accession 9. Neriglissar king of Babylon.
3.
.
The passages in italics are difficult to understand, and the above will serve to show the curious idiom of this class of documents. It should be stated that these tablets were kept in jars. The amount of interest charged for the loan of money, silver iron, etc., was either three, four, or five per cent.
}
19
1*
If W
C/3
1 ft
mEt &2
-in:i
>
130
Musezib-Bel, son of Da-Marduk, which Bel-ahe-iddin the son of Marduk-zir-ibru, son of Egibi, buys and this, manas 18 drachmas of silver, is sum of money, The owner entrusted to Nabu-ahe-iddin, son of Egibi. of the house will remain in possession as long as Belahe-iddin, the purchaser of the house, whose son is dead, does not actually take possession of the house, for this
deposit (the option shall last) for four years. After the death of Bel-ahe-iddin and Nabu-ahe-iddin, to whom the deposit is entrusted, Bel-rimanni (shall
receive) his deposit. Itti-Marduk-balat, the son of Nabuahe-iddin (shall repay) it, but if he, the actual holder, does not give back nor render the deposit, they shall bring him before the tribunal of the chief magistrate and judges, to Zirya, the intendant (?) of the temple Saggal, and he will say thus: the inheritance of the property, including the deposit, belongs to his (i. e. the testator s) son Zirya will decide, that he does not know this, kind of inheritance of the testator s property, nor about the right of taking possession of it, as if the deposit would belong to the son. Itti-Marduk-balat will render it with his seal in presence of Kiribtu, the magistrate, Edir-Bel, the magistrate, Nergal-afr-usur and Zikir-ukin, the judges, and will give it to Bel-rimanni. Da-Marduk, the scribe, son of Banu-^in-ilu. The "royal city of Babylon, in the month Elul, the 5th day, the i7th year of Nabonidus, king of Babylon. The seal of Nergal-ah-usur, the judge (the impres sion is rather effaced) the seal of Zikir-ukin, the judge (represents a priest standing before a large bird, over
; ;
which
is
star).
The
an
altar,
over which on the top of a pole axock is seated). The seal of Edir-Bel, the magistrate a priest standing
;
J.
N. Strassmaier, Trans.
Soc. Bib.
Arch.>
121
before an animal seated on an altar, behind which two poles are standing.
Sometimes Babylonian legal documents were inscribed on large stones, which then formed landmarks. Such a stone is generally inscribed on one side with the agree ment, names of witnesses, and a whole string of curses on the person who shall dare to move it, and on the other are figured in relief various gods and signs. The Michaux stone is a fair specimen of this kind of document, and I therefore give Dr. Oppert s translation
of
it
:
COLUMN
arura. on the
I.
Twenty hin of corn is the quantity for seeding an The field is situated near the town of Kar-Nabu, bank of the river Mekaldan, depending on the
property of
KlLNAMANDU.
:
Three stades in measured as follows length towards the East, in the direction of the town of three stades in length towards the West, Bagdad adjoining the house of TUNAMISSAH ; one stade fifty fathoms in breadth towards the North, adjoining the property of KlLNAMANDU one stade fifty fathoms up in the South, adjoining the property of KlLNAMANDU. SlRUSUR, son of KlLNAMANDU, gave it for all future days to DUR-SARGINAITI, his daughter, the bride of TAB-ASAP-MARDUK, son of INA-E-SAGGATU-IRBU (the
field is
;
;
The
pretended),
who wrote this and TAB-ASAP-MARDUK, wrote this in, order to son of INA-E-SAGGATU-IRBU, without interruption the memory of this gift, perpetuate and commemorated on this stone the will, of the great gods and the god SERAH/
w
wfe>
COLUMN
Whosoever
the sons, the family, the
II.
both male and female, of the house of KlLNAMANDU,. either a foreigner, or a "guest, or whosoever he may be this field, who will (or any One else), who will_detrqy
123
venture to take
cate
it
:
vindi
a god, or earn it for his superior, or claim it for himself, or change the extent, the surface, or the limits, that he reaps new or who will say of the field with its harvests (crops) whether he call forth measures, There is no granter malediction and hostility on the tablets ; or establish on it any one other who change these curses, in swearing and in asserting The head is not the head There whosoever will carry elsewhere those is no evil eye tablets ; or will throw them into the waters will bury them in the earth will hide them under stones will burn them with fire, will alter what is written on them, will confine them into a place where they might not be seen that man shall be cursed May the gods ANU, EL, HEA, the great goddess, the great gods, inflict upon him the utmost contumely, extir
whether he consecrate
pate his name, annihilate his family. May MARDUK, the great Lord of eternity without end, bind him in fetters which cannot be broken. May SAMAS, the great Judge of heaven and earth,
in
May SlN, the brilliant (Nartnar] who dwells in the sacred heavens, clothe him in leprosy as in a garment, and give him up to the wild feasts that wander in the outsides of the town. May ISTAR, the Queen of heaven and earth, carry him off, and deliver him for vengeance to the god and the king. May NlNlP, son of the zenith, son of EL the sublime,
take away his
larids, funds,
and
limits.
great Queen, the wife of NlNIP, infiltre into his bowels a poison which cannot be pushed out, and may he void blood and pus like water. May BIN, the great Guardian of heaven and earth, the son of the warrior ANU, inundate his field. May SERAH destroy his firstbolfi ; may he torture his flesh and load his feet with chains. May NABU, the supreme Watcher, strike him with
123
misfortune and ruin, and blast his happiness that he not obtain it, in the wrath of his face. May all the great gods whose names are recorded on this tablet, curse him with irrevocable malediction, and scatter his race even to the last days. The class of tablets inscribed with omens is verjN interesting, and reveals many of the strange ideas and beliefs of the Babylonians so long since passed away.
Omens were drawn from births, dreams, animals, birds, and geometrical figures. The following are specimens
:
If (i.)
a dog to the palace goes, and on a bed lies down, that palace none with his hand takes. If a dog into a temple enters, the gods to the country
grant no favour. a black dog into a temple enters, the foundation of x that temple is not stable. When a woman bears a child and its jaws are want ing, the days of the prince are long ; that house
If
*
(2.)
When
destroyed. a woman bears a child and its lower jaw wanting, the produce of the country for a year
is
is
is
many
to us from the old Babylonians isolated tablets, the description of which would
occupy too much space, and which when described would only interest the specialist. The tablets which interest us most are of course the historical, and as their
contents (as far as they relate to Babylonia) are given in the chapter on Babylonia, a description of their form The Assyrian kings wrote the annals will suffice here. of their wars and victories in lines across the huge and sculptures which adorned their palaces. Assyrian Babylonian kings were fond, too, of having brief notices stamped upon the bricks of their palaces but the usual form the royal historical documents took was that of a
;
prism, or
cylinder/ asf|t
is
technically called.
The large
ones have usually six sides, but the finest one of Assurtake the banipal has ten. Some of these documents
124
form
a barrel, on which are two Or more columns. a king built a palace it was customary for him to bury one of these in each of the four corners and it is ones remain owing to this that we have so many perfect Occasionally they are solid. That of Assurbanipal ing. mentioned above has a curious history. Once, when
When
men of the great excavator, Mr. Rassam, were digging, Some time and they came to a stop, for they had dug found nothing. They asked, Shall we go on ? Mr. had Rassam said, Yes, clear that little pile away. They to consist of bricks. began to do this, and found the pile On opening it they found the noble cylinder containing is the finest in the it 1,300 lines standing upright; These cylinders are of wonderful British Museum. It was a fragment of a cylinder of Sargon which value.
c 5
ptoved beyond
all
Ashdod, as
Isaiah,
doubt that Sargon went and besieged had said in his twentieth chapter.
upon
A small but
composed
is
world has already taken great interest in the Deluge tablet which gives the account of the Flood, and which There were twelve tablets in this is one of the series. series, fragments of five or six of which are in the British Museum. Though they are written in Assyrian, yet the run of thought and many of the expressions -give proofs that, they are only translations from the very late Akka The stoiy of the Flood is told sometimes in the dian. third, and sometimes in th$ first person, and the same
There idea is given occasionally in different language. existed Babylonian copies of this story, for there are ragments of them to be seen in the British Museum, Every one knows, giving important variant readings. low Jong, tradition lives in the Orient, and how it is shall ^ndgBown from generation to generation. how long these stofie^re current before they >ayjfei;
Who
\rr^ written
down ?
CHAPTER
THE BABYLONIAN
Babylonian belief in
spirits.
IX.
RELIGION.
belief degenerated.
Their pure
The Greeks
borrowed from their myths. Difficulty of reducing their religion into a Babylonian Trinity, Anu, Ea, and Bel. Marduk, the son of system. Ea. Marduk, the saviour of mankind. Ea taught men learning and knowledge. Ea received throtigh Marduk the prayers of man. fstar, the lady of war? Her two forms. Her search after Tammuz in Hades. Her address to Esarhaddon. Hymn to Istar. Extract therefrom. Ea The ship ofEa. the supreme god, the originator and maker of all things. His weapons and power. Sun-god worship. Tabl&t representing to the sun. the moon-god, Ninip, Nergal, Sin, worship thereof. Hymns The seven evil spirits. Babylonian hell and heaven. Nebo, andRimmon, the Babylonian after death. Description of hell, the Enjoyments of Tiamat. Her rebellion against the gods. land of no return. Marduk, the son of Ea^ sent to do battle with her. His armour. The Paraphrase of the Babylonian account. Tiamat, the prototype of fight, the devil. -Temptation of Adam. the old serpent Babylonian seal The giving representation of it. Babylonian account of the Creation.
c j
penitent sinner.
WITH
difficult
to give
anything like a perfect account of the religious views of the Babylonians. All that can be done is to gather together the statements made in the texts about the gods, and draw our own conclusions whether they are right or
;
The
to the mythology greater portion of the texts relating and religion of the Babylonians is in the Assyrian Ninevite character, and these of course are copies of older tablets. As is well known, the great literary king, Assurof all kinds to be copied founts banipal, caused tablets as mucn for Apolitical library at Nineveh it is thought reasons as for the sake of learning. Babylon w&s a city
:
"
iii
his time
wisdom that, was their, people flocked to teijn ,the Hbygone generations. In Assur.glorious heritage time his brother, Samullu-suma-ukina, was l^ing but he rebpe4 n, tributary of course to him;
fr<
136
BABYLdjJIAN LIFE
AND
HISTORY.
after some difficulty Assurbanipal subdued him and took the city again. It is extremely probable, then, that he caused all these tablets to be copied and taken to his city Nineveh, that henceforth there should be no need of the learned to resort to the aged city of Babylon, and there, together with the priests, to foment other
and
rebellions.
lonian mythology and philosophy. ^ The first trouble that besets any attempt to reduce the religion to order on the is the enormous number of gods enumerated Mr. Renouf, speaking of the Egyptian Pantheon, lists.said that he once tried to count the number of gods in
whatever period the Babylonians formulated their at first started with pure and good ideas religion, they of objects in Nature, began by worshipping^the spirit they but in latter days the esoteric view of a god was lost, Their worship and the utmost confusion prevailed. into the lowest and worst possible gradually degenerated forms of Nature-worship. * It is certain that the greatest borrowed largely from the old Baby Greek,
J"At
;
philosophers
but they were so numerous that he gave it up. The At said of the Babylonian Pantheon. one time one god was a greater favourite with the nation than another, and the cult of the god or gods which the old Babylonians preferred in the early days
it,
same may be
of their empire frequently fell into disuse and neglect in The most important ennead among the after times. was as follows Babylonians
:
Male Element.
Female Element.
Offspring,
Anu Ea
Bel
Anat Damkina
Beltis
Rimmon.
Samas.
Sin.
Babyknian Semitic inscription that we that of Sargon I., B.C. 3800, mentions the^ have, namely, Sun-god of Sippara. The very ytrly bricks and cones have been speak often of the god Bel, whoWppears to He was one to the last days of the empire. worshipped * of the great Trinity of Anu, Ea, and Bel r tbei* wives,
The
oldest
THE BABYLONIAN
:>r
RELIGION.
127
Damkina
is
feminine elements, were called Anat, Beltis, and and Jeremiah 1 says, Bel is confounded, Merq{
broken in pieces, which goes to prove that his dach the worship was widespread and very important among and his downfall the signal of the destruc Babylonians, He is mentioned by Isaiah 2 and again tion of the city. z He was the Jupiter of the Romans, and in Jeremiah the Zeus of the Greeks. There appears to be a confusion between Bel and Merodach (the names occur together on a tablet which applies numbers to the gods), and the temple dedicated to Merodach (as we know by the inscriptions) is the temple of the Belus of the
,
.
Marduk (Merodach) was omnipresent and omnipotent and was the healer and god who went before Ea, revealed to mankind the for mankind. toediator PC he is invoked as the /knowledge of Ea in all incantations to save against evil and ill. He was the o-od mighty and diseases, he healer of men troubled with evil spirits man how to exorcise demonvafrd he offered to taught of penitent man. He was, father Ea the
<
But Merodach himself now claims attention. He was He was the lord the son of Ea, the god of the abyss. and the greatest and best names were of life and light, With the Oriental fire has ever been the o-iven to him. and as the signs which form his object of adoration, name mean either the circle, or radiance of the sun, was a solar hero. His it is not hard to see that the god man old name meant, the god who orders good for His worship goes far back into the early days of kind/ addressed to him which have Babylonia, for the hymns down to us are written in the ancient Akkadian, come and our translations are made generally from the * His father Ea was Assyrian translation appended the the personification of all knowledge and learning ;
c
Greeks.
\the
of the conceptions of brightest and best fts sole duty in the Pantheon was the Babylonians, for last days of th$ to^how rr^ercy to mankind. To the
his
prayers
pecans* the
Jer.
li.
44-
128
empire his name was revered and his temples kept in His ^ife was called Zirpanitum. order. Another lofty conception was that of the goddess Nineveh boasted an Istar ; the lady of battles. Istar, and Arbela also. She was the spirit or goddess of the and a debased form of her worship was planet Venus x Her carried on by the Jews, who called her Ashtoreth husband was called Tammuz, and she went to seek him
c
land of no return. An allusion is made to him in Ezek. viii. 14, where it says, There sat women weeping for Tammuz. It was the good goddess Istar that appeared to Assurbanipal in a dream the night before a battle, and The king sacri told him that he should be victorious. ficed to the goddess Istar of Arbela, and he made a prayer to her in which he recalled to her mind the benefits that she had bestowed upon his father Esarhaddon he told her that the enemy Teumman had spread out his forces against him, and then entreated her to crush him and overcome him in battle. That night a seer slept and had a vision, and he went to the king saying, Istar of Arbela drew near me surrounded with She held a bow glory on the right hand and on the left. in her hand with the string stretched by an arrow pointed Her face was fixed, and she was in pain for battle. concerning thee, even as a mother bringing forth. Istar the beloved of the gods has decreed a decree saying thus, Whither thou goest I will go I will guard thee, and I will cause thee to obtain the desire of thy heart. Before thee the enemy shall not stand in battle, neither sliall hg
in the
c
3
And
farther back,
when the
father of this
same
king,\
Esarhaddon, was in trouble and grief because of the war -brought against him by his brothers, the goddess Istar spake to him by the oracle of Arbela, saying
:
(
Fear not, O Esarhaddon, I am, (as) Bel, thy strength I will ease the supports of thy heart.
1
Kings
xi. 33.
139
Each of the sixty great gods my strong ones with his life will guide thee, the Moon-god at thy right hand, the Sun-god at thy left. 1 Upon mankind trust not bend thine eyes upon me, I am Istar of Arbela.
,
And
again
Mighty
legions which devise against me, before thy feet I cut them in pieces. Thou, thou,
art king of kings/
tablet
During the reign of Esarhaddon a very beautiful little was made which we now have in the British
its
Museum,
number
Akkadian and
lines of
S. 954. It contains a hymn to is written in the two languages The reading of some of the Assyrian.
is
the
is
obverse
is
difficult
reverse
sufficiently clear to
and
it
will serve as a
kind.
The
:
translation
that of
my
friend Professor
Sayce
1.
2.
as the axis of heaven dawnest, in the dwellings of the earth her name revolves ; my begetter. As Queen of heaven above and below may she be
Thou who
invoked
3.
my
begetter.
fiercely she hurls into the
The mountains
deep
my
begetter. 4. As to the mountains, their goodly stronghold (art) thou, their mighty lock art thou my begetter. may thy liver be magnified. 5. May thy heart rest 6. Lord Ami, the*mighty, may thy heart rest. Lord, the mighty Prince (lit. mountain) Bel, may 7.
;
O O
thy
8.
liver
be magnified.
of heaven,
Istar,
the
Lady
1
may thy
;
heart
rest.
Compare Psalm
cxlvi. 3
cxviii. 8, 9.
130
9.
O
O
Lady, Queen
magnified).
of
heaven,
may
thy
liver
(be
10.
may
thy
thy
liver
heart
u.
is.
O O
O
may
rivers of
Erech,
13.
may
thy heart
(rest).
may
thy
14.
O O O
O
15. 16.
Lady, Queen of Temple of the Resting-place of the World, may thy heart (rest). liver (be Lady, Queen of Babylon, may thy
magnified).
may
thy
17.
1 8.
gods,
may
A cuneiform tablet
little is
mentions an
Istar of
known of her. The sky-god Anxi very number of gods, but no rally mentioned among a
him. worship appears to have .been paid to Ea was another god of great importance in the Baby He was the father of the mighty lonian Pantheon. Merodach, and to the Babylonians was the personification He was the soul that secret knowledge. gf wisdom and animated all, and he is often invoked ftrvaded all, which He -had in tha bilingual hymns as the spirit of earth.
_
no
ftf her, but was self-begotten, and perpetually renewed himself from the watery element which formed his home, or deep. for he is always called the lord of the abyss He was the god that knew how to frustrate the powers of the demons and spirits, for he knew their secrete; and could their attacks by, the intervention of no other god be warded off., In a tablet containing warnings to Jthe fills the place of avenger, for king against injustice if the we are avenges not according to the
6
>Ea
told,
king
13!
law of his country, the god Ea, the king of destinies, is On hostile to his destiny and Replaces him by another. the other hand, if the king avenges according to the writing of the god Ea, the great gods seat nim in stability and the praise of justice/ Together with his wife, Damkina, he was the originator of all created moving things he was the spirit of the earth/ and Damkina was the substance her name means the lady of the great earth, and she was the personification of the mass of the earth. It has been said that his name means habitation, i. e. the dwelling-place of created things, and so he has been compared with the Noah of the Bible. The Babylonian
4
; c
*
hymns
attribute to
him a
ship
unparalleled
by
fate,
in
which he sailed over the sea to the help of his son Marduk when he was fighting Tiamat. It was in this ship that Ea saved Sisithrus from the flood, as we are told in the account of it. Among other attributes of Ea we find him called a warrior, and he was furnished with armour made of all sorts of precious stones. His .principal weapon was one with seven rays and fifty faces, which
turned every
way
which reminds us of the flaming sword which turned every way mentioned in Gen. iii. 24. The serpent is one of his forms, and he was represented as having seven heads. The worship of Samas, the Sun-god, was widespread He was called the king and his votaries numerous. his wives names were of judgment/ the son of Ea Malkit, Gula, and Anunit. The cities in which his wor^ were Larsa or Senkeretr, ship was particularly favoured and Sippara in Babylon, where he was associated with In the tablet of Anunit, Marduk, and Zirpanitum. warnings to kings alluded to above we find it stated that and if the king smites the son of the city of Sippara the Sun-god, who judges heaven gives him to another, and earth, shall^ppoint another judge in -his country and a just prince, and a just judge instead of unjust ones. His This agrees with his title of king of judgment and goes back to a time when the worship was very old, were worshipped. The Surigreat powers of Nature
<
:>
in
the time of Sargon, B.C. 3800, for he mentions this god. and no other. One of his truest and best votaries was Nebobaladan, the king of Babylon, who began to reign about B.C. 900. There is a fine tablet in the British
the order of this king, which contains columns of beautifully executed Babylonian writing, and also a picture of the worship of the Sun-god. It is The god is seated upon a figured on the opposite page. seat (having carvings of two figures on one side) square set in a pillar-supported porch, and holding in his hand 1 a ring and a short rod. Above is written the crown of the Sun-god, and of the Sun-god, the above this are three circles, which represent the new moon the Sun, and Istar or Venus. Two lines of writing run above the roof which read the Moon-god, the Sun2 Before the pillar stands a god and Istar in
six
Museum made by
....
i.
,
%.
3.
4.
1
Magical incantation. Sun, from the foundations of heaven thou art risen thou hast unfastened the bolts of the shining skies thou hast opened the door of heaven.
I.e. disk.
;
:
This
may
be also read
The meanings
known.
THE BABYLONIAN
5.
6.
RELIGION.
135
Sun, above the countries thou hast raised thy head, Sun, thou hast covered the immensity of the heavens, and the terrestrial countries.
II.
2.
3.
4.
face.
The language of praise, as one word, thou directest it. The host of their heads seeks the light of the Sun in
the South.
7.
8.
9.
Like a bridegroom thou restest joyful and gracious.. In thy illumination thou dost reach afar to the boundaries of heaven. Thou art the banner of the vast earth.
the men who dwell afar off contemplate thee and rejoice. Side by side with Samas, the Moon-god, Sin, held a prominent place in the Babylonian Pantheon he was the personification of the moon, and the eldest son of Bel. Though we Westerns regard the moon as a femi nine and the sun as a masculine object, the Orientals held just the opposite idea, namely, (like the Germans) that the moon is masculine and the sun feminine, for the In the Hebrew latter is called the lady of the world. text of the Bible the sun is regarded as of common was called Nana, gender. The wife of the Moon-god but the moon is represented as a female, hence arose Her chief city the idea of her hermaphrodite nature. was Ur, and her daughter s name was Istar. The other principal gods, Ninip, Nergal, Nebo, and Rimmon, call for little comment. Ninip was the god of the planet Saturn, and was the Hercules of the Baby-, Ionian Pantheon he was both the son and husband of He was, perhaps, the modern representative of Beltis.
10.
;
O God!
136
the night sun. the Akkadian god Nindar, Nergal was the god of the planet Mars, and his name forms part of the name Nergalsar-eser, i.e. Nergal-sara-usur, Nergal Rimmon was the son of Anu, and protects the king/ He represented the governor of heaven and earth. generally the atmosphere, the storm, and the tempest, and his commonest name is the inundator. The god Nebo 1 was also called Nusku, and his wife was He was the god of the planet Mercury, called Tasmit. the lofty intelligence and the lord of Tablets his
5
3
This god is usually mentioned with the goddess Tasmit) in the colophons (together broad ears to of tablets as the being who gives the king that he may understand knowledge, and the writing upon the tablets is regarded as the secrets of Nebo. In addition to the number of gods which the Baby lonians worshipped, we find them much addicted to, the belief in spirits, and this to so great an extent that the prayers and incantations against them form a very large portion of their religious literature. Every man, accord ing to their belief, began his existence possessed of some spirit, and everything in Nature had its spirit, good or
chief city
s
was Borsippa.
was the duty, then, of a man to propitiate this and if good to endeavour to make it serve him. Babylonian saw the mass of the sun, the but in later moon, etc., and he worshipped its spirit days this higher idea was lost, and nothing but sun worship pure and simple remained. To the Babylonian the spirit of the overflowing river, which desolated his lands and destroyed his property, was an evil spirit, and had to be exorcised; the- evil spirit which gave him. pains, aches, and diseases was regarded as a devil, ana was prayed against accordingly. We can trace ^tjhis
bad.
It
spirit if bad,
\<The
very distinctly in the Bible. In Matt. xii. 22,%e dumb man possessed with a devil the 2 was grievously daughter of the woman of Canaan vexed with a devil. There were seven spirits which
belief
read of a
Isa. xlvi. i.
BABYLONIAN RELIGION.
137
s imagined to be more wicked and 13E deadly than any others. They were the objects of awe and terror to them. They appear to have been storm-clouds originally, anq were supposed to attack the moon during an eclipse. A hymn tells us that during the eclipse of the moon, thei Sun-god fled away and* Istar went to the The god Bel, the father of the moon, highest heaveln. saw the attack of the evil spirits upon his son, and sent Nebo, the Mercury of the Greeks, to ask the assistance Easent the lordly an,d advice of Ea, the lord of wisdom. Merodach to dcKbattle with these dreadful spirits, and by his fiery and brilliant armour he completely defeated them, even as he 5id Tiamat. These evil spirits were born and reared in trie mountains of the sunset and the dawn but, however powerful, they had no part in the
!
hierarchy of heaven, for we read Among the gods their couch they have not. They went to the depths of the earth, and their dominion extended to highest heaven. In a large tablet contain ing incantations we find a description of them, and though it has been quoted often before, it appears necessary to them \ere. It give a translation of the part relating to reads Seven are they, seven are they In the abyss of the deep seven are they, In the brightness of heaven seven are they. In the abyss of the deep in a place was their growth. Male they are not, female they are not. Moreover the deep is their pathway. Wife they have not, child is not born to them.
6
and order know they not. Prayer and supplication hear they not. Among the thorns of the mountain was their growth. To Ea are they hostile. The throne-bearers (?) of the gods are they are they set Disturbers in the
Law
....
Evil are they, baleful are they. The Babylonian implored every
spirit in
heaven and
138
earth to
ward off the attack of the evil spirits from them, they were the originators of all diseases and evils. Christ tells us of seven other spirits l whjich may enter a man and we are all familiar with story of His 2 casting out seven devils from Mary Magdalene There was one evil spirit which was a grqat terror to the Babylonian, and this was the spirit of trie South-West Wind, which brought disease and death with it. There are four models of this monster in the IJWtish Museum (there is another at Paris), with huge staling eyeballs and
for
;
th<jb
gaunt features and lantern jaws. AmujKets were worn as a protection against these spirits arfd a few of these emblems of superstition have come/down to us, telling us very plainly what torments tijjgfse people must have
;
suffered through terror of thejaffonsters of their religion. / This belief was current irithe early ages of the world s
/history nations
his face
,left.
the prophets
by
it
knew of it, and appealed to the and to-day the Arab, when praying with
towards Mecca, salaams to the right and to the to pacify the spirits that he imagines are present there. L)id the Babylonians know of a heaven or a a
?
the evidence we can from the inscriptions, and perhaps we shall find that their Hades was not so very far different from the Sheol, or the pit, of the Bible, nor the-devil
distinguished from the Satan we read of. Heaven,* the place where the spirits of good Babylonians reposed, was called the land of the shining sky/ and was the seat of the gods. It cannot at present be decided whether they attained the conception of one God the Almighty/ but it seems improbable, for to the last days ,of the duration of their kingdom, in the prayers and histories they mention more than one god. The Jews were the people who enunciated the grand idea of the 3 In the Babylonian heaven, the house of unity of God
e
.
We will give.ali
hell,
place
much to.be
Matt. Beat.
xii.
45
Luke
Hear,
xi. 26.
2
;
vi.
Mark
xvi.
Luke
is
viii. 2.
Israel
the
one Lord
or
is
Hear,
God
139
the
land of
life/
he reclined on a couch, and drank pure drinks^together with his friends and associates. iNot a strange idea for a nation that was at war with its fellows perpetually, but far, very far, from the holy conception ^of heaven of
the prophet of the New Testament, with God for its sun, its tree of life for the healing of the nations, its pure river of water of life, where there is no more curse, nor
sorrow, nor pain, nor death, and where
God Himself
wipes away all tears. The Babylonian conception of hell is made known to us by a tablet which relates the descent of Istar thither It in search of her lovely young husband, Tammuz. has been stated that the same words for Hades, i.e. Sheol, as that used in the Hebrew Scriptures, has been found but this assertion has been made in Babylonian texts while the means for definitely proving it do not at
;
Hades was present exist. The lady of the Babylonian and the place itself had a river running called Nin-ki-gal, through it, over which spirits had to cross. There was a porter of the waters (which reminds us of the also Charon of the Greeks), and it had seven gates. * The tablet mentioned above tells us that
(
i.
To
off,
to regions
3.
Istar,
firmly
3. fixed,
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
o.
10. 11.
fixed the house of corruption, the dwelling of the deity Irkalla (to go) to the house whose entrance is without exit to the road whose way is without return to the house whose entrance is bereft of light a place where much dust is their food, their meat mud, where light is never seen, where they dwell in darkness whirl round and round ^the vaults ghosts (?) like birds dust. over the doors and wainscoting there is thick
.
140
land of no return was strongly the porter having refused to Istar admission, the goddess says grant
for
The
let
me
enter in
If thou openest not the gate, and I come not I force the gate, the bolt I shatter, I strike the threshold, and I cross the doors,
I
in,
(for)
There
form
it
another
c
It is difficult to say where they imagined their Hades to be, but it has been conjectured by some that they thought it to be in the west \ Whether they believed in a final judgment or not is unknown, as is likewise the principle which decided whether a man
meaning
name for Hades, the signs which the house of the land of the dead. pronunciation as Arali. Such, then, is
should go to the land of the shining sky, or the land of no return. The seven evil spirits dwelt in the deep, and there appears to be some connexion between them and the seven wicked gods which dwelt in Hades. They were probably the companions of the awful monster Tiamat, who made war against the godsJoTwlroEwer^re ii.Qw.able tp give some account. ^ Tiamat dwelt in the sea, and was a kindred demon of Bahu (the Bohu of Gen. i. 2), or disorder, and is the prototype of the sea serpent of to-day. Recently a piece of tablet was discovered which gave about 64 lines of the account of the conflict between her and Merodach and the following paraphrase is made from the fragment of a tablet written in Babylonian, and two or three
;
pieces of an Assyrian copy. The first lines open by saying that the gods had set Merodach upon his throne in the dwelling of the great ones. Then follows a kind of paean of praise thus
repeated
Amenti,
ment
tins
for a happy burial in the West; and in the Coptic versions of the New Testa same word amenti is used to express hell/ or Hades.
the
THE BABYLONIAN
c
RELIGION.
141
the great
Merodach thou
gods
is
among
thy destiny
Merodach thou
is
thy fate
1 unequalled, thy sumgar is the god Arm, art honourable, among the great gods unequalled, thy sumgar is the god Anu.
and that high and low seek his hand. A prayer follows, which entreats that whatever goes forth from thy mouth, O Marduk, may it be established, thy fortune not failing. Next there appears to be a reference to the gifts of the gods, and then another prayer saying, in the dwelling
*
The narrative then proceeds with the statement that Marduk s command is unchangeable and unalterable,
may
thy place
:
be established.
Again
Merodach thou
we
ascribe to thee royalty, thou hast in the assembly of the gods the multitude of the whole of everything,
be high,
5
may
And
thee,
lord,
who
trusts
do thou benefit his soul, comes next. The gods then approve of Merodach s mission against the wicked Tiamat, for we are told they rejoiced, they drew near to Merodach the king, they endowed him with sceptre, thrgne, and reign, they gave him an unequalled weapon for destroying his enemies, and said Go, make an end of the life of Tiamat, and may the wind carry- away
:
The gods decreed his Now out on his enterprise. fate, He follows the record of the equipment of the god. had a bow, a club, his right hand held the bow, and he hung the skin quiver at his side. He set the lightning before him, and filled his body with swift destruction/ Then he obtained a scimitar (or as some read net ) to
and made him
set
J
attack Tiamat.
1
We
Anu
his father
it
made
appears
to
The mean
protecting divinity?
142
the bow, and not content with all these weapons Merodach made league with the south, north, east, and west he made the evil wind, the malignant wind, winds the storm, the tempest, and the sven deadly winds, his allies, and they came after him to trouble Tiamat. The lord of the storm also lifted up his mighty weapon and rode over the sea in his unequalled chariot of fate. He laid hold of Tiamat and bound her fast with bonds. But Tiamat made desperate resistance, though of exactly what nature the fracture in the tablet forbids our find, however, that she sought out her kfiowing. husband Kingu, and spread trouble upon his path, probably because he refused to assist her in her rebellion, and she also used incantations to effect the destruction of Merodach. But to no purpose, for Merodach drew near in a warlike manner, he made his weapon approach her, he took the evil wind and let it loose before and behind him. Tiamat opened her mouth to engulf him, but Merodach drove such a quantity of wind down her throat that she could not cover her lip, he rained mighty winds Now Tiamat s heart was afraid, for Merodach into her. cleft her face, he raised his club, destroyed her belly, he cut through her interior, he mastered her heart, he laid hold of her and destroyed her life. He threw her body down and then sat upon her. Not content with the destruction of the monster herself, Merodach scattered her band of followers and swept away her assembly. The gods that went by her side turned and fled, they Merodach clung to one another fleeing helplessly. destroyed their attack and broke their weapons they sat down mournfully and filled the regions with groan Merodach .also made an end of Kingu, Tiamat s ing.
:
We
husband, and
c
The might
of the
over the
enemy
he strengthened his hold over the rebellious gods Tiamat whom he had laid hold of powerfully he turned backward the lord trampled down too the foundation of Tiamat.
143
The next lines tell us that the north wind carried away her blood to a wretched place. Then Merodach s father rejoiced, and was glad when he saw this and when the messengers brought him the news. After his labours the lord Merodach rested and refreshed his body. Then follows the account of how the heavens were made
bright and clear after this dreadful fight, and the text goes on to say that the gods made the waters to come forth, which were not coming forth. Now Tiamat was a sea demon, and while this fight was going on she apparently had stopped the tides from flowing, but this the god Merodach rectified. representation of the battle, taken from a sculpture in the British Museum, is given in the frontispiece. The tablet then adds the first line of the next tablet of the series, which reads
He made
And
comes a colophon stating that the tablet contained one hundred and forty-six lines, an^ was written by Nabu-beli-su Nahid-Marduk for the saving of his life, and that it was placed in the temple of Zida. The tablet not only gives us a valuable piece of my thology of the Babylonians, but the colophon shows that it was a meritorious act on the part of a pious man to write or copy a religious book as a thank-offering to a god. It is another form of an old Semitic idea: the Jews wrote copies of the law each man for himself, every king was bound to do so to-day the Mahommedans write copies of their Koran. To go back to the Baby lonian tablet, however. The story is told in very concise and brief language, and the expressions are .here and there somewhat obscure. The sen^e of a few of the lines I cannot make out, owing to a number of words the meanings of which at present are unknown. If one of the Oriental puts aside the weird and mystic imagery from it, it is the account of the battle of light against darkness. Merodach is the brilliance of the sun/ and he goes armed with the bow of his father Anu, the sky
after this
;
144
god, and the imd-mul-lum *, or principle of the stars and he takes the lightning and gathers together to his fire side the winds, the powers of the heavens. With this
;
the second read that there chapter of Genesis. was darkness upon the face of the deep, and the word rendered deep is fhoin, i. e. Tiamat, in Babylonian. Tiamat is represented as the abyss from whence all she herself is personified in the things noxious sprang form of a being with scales, feathers, wings, claws, gaping jaws, and a tail, and over this hideous being the glorious light sprang. St. John, in the Apocalypse, spoke of the time when there shall be no more sea/ intimating that the abolition of the sea with its monsters and terrors was to be a part of the glorious future. In the tablet spoken of above the line
in
armour he does battle against Tiamat. equivalent to this word we meet with
first
The Hebrew
verse of the
We
lord,
who
trusts in thee,
do thou benefit
in
his soul,
the Psalms,
and reveals to us the craving of the soul of the Baby lonian for the assistance and support of a mighty and powerful god. Whether they had a deeper meaning veiled under the words is hard to say, but it is not at all improbable that the ideas of right and wrong were repre sented by them under the symbols of light and darkness. A curious name is given to Tiamat in the tablet, she is called the great serpent (we have already spoken of her shape and of her being the personification of chaos), which reminds one of the Revelation where Satan is called the great dragon V The Jews, too, have called Satan the prince over chaos/ This Tiamat then is clearly the Babylonian tempter which led man astray, and which brought *death and destruction into the world. There is a seal in the British Museum bearing an en graving which seems to be a picture of the fall of man.
1
The word
Rev.
xii.
is
rendered club
;
perhaps
fire
stick
would be a
translation.
2
7-9
xx. 2.
THE BABYLONIAN
It is figured
RELIGION.
145
.
on page 153, and has been published before 1 In the middle of the scene there stands a tree with branches, and on either side of the trunk there is a fruit. Seated on the right is a man, and upon the left is a woman, behind whom stands the serpent. The tree is the tree of life, which played a great part in the BabyIonian and Assyrian religions, and was understood too by the Babylonians to be the symbol of immortality. As to the views of the Babylonians about the creation we know but little, for only a few lines on this subject, and these on a fragment of a tablet, have come down to us. They read
When on
and beneath, the abyss recorded not a name, the water deep first begot them, the lady Tiamat was the bringer forth of all.
and
collected, but the clouds were not in the earth was not a seed.
Then none
These words evidently refer to a time when the earth was without form and void. Apparently the pious Babylonian repented deeply at
times, for
the days of
the lament of one which says, .From, youth I am bound fast to the yoke of "troubled. sin; and his conscience was at times sorely When in distress, through a calamity or any other cause, he asks himself, Have I estranged father and son, brother and brother, or friend and friend ? Have I not freed the captive, released the bound, and delivered him who was confined in prison 2 ? Have I resisted my god or despised my goddess? Have I taken territory not my own, or entered with wrong motives the house of my Have I approached the wife of my fellow man? fellow ? Have I shed man s blood or robbed one of his clothing? The Babylonian could bewail his sins, iniquities, and and the following lines ignorance in very pathetic words,
find,
we
my
146
will show how nearly the words and ideas approach some of our own prayers of to-day
;
O my lord, my transgression is great, many are my sins. O my god .... O my goddess .... O my god that knowest that I knew not, my trans gression is great, many are my sins. my goddess .that knowest that I knew not my trans gression is great, many are my sins.
3
The sin that I committed I knew The sin that I sinned I knew not. The forbidden things did I eat. The .... did I trample upon.
not.
My lord
God
1
punished me. has overpowered me. lay on the ground, and no man extended the hand.
in the strength of his heart
I
in the
wrath of
In tears
I
dissolved myself, and none my palms took. there was none that would hear me.
;
my goddess
embraced.
I
To my
god,
knew
not, I
made
supplication.
transgressions are before me transgressions are before me, may thy judgment give me life. May thy heart like the heart of the mother of the setting 2 day to its place return For the tearful supplication of my heart, let the name of eyery god be invoked 65 times. Peace afterwards.
.
To my goddess who knew, I made supplication. How long, O my god ? How long, O my goddess ? O my god, seven times seven are my transgressions, my 1
My
gocls, bis
have now seen something about the Babylonians neaven, his hell, his devil and evil spirits. We so ^een .some of his best ideas and conceptions.
?
!;3$j(jji"prayef
THE BABYLONIAN
RELIGION.
147
He had grand ideas about his gods, but he appears to have feared the attacks of the evil spirits more than he trusted in his great gods to defend him from them. At the beginning he peopled all Nature and everything in Nature with spirits, but by degrees he attributed more power to some of these than to others, and hence arose His religion was a mixture of sub the great gods. and absurdity, of purity and impurity, of refined limity ideas and coarse conceptions in short, he made the gods He never grasped the idea of one God in his own image. making and ruling all things, the Ruler and Governor of nations and individuals alike, but he multiplied idols and s gods without end. This brought down Jeremiah just l It is the land of graven images, and they observation He was superstitious and are mad upon their idols. was slavish in his easily terrified by the supernatural, and obedience to it. His mind was easily led captive by the pomp and religious processions, which the priests took care to .make as attractive as possible. Jo these were added the practices of Nature worship so strongly de nounced in the Bible under the names- of Baal, Baaland thus the mind Peor, Astitoreth, and the groves of the Babylonian was led astray, and whatever good he had lying in his soul was crushed and blotted out. In the day of retribution when Babylon fell his idols were as he found to his bitter cost. powerless to save him, the Babylonians asked the Jews to sing them Though one of the songs of Zion, yet they profited nought by learn anything of Jehovah, if, neither did they who^had deeds and driven out mighty nations -for done mighty and the three children were Daniel this
;
*
God in Babylon, its people repented living witnesses of the preaching of Jonah. not, as Nineveh repented at like Its gods are gone, its people, and its tributary kings, vanished there is nothing, but the theif conquerors, have of Us accumulated dust of centuries in the land instead of the it is beholden to the -children former glory, and site. \est for the discovery in recent times of its ancient
;
people.
Though
Jer.l. 38.
148
CHAPTER
X.
importance-Babylonian
names.
Crentat
-Commerce-Sla^
Babylonians good builders*
ONE
attend
We are ignorant his gods. worship and praise due to thenthat were carried out of the exact ceremonies but it seems that processions of priests bearing temples, and frequent. The the image of a god were common the temples with part of the spoils kings richly endowed which they obtained in war, and each person, according They craved for to his ability, no doubt did the same. and were not visible representation of their deities, a even if they had any satisfied with an invisible presence, or low, rich or conception of it. Every person, high which was earned poor took part in the Nature-worship It is probable out under the beautiful sky of Chaldea. to their gods, that they chanted hymns and praises fourth tablet of the for the Babylonian copy of the Merodach Creation series, recording the fight between and a parallelism in many and Tiamat, exhibits a rhythm One would think that the narrative part of its lines. a few vdices, and the lines of or
was to of the chief concerns of the Babylonian and to take part in the duties, to his
religious
was recited
praise
a huge chorus in wMch eVery one joined. Their sacred books were the so-called Qistubar legends, Which relate that the solar hero Gistubar performed deeds, each of which formed the subject Itvelve
sung by
by
mighty if a narrative, The Babylonians prayed, for their prayers a have cope idown to us., Every seventhly was of rest for the day Sabbath, or as they put it,
:
<a
149
god or goddess presided over every day in and lists of the days of the months, with their regents mentioned, have come down to us. Their repre sentation of the Sun-god took the form of a disk, and a beautiful woman was the type of Istar, the daughter of the Moon-god. At the doorways of their palaces they placed huge stone figures of a composite being, with the face and head of a man, the body and tail of a horse, the legs and hoofs of a bull, and the huge feathered pinions of a mighty bird, which indicated that it had the wisdom and intelligence of a maji, the swift body of the horse, the fleet wings of the .eagles, and the mighty treading down power of the*bull. These figures guarded the footsteps of the king their maker/ The contract tablets show us that the Babylonians had two names, one an official and the other private whether any ceremony attended the naming is not known. When the Babylonian died he was most probably burnt, and it is thought that furnaces were always kept going for this purpose. It has been suggested that it was into one of
the year,
;
three children
had been made seven times hotter than usual. There are ^earthenware pots in the British Museum
it
which contained the calcined bones and ashes of pe^e that were burnt more than two thousand years ago, gjk these pots are common and abundant in the ruins of tie
In the time of the Parthians they old, Babylonian cities, used coffins, and of these specimens in a greenish glazed On the death of the ..earthenware are still to be seen. Babylonian his soul went to the land of the silver -sky/ the kings ;au^ dwelt with the heroes of bygone times who ruled ages before. Isaiah describes iHe home of these spirits in almost identical words \ The numerous to an enormous tennples must have given occupation of people and servants, and even the body of !pt||nfeer various services Sp^sts necessary for performing the
^d
fi.a;ve
8
been
large.
1
Isaiah xiv. 9.
150
The chief occupation of the Babylonian was war; as soon as one king was dead, all the tributary kingdoms tried to assert their independence. This, of course, necessitated expeditions to all parts of the country to put down the various rebellions. There was a set time of the year for warlike expeditions, as we learn from The Babylonians were armed with swords, 2 Sam. xi. i. bows and arrows, and staves in the later days they had helmets and shields. Their battles consisted more of surprises and skirmishes than what we should call definite warfare. They showed no mercy, and once a city they destroyed it utterly, slaying having captured the unfortunate inhabitants and burning everything few of the kings took the that could be burnt.
;
made them
In besieging
build walls
and temples,
cities they used scaling ladders, and men were set under cover to dig out the stones from the foundations, that the, city walls might fall. They used horses and chariots in battle, but the greater part of the army must have gone It will be remembered that the Rabshakeh on foot. of Sennacherib offered Hezekiah horses, saying, I will give thee two thousand horses if thou be able on thy part to set riders upon them V list was kept of the people destroyed in each city, and of the spoil taken. Wars were undertaken on various pretexts, such as rebellion and invasion of territory but the kings often made raids on slight provocation when the funds of their treasuries were low. It was the wealth of Hezekiah s palace and of the Temple that attracted MerodaclvBaladan and Nebuchadnezzar and the riches of Tyre always made it an attractive object for conquest in the eyes of the
etc.,
for
them.
Babylonians and Assyrians. Many of the Babylonians were engaged for the Semite was always a trader, and
certainty* that
it
in
commerce,
was respected,
1
Isaiah xxxvi. S.
151
the business of the firm of Egibi and Son was carried on throughout all the wars and civil commotions which con vulsed Babylon. The Babylonians made legal promises to pay certain debts they had contracted. They bought sold land, and they lent and or merchandise on
money
interest.
This business firm of Egibi and Son arranged dowries for unwedded women, and some records of this sort are in our national collection.
The Babylonians bought slaves, male and female, and appears that some of the owners went so far as to brand their own name upon them with hot irons.
it
In stature the Babylonians were short and thick-set they had the characteristic Semitic nose, thick lips, and Their hair was thick and curly, and of oblique eyes. course black whether they plaited or knotted it in the
;
;
way we
see it represented is doubtful, for the dressing shown on the sculptures may be for the sake of ornament. They wore dyed raiment, probably of a brilliant colour, girdles round their waist, and sandals on their feet The Babylonian youth learned to read and write early. The task of learning the huge syllabary was no easy one, he therefore copied the characters over and over again, until the eye, the hand, and the memory all helped him
Those who were to gain a perfect knowledge of them. intended for priests or astronomers learnt the omens,
the astrological and the astronomical texts, and the old Akkadian language. The king was absolute monarch he heard complaints and redressed wrongs the, power of life and death was in his hands. How the Babylonian king amused himself is not known the Assyrian hunted The Babylonian libraries were well stored lions, etc.
;
;
with tablets by generations gone by, and therefore they became the centre of attraction for the literati ao& savants
great .astrologers and moderately good astronomers ; we to them. They drew maps upon ^jfee a very great deal
The, Babylonians were very superstitious, pf that day. and, very fearful of the evil spirits and genii, which they imagined were always ready to attack them. .They were
1-53
and there are fragments of their planispheres, which are divided into divisions corresponding to degrees, among the treasures of our national collection.
clay,
The Babylonian was a skilful engraver upon the hardest stones, of which the polish and smoothness is a marvel even in the nineteenth century. The little stone which contains Sargon s inscription (B.C. 3800) is beauti fully rounded and smooth, the inscription being admirably cut. They excelled in seal cutting, and delighted in inscribing figures of the beings of their Pantheon
upon
agate, chalcedony, jasper, haematite, etc. Drawings of some of these seals are shown on the opposite page.
The Babylonians were good builders, as the ruins and remains of their temples and walls testify. Some of their bricks they burnt, others they sun-dried, and each brick bore the impression of the seal of the king its makr. Some bricks were glazed with one colour (these were probably used to lay the foundations in damp
places), others for ornament in two or occasionally we find them both fluted
arch, and they used pillars in their Their palaces were decorated with all kinds buildings. of beautiful stones it has been thought that they were but one storey high, but this is scarcely credible. of of the Owing to our ignorance of the
;
meaning
many
architectural
cannot
make
terms employed in their buildings, we exact statements about them, but their
palaces and temples were very extensive. They made plantations around them, and a little tablet gives us the names of the various plants and trees that were in the gardens of Merodach-Baladan. Of the houses of the
poorer classes we know nothing; their dwellings have long since passed away. There were beautiful objects of art in the kings palaces, bronze statuettes, glass bottles and vases, alabaster jars, ivories with gold and beautiful colours, though these belong probably to the later period of the empire. The objects of art and luxury which the Babylonians were unable to produce for themselves they
ANCIENT BABYLONIAN
SEALS.
ENGRAVING ON A BABYLONIAN SEAL REPRESENTING THE TEMPTATION OF ADAM AND EVE AND THE TREE OF LIFE.
155
could obtain from Phoenicia and Egypt, and no doubt they availed themselves of the opportunity. Every single tablet that is recovered from the mounds
of Babylonia reveals fresh facts and gives new testimony of the enormous amount of knowledge possessed by the It will be impossible to obtain an exact
Babylonians.
excavated and
all
until all the mounds have been the literature read and understood. enough work for many lifetimes the
;
knew
to
be done
is
labourers in the field are very few. The task of reading the cuneiform inscriptions is a hard one, and much but is necessary before it can be done ; patient work it is a study attractive enough surely In this little book only a few of the most important
!
facts
have been touched upon, and we have tried to and are certain. only such things as admit of proof
however, how
.state
It is
very necessary the knowledge, self-evident, of the facts obtained from the cuneiform inscriptions is for the right understanding of that part of Bible history
which
relates to
156
INDEX.
Abel, 75Abil-Bel-usum-same, 45. Abil-Ea-sar-mati, 45.
Abil-Sin, 42.
Apirak, 41.
Apries, 74.
Azuri, 61.
Arad-Gula, 116.
Arah-samna
Abraham,
75.
October,
6.
Achaemenes, 95.
Adam,
75.
Arahu-mahru, the inter calary month, in. Arahu or Aracus he per sonified Nebuchadnez zar, son of Nabonidus,
;
Babylon does not mean confusion Jews play ed on the word, 19; Talmudic discussion on the word, 19 accord ing to Herodotus, 29 size of the city, 30 its
*
; ;
name
Adlil, 58-
96.
Arakadres, 94. Araxes, 65. Arbela, oracle of, 128. Arithmetic, 1 08. Ariyaramnes, 95.
Arsaces, the era
of,
117.
Arsames, 95.
Istar,
the inscrip tions; the gate of God/ the house/ the wood of life/ 19 ; situated on the Euphra tes called the dwell ing-place of Bel and town of Marduk, 19 destruction of, by Sen
in
; ;
Akkadian hymn to
129.
Artaxerxes, 115.
Ashdod, siege
of, 61.
Ashtoreth, 128.
nacherib, 65 capture of, by Cyrus, 76-89 ; various statements as to the size of. Its two
;
Alman,
45.
his
Amil-Gula, 45.
Ammananu,
79.
cylin
Kaldu, 18. Babylonian copy books, 107 history, blank in, for twenty years, 60 manners and customs,
;
Assur-Dan, 60.
Assur-Danan, 49.
Assur-izir-pal, 106.
50-1 55
;
heaven, 138;
Amulets, 138. Amytes, 69. Anat, 126. Aneana, 97. Anna, heaven/ 36. Antiochns, 97 ; his cylin
der, 99.
called
Chesed,J7.
-
Assyria,
rise
of,
under
I.,
Bagayadish, 95.
Baltasar, 88.
Rimmon-Nirari
Assyrian
annals,
46.
;
123
Bani-tum-umma, 118.
Bardes, 93. Barrel cylinders, 124.
Anzan,
79.
INDEX.
Malkit, 131.
Man
possessed of a devil,
24.
113.
fight
with
Tiamat, 141.
Marduk-balatsu-ikbi, 59. Marduk-Bel-usati, 59. Marduk-irba, 116.
Merodach-Baladan
58-
II.,
Merodach-Baladan,
63-
60-
Michaux
stone, 121.
Mili-Sipak, 45.
was
dedicated,
in.
Moon-gocl, 135
Moon-god,
in
^abonidus,
a sun76 worshipper, 37 ; con in 1 7th year of, tract 120; his dream, 80;
;
his
excavations,
81
(Nabu-pal-
INDEX.
Nabu-abla-iddina, 58,
Nabu-ahi-bullit, 117. Nabu-balat-su, 115. Nabu-balatsu-ikbi, 80.
translation of two of his
inscriptions, 19, 25.
159
Sum Babylonians. mary, 147. Repentance of the Baby
Riblah,
lonians, 145. inscriptions
Nebuchadnezzar
Babylon, 70. Nergal, 136.
city,
of
Nebuchadnezzar
33.
Rim-Agu,
41.
35.
Rimat, 120.
wall
of Rimmon-Nirari
I.,
Nabu-lddannu, 116.
Nabu-kissir, 116. Nabu-kusur-su, 114.
Nimitti-Bel,
Nabu-ludda, 115.
Nabu-nadin-ziri, 60. Nabu-nasir, 60. Nabunnaa, 116. Nabu-rimanni, 116. Nabu-sab-sunu, 116.
43./
Marduk, 50;
his
of,
Ritti
wars, 50-57.
Ningal-iddina, 66.
Ninip-kudurri-us.ur, 58.
S^batu= January,
Sabbath, 148.
in.
Nippur,
28.
Nisaea, 95.
abmanda, 80.
^^
82.
Nabu-suma-iskun, 58.
Nabu-surna-ukin, 60.
58. Nabu-sum-esir, 116. Nabu-uhi-su, 116,
Baby
Nabu-sum-damik,
Omen
tablets, 123.
Ormazd,
95.
Samas-nasir, 45.
Nabu-usabsi, 60.
Nabu-usitik-urri, 116.
Pacorus, 117.
Nabu-usur-napistu,
1 1 6.
Padan, 45.
Patizithes, 93.
Samsi-Rammanu,
,
59.
Nadintu-Bel, 93.
Nagitu, 62.
Nahid-Marduk,
66.
Namar,
54.
Sargon
reign from
Nabonidus
Prexashes, 93.
Nazi-bugas, 45.
117.
19.
Sennacherib, 63-65.
-
Nebuchadnezzar
II.,
his
;
Rammanu -
abla
iddina,
war against Tyre, 73 50. 60. his War against Egypt, Rammanu-NirarillL, Shalmaneser his kindness to Rammanu-sea, 116. 70
;
Jeremiah, 74 India House inscrip tion, 31 brought wood from Lebanon, 29 ; his prayer to Marad, 24;
"East
>
Rassam,
H.,
his
dis
Shalmaneser
Sheol, 138. Siatu, 116.
Sibir, 58.
Rawlinson,
H.,
of
his
Religious belief
the
Sictachotes, 95.
OXFORD
above
deserve success.
the Committee of the Religious Tract Society is issuing under the Most of them have been entrusted to scholars who have a
treat."
The Atkenaum
1.
Cleopatra
Crown
**
s Needle. History of the London Obelisk, with an Exposition of the Hieroglyphics. By the Rev. J. KING, Lecturer for the Palestine Exploration Fund. With Illustrations,
8vo., 2s. 6d. cloth boards.
fairly full
and
satisfactory."
Saturday Review.
2.
Fresh Light from the Ancient Monuments, By K. SAYCE, LL.l). A sketch of the most striking confirmations of
^
A.
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Bible from recent discoveries in Egypt, Assyria, Babylonia, Palestine, With Facsimiles from Photographs. 35. cloth boards.* wish to understand the Bible, and all who take an interest in ancient "All who
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Leeds Mercury,
3.
Hill at Jerusalem. Ex
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With Maps,
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little
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Literary Churchmap.
4.
By E.
*
A.
WALLIS BUDGE,
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D, Litt, Assistant in the Department of Oriental Antiquities, Museum. Illustrated. Crown 8vo., 35. cloth boards,
series of By-Paths of "An admirable addition to this excellent Bible^Knowledge, Dr, Budge s method is sound, and his book is worthy of his reputation." Saturday Review.
.
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"
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Their Physical Features in Relation DAWSON, F.G.S., F.R.S., President Crown 8vo 33. cloth boards.
,
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know
^con ttnear
,*
Assyria:
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Its Princes, Priests,
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Museum.
"
With many Illustrations. Crown 8vo., 35. cloth boards. that historic A little book that contains a vast amount of information respecting and thedis. the
Nile. Chapters on the Life, Customs of Ancient Egypt. By E. A, WALUS British Department of Oriental Antiquities,
Kir interpretation
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cloth boards.
of the Bible.
By
Sir J.
RISDON BENNETT,
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8vo., 2s. 6d.
10.
By W. H. GROSER,
hoards.
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Illustrated.
Naturalist to Sir G.
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Empire,
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of Isaiah, as illustrated from Contemporary Fresh Light from of By A. H. SAYCE, LL.D, author of a
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