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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient
+Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon, by George Rawlinson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon
+ The History, Geography, And Antiquities Of Chaldaea,
+ Assyria, Babylon, Media, Persia, Parthia, And Sassanian
+ or New Persian Empire; With Maps and Illustrations.
+
+Author: George Rawlinson
+
+Illustrator: George Rawlinson
+
+Release Date: July 1, 2005 [EBook #16164]
+Last Updated: September 6, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SEVEN GREAT MONARCHIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SEVEN GREAT MONARCHIES
+
+OF THE
+
+ANCIENT EASTERN WORLD;
+
+
+OR,
+
+
+THE HISTORY, GEOGRAPHY, AND ANTIQUITIES OF CHALDAEA, ASSYRIA
+
+BABYLON, MEDIA, PERSIA, PARTHIA, AND SASSANIAN,
+
+OR NEW PERSIAN EMPIRE.
+
+
+BY
+
+GEORGE RAWLINSON, M.A.,
+
+CAMDEN PROFESSOR OF ANCIENT HISTORY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
+
+
+
+IN THREE VOLUMES.
+
+
+
+VOLUME II.
+
+
+
+WITH MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+
+
+THE FOURTH MONARCHY
+
+
+
+BABYLONIA.
+
+
+[Illustration: MAP]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. EXTENT OF THE EMPIRE.
+
+
+“Behold, a tree in the midst of the earth, and the height thereof was
+great; the tree grew and was strong: and the height thereof reached unto
+heaven, and the sight thereof to the end of all the earth.”--Dan. iy.
+10, 11.
+
+
+The limits of Babylonia Proper, the tract in which the dominant power
+of the Fourth Monarchy had its abode, being almost identical with those
+which have been already described under the head of Chaldaea, will not
+require in this place to be treated afresh, at any length. It needs
+only to remind the reader that Babylonia Proper is that alluvial tract
+towards the mouth of the two great rivers of Western Asia--the Tigris
+and the Euphrates--which intervenes between the Arabian Desert on the
+one side, and the more eastern of the two streams on the other. Across
+the Tigris the country is no longer Babylonia, but Cissia, or Susiana--a
+distinct region, known to the Jews as Elam--the habitat of a distinct
+people. Babylonia lies westward of the Tigris, and consists of two vast
+plains or flats, one situated between the two rivers, and thus forming
+the lower portion of the “Mesopotamia” of the Greeks and Romans--the
+other interposed between the Euphrates and Arabia, a long but narrow
+strip along the right bank of that abounding river. The former of these
+two districts is shaped like an ancient amphora, the mouth extending
+from Hit to Samarah, the neck lying between Baghdad and Ctesiphon on the
+Tigris, Mohammed and Mosaib on the Euphrates, the full expansion of
+the body occurring between Serut and El Khithr, and the pointed base
+reaching down to Kornah at the junction of the two streams. This tract,
+the main region of the ancient Babylonia, is about 320 miles long, and
+from 20 to 100 broad. It may be estimated to contain about 18,000 square
+miles. The tract west of the Euphrates is smaller than this. Its length,
+in the time of the Babylonian Empire, may be regarded as about 350
+miles, its average width is from 25 to 30 miles, which would give an
+area of about 9000 square miles. Thus the Babylonia of Nabopolassar
+and Nebuchadnezzar may be regarded as covering a space of 27,000 square
+miles--a space a little exceeding the area of the Low countries.
+
+The small province included within these limits--smaller than Scotland
+or Ireland, or Portugal or Bavaria--became suddenly, in the latter half
+of the seventh century B.C., the mistress of an extensive empire. On the
+fall of Assyria, about B.C. 625, or a little later, Media and Babylonia,
+as already observed, divided between them her extensive territory. It
+is with the acquisitions thus made that we have now to deal. We have to
+inquire what portion exactly of the previous dominions of Assyria fell
+to the lot of the adventurous Nabopolassar, when Nineveh ceased to
+be--what was the extent of the territory which was ruled from Babylon in
+the latter portion of the seventh and the earlier portion of the sixth
+century before our era?
+
+Now the evidence which we possess on this point is threefold. It
+consists of certain notices in the Hebrew Scriptures, contemporary
+records of first-rate historical value; of an account which strangely
+mingles truth with fable in one of the books of the Apocrypha; and of a
+passage of Berosus preserved by Josephus in his work against Apion.
+The Scriptural notices are contained in Jeremiah, in Daniel, and in
+the books of Kings and Chronicles. From these sources we learn that the
+Babylonian Empire of this time embraced on the one hand the important
+country of Susiana or Elymais (Elam), while on the other it ran up the
+Euphrates at least as high as Carchemish, from thence extending westward
+to the Mediterranean, and southward to, or rather perhaps into, Egypt.
+The Apocryphal book of Judith enlarges these limits in every direction.
+That the Nabuchodonosor of that work is a reminiscence of the real
+Nebuchadnezzar there can be no doubt. The territories of that monarch
+are made to extend eastward, beyond Susiana, into Persia; northward to
+Nineveh; westward to Cilicia in Asia Minor; and southward to the very
+borders of Ethiopia. Among the countries under his sway are enumerated
+Elam, Persia, Assyria, Cilicia, Coele-Syria, Syria of Damascus,
+Phoenicia, Galilee, Gilead, Bashan, Judsea, Philistia, Goshen, and Egypt
+generally. The passage of Berosus is of a more partial character. It
+has no bearing on the general question of the extent of the Babylonian
+Empire, but, incidentally, it confirms the statements of our other
+authorities as to the influence of Babylon in the West. It tells us that
+Coele-Syria, Phoenicia, and Egypt, were subject to Nabopolassar, and
+that Nebuchadnezzar ruled, not only over these countries, but also over
+some portion of Arabia.
+
+From these statements, which, on the whole, are tolerably accordant, we
+may gather that the great Babylonian Empire of the seventh century
+B.C. inherited from Assyria all the southern and western portion of her
+territory, while the more northern and eastern provinces fell to the
+share of Media. Setting aside the statement of the book of Judith
+(wholly unconfirmed as it is by any other authority), that Persia was at
+this time subject to Babylon, we may regard as the most eastern portion
+of the Empire the district of Susiana, which corresponded nearly with
+the modern Khuzistan and Luristan. This acquisition advanced the eastern
+frontier of the Empire from the Tigris to the Bakhtiyari Mountains, a
+distance of 100 or 120 miles. It gave to Babylon an extensive tract
+of very productive territory, and an excellent strategic boundary.
+Khuzistan is one of the most valuable provinces of modern Persia. It
+consists of a broad tract of fertile alluvium, intervening between the
+Tigris and the mountains, well watered by numerous large streams, which
+are capable of giving an abundant irrigation to the whole of the low
+region. Above this is Luristan, a still more pleasant district, composed
+of alternate mountain, valley, and upland plain, abounding in beautiful
+glens, richly wooded, and full of gushing brooks and clear rapid rivers.
+Much of this region is of course uncultivable mountain, range succeeding
+range, in six or eight parallel lines, as the traveller advances to the
+north-east; and most of the ranges exhibiting vast tracts of bare
+and often precipitous rock, in the clefts of which snow rests till
+midsummer. Still the lower flanks of the mountains are in general
+cultivable, while the valleys teem with orchards and gardens, and the
+plains furnish excellent pasture. The region closely resembles Zagros,
+of which it is a continuation. As we follow it, however, towards the
+south-east into the Bakhtiyari country, where it adjoins upon the
+ancient Persia, it deteriorates in character; the mountains becoming
+barer and more arid, and the valleys narrower and less fertile.
+
+All the other acquisitions of Babylonia at this period lay towards the
+west. They consisted of the Euphrates valley, above Hit; of Mesopotamia
+Proper, or the country about the two streams of the Bilik and the
+Khabour; of Syria, Phoenicia, Palestine, Idumasa, Northern Arabia, and
+part of Egypt. The Euphrates valley from Hit to Balis is a tract of no
+great value, except as a line of communication. The Mesopotamian Desert
+presses it closely upon the one side, and the Arabian upon the other.
+The river flows mostly in a deep bed between cliffs of marl, gypsum, and
+limestone, or else between bare hills producing only a few dry sapless
+shrubs and a coarse grass; and there are but rare places where, except
+by great efforts, the water can be raised so as to irrigate, to any
+extent, the land along either bank. The course of the stream is fringed
+by date-palms as high as Anah, and above is dotted occasionally with
+willows, poplars, sumacs, and the unfruitful palm-tree. Cultivation
+is possible in places along both banks, and the undulating country on
+either side affords patches of good pasture. The land improves as we
+ascend. Above the junction of the Khabour with the main stream, the left
+bank is mostly cultivable. Much of the land is flat and well-wooded,
+while often there are broad stretches of open ground, well adapted for
+pasturage. A considerable population seems in ancient times to have
+peopled the valley, which did not depend wholly or even mainly on its
+own products, but was enriched by the important traffic which was always
+passing up and down the great river.
+
+Mesopotamia Proper, or the tract extending from the head streams of the
+Khabour about Mardin and Nisibin to the Euphrates at Bir, and thence
+southwards to Karkesiyeh or Circesium, is not certainly known to have
+belonged to the kingdom of Babylon, but may be assigned to it on grounds
+of probability. Divided by a desert or by high mountains from the valley
+of the Tigris, and attached by means of its streams to that of the
+Euphrates, it almost necessarily falls to that power which holds the
+Euphrates under its dominion. The tract is one of considerable extent
+and importance. Bounded on the north by the range of hills which Strabo
+calls Mons Masius, and on the east by the waterless upland which lies
+directly west of the middle Tigris, it comprises within it all the
+numerous affluents of the Khabour and Bilik, and is thus better supplied
+with water than almost any country in these regions. The borders of the
+streams afford the richest pasture, and the whole tract along the flank
+of Masius is fairly fertile. Towards the west, the tract between the
+Khabour and the Bilik, which is diversified by the Abd-el-Aziz hills,
+is a land of fountains. “Such,” says Ibn Haukal, “are not to be found
+elsewhere in all the land of the Moslems, for there are more than three
+hundred pure running brooks.” Irrigation is quite possible in this
+region; and many remains of ancient watercourses show that large tracts,
+at some distance from the main streams, were formerly brought under
+cultivation.
+
+Opposite to Mesopotamia Proper, on the west or right bank of the
+Euphrates, lay Northern Syria, with its important fortress of
+Carchemish, which was undoubtedly included in the Empire. This tract is
+not one of much value. Towards the north it is mountainous, consisting
+of spurs from Amanus and Taurus, which gradually subside into the desert
+a little to the south of Aleppo. The bare, round-backed, chalky or rocky
+ranges, which here continually succeed one another, are divided only by
+narrow tortuous valleys, which run chiefly towards the Euphrates or
+the lake of Antioch. This mountain tract is succeeded by a region of
+extensive plains, separated from each other by low hills, both equally
+desolate. The soil is shallow and stony; the streams are few and of
+little volume; irrigation is thus difficult, and, except where it can be
+applied, the crops are scanty. The pistachio-nut grows wild in places;
+Vines and olives are cultivated with some success; and some grain is
+raised by the inhabitants; but the country has few natural advantages,
+and it has always depended more upon its possession of a carrying trade
+than on its home products for prosperity.
+
+West and south-west of this region, between it and the Mediterranean,
+and extending southwards from Mount Amanus to the latitude of Tyre, lies
+Syria Proper, the Coele-Syria of many writers, a long but comparatively
+narrow tract of great fertility and value. Here two parallel ranges of
+mountains intervene between the coast and the desert, prolific parents
+of a numerous progeny of small streams. First, along the line of the
+coast, is the range known as Libanusin the south, from lat. 33° 20’ to
+lat. 34° 40’, and as Bargylus in the north, from lat. 34° 45’ to the
+Orontes at Antioch, a range of great beauty, richly wooded in places,
+and abounding in deep glens, foaming brooks, and precipices of a
+fantastic form. [PLATE VII., Fig 2.] More inland is Antilibanus,
+culminating towards the south in Hermon, and prolonged northward in the
+Jebel Shashabu, Jebel Biha, and Jebel-el-Ala, which extends from near
+Hems to the latitude of Aleppo. More striking than even Lebanon at its
+lower extremity, where Hermon lifts a snowy peak into the air during
+most of the year, it is on the whole inferior in beauty to the coast
+range, being bleaker, more stony, and less broken up by dells and
+valleys towards the south, and tamer, barer, and less well supplied with
+streams in its more northern portion. Between the two parallel ranges
+lies the “Hollow Syria,” a long and broadish valley, watered by the
+two streams of the Orontes and the “Litany” which, rising at no great
+distance from one another, flow in opposite directions, one hurrying
+northwards nearly to the flanks of Amanus, the other southwards to the
+hills of Galilee. Few places in the world are more, remarkable, or have
+a more stirring history, than this wonderful vale. Extending for above
+two hundred miles from north to south, almost in a direct line, and
+without further break than an occasional screen of low hills, it
+furnishes the most convenient line of passage between Asia and Africa,
+alike for the journeys of merchants and for the march of armies. Along
+this line passed Thothines and Barneses, Sargon, and Sennacherib,
+Neco and Nebuchadnezzar, Alexander and his warlike successors, Pompey,
+Antony, Kaled, Godfrey of Bouillon; along this must pass every great
+army which, starting from the general seats of power in Western Asia,
+seeks conquests in Africa, or which, proceeding from Africa, aims at the
+acquisition of an Asiatic dominion. Few richer tracts are to be found
+even in these most favored portions of the earth’s surface. Towards the
+south the famous El-Bukaa is a land of cornfields and vineyards, watered
+by numerous small streams which fall into the Litany. Towards the
+north El-Ghab is even more splendidly fertile, with a dark rich soil,
+luxuriant vegetation, and water in the utmost abundance, though at
+present it is cultivated only in patches immediately about the towns,
+from fear of the Nusairiyeh and the Bedouins.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VII.]
+
+
+Parallel with the southern part of the Coele-Syrian valley, to the west
+and to the east, were two small but important tracts, usually regarded
+as distinct states. Westward, between the heights of Lebanon and the
+sea, and extending somewhat beyond Lebanon, both up and down the coast,
+was Phoenicia, a narrow strip of territory lying along the shore, in
+length from 150 to 180 miles, and in breadth varying from one mile to
+twenty. This tract consisted of a mere belt of sandy land along the sea,
+where the smiling palm-groves grew from which the country derived its
+name, of a broader upland region along the flank of the hills, which
+was cultivated in grain, and of the higher slopes of the mountains
+which furnished excellent timber. Small harbors, sheltered by rocky
+projections, were frequent along the coast. Wood cut in Lebanon was
+readily floated down the many streams to the shore, and then conveyed
+by sea to the ports. A narrow and scanty land made commerce almost a
+necessity. Here accordingly the first great maritime nation of antiquity
+grew up. The Phoenician fleets explored the Mediterranean at a time
+anterior to Homer, and conveyed to the Greeks and the other inhabitants
+of Europe, and of Northern and Western Africa, the wares of Assyria,
+Babylon, and Egypt. Industry and enterprise reaped their usual harvest
+of success; the Phoenicians grew in wealth, and their towns became great
+and magnificent cities. In the time when the Babylonian Empire came
+into being, the narrow tract of Phoenicia--smaller than many an
+English county--was among the most valuable countries of Asia; and its
+possession was far more to be coveted than that of many a land whose
+area was ten or twenty times as great.
+
+Eastward of Antilibanus, in the tract between that range and the great
+Syrian desert, was another very important district--the district which
+the Jews called “Aram-Dammesek,” and which now forms the chief part of
+the Pashalik of Damascus. From the eastern flanks of the Antilibanus two
+great and numerous smaller streams flow down into the Damascene plain,
+and, carrying with them that strange fertilizing power which water
+always has in hot climates, convert the arid sterility of the desert
+into a garden of the most wonderful beauty. The Barada and Awaaj,
+bursting by narrow gorges from the mountain chain, scatter themselves in
+numerous channels over the great flat, intermingling their waters, and
+spreading them out so widely that for a circle of thirty miles the
+deep verdure of Oriental vegetation replaces the red hue of the Hauran.
+Walnuts, planes, poplars, cypresses, apricots, orange-trees, citrons,
+pomegranates, olives, wave above; corn and grass of the most luxuriant
+growth, below. In the midst of this great mass of foliage the city of
+Damascus “strikes out the white arms of its streets hither and thither”
+ among the trees, now hid among them, now overtopping them with its domes
+and minarets, the most beautiful of all those beautiful towns which
+delight the eye of the artist in the East. In the south-west towers
+the snow-clad peak of Hermon, visible from every part of the Damascene
+plain. West, north-west, and north, stretches the long Antilibanus
+range, bare, gray, and flat-topped, except where about midway in its
+course, the rounded summit of Jebel Tiniyen breaks the uniformity of the
+line. Outside the circle of deep verdure, known to the Orientals as El
+Merj (“the Meadow”), is a setting or framework of partially cultivable
+land, dotted with clumps of trees and groves, which extend for many
+miles over the plain. To the Damascus country must also be reckoned
+those many charming valleys of Hermon and Antilibanus which open out
+into it, sending their waters to increase its beauty and luxuriance,
+the most remarkable of which are the long ravine of the Barada, and the
+romantic Wady Halbon, whose vines produced the famous beverage which
+Damascus anciently supplied at once to the Tyrian merchant-princes and
+to the voluptuous Persian kings.
+
+Below the Coelo-Syrian valley, towards the south, came Palestine, the
+Land of Lands to the Christian, the country which even the philosopher
+must acknowledge to have had a greater influence on the world’s
+history than any other tract which can be brought under a single
+ethnic designation. Palestine--etymologically the country of the
+Philistines--was somewhat unfortunately named. Philistine influence may
+possibly have extended at a very remote period over the whole of it; but
+in historical times that warlike people did but possess a corner of
+the tract, less than one tenth of the whole--the low coast region
+from Jamnia to Gaza. Palestine contained, besides this, the regions of
+Galilee, Samaria, and Judaea, to the west of the Jordan, and those of
+Ituraea, Trachonitis, Bashan, and Gilead, east of that river. It was a
+tract 140 miles long, by from 70 to 100 broad, containing probably about
+11,000 square miles. It was thus about equal in size to Belgium, while
+it was less than Holland or Hanover, and not much larger than the
+principality of Wales, with which it has been compared by a recent
+writer.
+
+The great natural division of the country is the Jordan valley. This
+remarkable depression, commencing on the west flank of Hermon, runs with
+a course which is almost due south from lat. 33° 25’ to lat. 31° 47’,
+where it is merged in the Dead Sea, which may be viewed, however, as a
+continuation of the valley, prolonging it to lat. 31° 8’. This valley is
+quite unlike any other in the whole world. It is a volcanic rent in
+the earth’s surface, a broad chasm which has gaped and never closed
+up. Naturally, it should terminate at Merom, where the level of the
+Mediterranean is nearly reached. By some wonderful convulsion, or at any
+rate by some unusual freak of Nature, there is a channel opened out from
+Merom, which rapidly sinks below the sea level, and allows the stream to
+flow hastily, down and still down, from Merom to Gennesareth, and from
+Gennesareth to the Dead Sea, where the depression reaches its lowest
+point, and the land, rising into a ridge, separates the Jordan valley
+from the upper end of the Gulf of Akabah. The Jordan valley divides
+Palestine, strongly and sharply, into two regions. Its depth, its
+inaccessibility (for it can only be entered from the highlands on either
+side down a few steep watercourses), and the difficulty of passing
+across it (for the Jordan has but few fords), give it a separating power
+almost equal to that of an arm of the sea. In length above a hundred
+miles, in width varying from one mile to ten, and averaging some five
+miles, or perhaps six, it must have been valuable as a territory,
+possessing, as it does, a rich soil, abundant water, and in its lower
+portion a tropical climate.
+
+On either side of the deep Jordan cleft lies a highland of moderate
+elevation, on the right that of Galilee, Samaria, and Judsea, on the
+left that of Ituraea, Bashan, and Gilead. The right or western highland
+consists of a mass of undulating hills, with rounded tops, composed of
+coarse gray stone, covered, or scarcely covered, with a scanty soil, but
+capable of cultivation in corn, olives, and figs. This region is
+most productive towards the north, barer and more arid as we proceed
+southwards towards the desert. The lowest portion, Judaea, is
+unpicturesque, ill-watered, and almost treeless; the central, Samaria,
+has numerous springs, some rich plains, many wooded heights, and in
+places quite a sylvan appearance; the highest, Galilee, is a land of
+water-brooks, abounding in timber, fertile and beautiful. The average
+height of the whole district is from 1500 to 1800 feet above the
+Mediterranean. Main elevations within it vary from 2500 to 4000 feet.
+The axis of the range is towards the East, nearer, that is, to the
+Jordan valley than to the sea. It is a peculiarity of the highland that
+there is one important break in it. As the Lowland mountains of Scotland
+are wholly separated from the mountains of the Highlands by the low
+tract which stretches across from the Frith of Forth to the Frith of
+Clyde, or as the ranges of St. Gall and Appenzell are divided off from
+the rest of the Swiss mountains by the flat which extends from the Rhine
+at Eagatz to the same river at Waldshut, so the western highland of
+Palestine is broken in twain by the famous “plain of Esdraelon,”
+ which runs from the Bay of Acre to the Jordan valley at Beth-Shean or
+Scythopolis.
+
+East of the Jordan no such depression occurs, the highland there being
+continuous. It differs from the western highland chiefly in this--that
+its surface, instead of being broken up into a confused mass of rounded
+hills, is a table-land, consisting of a long succession of slightly
+undulating plains. Except in Trachonitis and southern Ituraea, where the
+basaltic rock everywhere crops out, the soil is rich and productive, the
+country in places wooded with fine trees, and the herbage luxuriant. On
+the west the mountains rise almost precipitously from the Jordan valley,
+above which they tower to the height of 3000 or 4000 feet. The outline
+is singularly uniform; and the effect is that of a huge wall guarding
+Palestine on this side from the wild tribes of the desert. Eastward the
+tableland slopes gradually, and melts into the sands of Arabia. Here
+water and wood are scarce; but the soil is still good, and bears the
+most abundant crops.
+
+Finally, Palestine contains the tract from which it derives its
+name, the low country of the Philistines, which the Jews called the
+_Shephelah_, together with a continuation of this tract northwards to
+the roots of Carmol, the district known to the Jews as “Sharon,” or “the
+smooth place.” From Carmol to the Wady Sheriah, where the Philistine
+country ended, is a distance of about one hundred miles, which gives the
+length of the region in question. Its breadth between the shore and the
+highland varies from about twenty-five miles, in the south, between Gaza
+and the hills of Dan, to three miles, or less, in the north, between
+Dor and the border of Manasseh. Its area is probably from 1400 to 1500
+square miles, This low strip is along its whole course divided into two
+parallel belts or bands-the first a flat sandy tract along the shore,
+the Ramleh of the modern Arabs; the second, more undulating, a region
+of broad rolling plains rich in corn, and anciently clothed in part with
+thick woods, watered by reedy streams, which flow down from the great
+highland. A valuable tract is this entire plain, but greatly exposed to
+ravage. Even the sandy belt will grow fruit-trees; and the towns which
+stand on it, as Gaza, Jaffa, and Ashdod, are surrounded with huge groves
+of olives, sycamores, and palms, or buried in orchards and gardens,
+bright with pomegranates and orange-trees. The more inland region is
+of marvellous fertility. Its soil is a rich loam, containing scarcely a
+pebble, which yields year after year prodigious crops of grain--chiefly
+wheat--without manure or irrigation, or other cultivation than a light
+ploughing. Philistia was the granary of Syria, and was important doubly,
+first, as yielding inexhaustible supplies to its conqueror, and secondly
+as affording the readiest passage to the great armies which contended in
+these regions for the mastery of the Eastern World.
+
+South of the region to which we have given the name of Palestine,
+intervening between it and Egypt, lay a tract, to which it is difficult
+to assign any political designation. Herodotus regarded it as a portion
+of Arabia, which he carried across the valley of the Arabah and
+made abut on the Mediterranean. To the Jews it was “the land of the
+south”--the special country of the Amalekites. By Strabo’s time it had
+come to be known as Idumsea, or the Edomite country; and under this
+appellation it will perhaps be most convenient to describe it here.
+Idumasa, then, was the tract south and south-west of Palestine from
+about lat. 31° 10’. It reached westward to the borders of Egypt, which
+were at this time marked by the Wady-el-Arish, southward to the range of
+Sinai and the Elanitic Gulf, and eastward to the Great Desert. Its
+chief town was Petra, in the mountains east of the Arabah valley. The
+character of the tract is for the most part a hard gravelly and rocky
+desert; but occasionally there is good herbage, and soil that admits of
+cultivation; brilliant flowers and luxuriantly growing shrubs bedeck the
+glens and terraces of the Petra range; and most of the tract produces
+plants and bushes on which camels, goats, and even sheep will browse,
+while occasional palm groves furnish a grateful shade and an important
+fruit. The tract divides itself into four regions--first, a region of
+sand, low and flat, along the Mediterranean, the Shephelah without
+its fertility; next, a region of hard gravelly plain intersected by
+limestone ridges, and raised considerably above the sea level, the
+Desert of El-Tin, or of “the Wanderings;” then the long, broad, low
+valley of the Arabah, which rises gradually from the Dead Sea to an
+imperceptible watershed, and then falls gently to the head of the
+Gulf of Akabah, a region of hard sand thickly dotted with bushes, and
+intersected by numerous torrent courses; finally a long narrow region
+of mountains and hills parallel with the Arabah, constituting Idumsea
+Proper, or the original Edom, which, though rocky and rugged, is full
+of fertile glens, ornamented with trees and shrubs, and in places
+cultivated in terraces. In shape the tract was a rude square or oblong,
+with its sides nearly facing the four cardinal points, its length from
+the Mediterranean to the Gulf of Akabah being 130 miles, and its width
+from the Wady-el-Arish to the eastern side of the Petra mountains 120
+miles. The area is thus about 1560 square miles.
+
+Beyond the Wady-el-Arish was Egypt, stretching from the Mediterranean
+southwards a distance of nearly eight degrees, or more than 550 miles.
+As this country was not, however, so much a part of the Babylonian
+Empire as a dependency lying upon its borders, it will not be necessary
+to describe it in this place.
+
+One region, however, remains still unnoticed which seems to have been
+an integral portion of the Empire. This is Palmyrene, or the Syrian
+Desert--the tract lying between Coelo-Syria on the one hand and the
+valley of the middle Euphrates on the other, and abutting towards the
+south on the great Arabian Desert, to which it is sometimes regarded
+as belonging. It is for the most part a hard sandy or gravelly plain,
+intersected by low rocky ranges, and either barren or productive only
+of some sapless shrubs and of a low thin grass. Occasionally, however,
+there are oases, where the fertility is considerable. Such an oasis is
+the region about Palmyra itself, which derived its name from the palm
+groves in the vicinity; here the soil is good, and a large tract is
+even now under cultivation. Another oasis is that of Karyatein, which
+is watered by an abundant stream, and is well wooded, and productive of
+grain. The Palmyrene, however, as a whole possesses but little value,
+except as a passage country. Though large armies can never have
+traversed the desert even in this upper region, where it is
+comparatively narrow, trade in ancient times found it expedient to
+avoid the long detour by the Orontes Valley, Aleppo, and Bambuk, and
+to proceed directly from Damascus by way of Palymra to Thapsaeus on the
+Euphrates. Small bands of light troops also occasionally took the same
+course; and the great saving of distance thus effected made it important
+to the Babylonians to possess an authority over the region in question.
+
+Such, then, in its geographical extent, was the great Babylonian Empire.
+Reaching from Luristan on the one side to the borders of Egypt on the
+other, its direct length from east to west was nearly sixteen degrees,
+or about 980 miles, while its length for all practical purposes, owing
+to the interposition of the desert between its western and its eastern
+provinces, was perhaps not less than 1400 miles. Its width was very
+disproportionate to this. Between Zagros and the Arabian Desert, where
+the width was the greatest, it amounted to about 280 miles; between
+Amanus and Palmyra it was 250; between the Mons Masius and the middle
+Euphrates it may have been 200; in Syria and Idumsea it cannot have been
+more than 100 or 160. The entire area of the Empire was probably from
+240,000 to 250,000 square miles--which is about the present size of
+Austria. Its shape may be compared roughly to a gnomon, with one longer
+and one shorter arm.
+
+It added to the inconvenience of this long straggling form, which made
+a rapid concentration of the forces of the Empire impossible, that the
+capital, instead of occupying a central position, was placed somewhat
+low in the longer of the two arms of the gnomon, and was thus nearly
+1000 miles removed from the frontier province of the west. Though in
+direct distance, as the crow flies, Babylon is not more than 450 miles
+from Damascus, or more than 520 from Jerusalem, yet the necessary detour
+by Aleppo is so great that it lengthens the distance, in the one case
+by 250, in the other by 380 miles. From so remote a centre it was
+impossible for the life-blood to circulate very vigorously to the
+extremities.
+
+The Empire was on the whole fertile and well-watered. The two great
+streams of Western Asia--the Tigris and the Euphrates--which afforded
+an abundant supply of the invaluable fluid to the most important of
+the provinces, those of the south-east, have already been described at
+length; as have also the chief streams of the Mesopotamian district, the
+Belik and the Khabour. But as yet in this work no account has been given
+of a number of important rivers in the extreme east and the extreme
+west, on which the fertility, and so the prosperity, of the Empire very
+greatly depended. It is proposed in the present place to supply this
+deficiency.
+
+The principle rivers of the extreme east were the Choaspes, or modern
+Kerkhah, the Pasitigris or Eulseus, now the Kuran, the Hedyphon or
+Hedypnus, now the Jerahi, and the Oroatis, at present the Tab or
+Hindyan. Of these, the Oroatis, which is the most eastern, belongs
+perhaps more to Persia than to Babylon; but its lower course probably
+fell within the Susianian territory. It rises in the mountains between
+Shiraz and Persepolis, about lat. 29° 45’, long. 52° 35’ E.; and flows
+towards the Persian Gulf with a course which is north-west to Failiyun,
+then nearly W. to Zehitun, after which it becomes somewhat south of west
+to Hindyan, and then S.W. by S. to the sea. The length of the stream,
+without counting lesser windings, is 200 miles; its width at Hindyan,
+sixteen miles above its mouth, is eighty yards, and to this distance it
+is navigable for boats of twenty tons burthen. At first its waters are
+pure and sweet, but they gradually become corrupted, and at Hindyan they
+are so brackish as not to be fit for use. The Jerahi rises from several
+sources in the Kuh Margun, a lofty and precipitous range, forming the
+continuation of the chain of Zagros. about long. 50° to 51°, and lat.
+31° 30’. These head-streams have a general direction from N.E. to S.W.
+The principal of them is the Kurdistan river, which rises about fifty
+miles to the north-east of Babahan and flowing south-west to that point,
+then bends round to the north, and runs north-west nearly to the fort
+of Mungasht, where it resumes its original direction, and receiving from
+the north-east the Abi Zard, or “Yellow River”--a delightful stream of
+the coldest and purest water possible--becomes known as the Jerahi, and
+carries a large body of water as far as Fellahiyeh or Dorak. Near Dorak
+the waters of the Jerahi are drawn off into a number of canals, and the
+river is thus greatly diminished; but still the stream struggles on, and
+proceeds by a southerly course towards the Persian Gulf, which it enters
+near Gadi in long. 48° 52’. The course of the Jerahi, exclusively of
+the smaller windings, is about equal in length to that of the Tab or
+Hindyan. In volume, before its dispersion, it is considerably greater
+than that river. It has a breadth of about a hundred yards before it
+reaches Babahan, and is navigable for boats almost from its junction
+with the Abi Zard. Its size is, however, greatly reduced in its lower
+course, and travellers who skirt the coast regard the Tab as the more
+important river.
+
+The Kuran is a river very much exceeding in size both the Tab and the
+Jerahi. It is formed by the junction of two large streams--the Dizful
+river and the Kuran proper, or river of Shuster. Of these the Shuster
+stream is the more eastern. It rises in the Zarduh Kuh, or “Yellow
+Mountain,” in lat. 32°, long. 51°, almost opposite to the river Isfahan.
+From its source it is a large stream. Its direction is at first to the
+southeast, but after a while it sweeps round and runs considerably north
+of west; and this course it pursues through the mountains, receiving
+tributaries of importance from both sides, till, near Akhili, it turns
+round to the south, and, cutting at a right angle the outermost of the
+Zagros ranges, flows down with a course S.W. by S. nearly to Sinister,
+where, in consequence of a bund or dam thrown across it, it bifurcates,
+and passes in two streams to the right and to the left of the town.
+The right branch, which earned commonly about two thirds of the water,
+proceeds by a tortuous course of nearly forty miles, in a direction a
+very little west of south, to its junction with the Dizful stream, which
+takes place about two miles north of the little town of Bandi-kir. Just
+below that town the left branch, called at present Abi-Gargar, which
+has made a considerable bend to the east, rejoins the main stream, which
+thenceforth flows in a single channel. The course of the Kuran from its
+source to its junction with the Dizful branch, including main windings,
+is about 210 miles. The Dizful. branch rises from two sources, nearly a
+degree apart, in lat. 33° 30’. These streams run respectively south-east
+and south-west, a distance of forty miles, to their junction near
+Bahrein, whence their united waters flow in a tortuous course, with
+a general direction of south, for above a hundred miles to the outer
+barrier of Zagros, which they penetrate near the Diz fort, through a
+succession of chasms and gorges. The course of the stream from this
+point is south-west through the hills and across the plain, past Dizful,
+to the place where it receives the Beladrud from the west, when it
+changes and becomes first south and then southeast to its junction with
+the Shuster river near Bandi-kir. The entire course of the Dizful stream
+to this point is probably not less than 380 miles. Below Bandi-kir,
+the Kuran, now become “a noble river, exceeding in size the Tigris and
+Euphrates,” meanders across the plain in a general direction of S.S.
+W., past the towns of Uris, Ahwaz, and Ismaili, to Sablah, when it
+turns more to the west, and passing Mohammerah, empties itself into the
+Shat-el-Arab, about 22 miles below Busra. The entire course of the Kuran
+from its most remote source, exclusive of the lesser windings, is not
+less than 430 miles.
+
+The Kerkhah (anciently the Choaspes) is formed by three streams of
+almost equal magnitude, all of them rising in the most eastern portion
+of the Zagros range. The central of the three flows from the southern
+flank of Mount Elwand (Orontes), the mountain behind Hamadan (Ecbatana),
+and receives on the right, after a course of about thirty miles, the
+northern or Singur branch, and ten miles further on the southern or
+Guran branch, which is known by the name of the Gamas-ab. The river
+thus formed flows westward to Behistun, after which it bonds to the
+south-west, and then to the south, receiving tributaries on both hands,
+and winding among the mountains as far as the ruined city of Rudbar.
+Here it bursts through the outer barrier of the great range, and,
+receiving the large stream of the Kirrind from the north-west, flows
+S.S.E. and S.E. along the foot of the range, between it and the Kebir
+Kuh, till it meets the stream of the Abi-Zal, when it finally leaves the
+hills and flows through the plain, pursuing a S.S.E. direction to the
+ruins of Susa, which lie upon its left bank, and then turning to the
+S. S. W., and running in that direction to the Shat-el-Arab, which it
+reaches about five miles below Kurnur. Its length is estimated at above
+500 miles; its width, at some distance above its junction with the
+Abi-Zal, is from eighty to a hundred yards.
+
+The course of the Kerkhah was not always exactly such as is here
+described. Anciently it appears to have bifurcated at Pai Pul, 18 or 20
+miles N.W. of Susa, and to have sent a branch east of the Susa ruins,
+which absorbed the Shapur, a small tributary of the Dizful stream, and
+ran into the Kuran a little above Ahwaz. The remains of the old channel
+are still to be traced; and its existence explains the confusion,
+observable in ancient times, between the Kerkhah and the Kuran, to each
+of which streams, in certain parts of their course, we find the name
+Eulseus applied. The proper Eulseus was the eastern branch of the
+Kerkhah (Choaspes) from Pai Pul to Ahwaz; but the name was naturally
+extended both northwards to the Choaspes above Pai Pul and southwards to
+the Kuran below Ahwaz. The latter stream was, however, known also, both
+in its upper and its lower course, as the Pasitigris.
+
+On the opposite side of the Empire the rivers were less considerable.
+Among the most important may be mentioned the Sajur, a tributary of
+the Euphrates, the Koweik, or river of Aleppo, the Orontes, or river of
+Antioch, the Litany, or river of Tyre, the Barada, or river of Damascus,
+and the Jordan, with its tributaries, the Jabbok and the Hieromax.
+
+The Sajur rises from two principle sources on the southern flanks of
+Amanus, which, after running a short distance, unite a little to the
+east of Ain-Tab. The course of the stream from the point of junction is
+south-east. In this direction it flows in a somewhat tortuous channel
+between two ranges of hills for a distance of about 30 miles to Tel
+Khalid, a remarkable conical hill crowned by ruins. Here it receives an
+important affluent--the Keraskat--from the west, and becomes suitable
+for boat navigation. At the same time its course changes, and runs
+eastward for about 12 miles; after which the stream again inclines to
+the south, and keeping an E.S.E. direction for 14 or 15 miles, enters
+the Euphrates by five mouths in about lat. 36° 37’. The course of the
+river measures probably about 65 miles.
+
+The Koweik, or river of Aleppo (the Chalus of Xenophon), rises in the
+hills south of Ain-Tab. Springing from two sources, one of which is
+known as the Baloklu-Su, or “Fish River,” it flows at first eastward,
+as if intending to join the Euphrates. On reaching the plain of Aleppo,
+however, near Sayyadok-Koi, it receives a tributary from the north,
+which gives its course a southern inclination; and from this point it
+proceeds in a south and south-westerly direction, winding along the
+shallow bed which it has scooped in the Aloppo plain, a distance of 60
+miles, past Aleppo to Kinnisrin, near the foot of the Jebel-el-Sis. Here
+its further progress southward is barred, and it is forced to turn to
+the east along the foot of the mountain, which it skirts for eight or
+ten miles, finally entering the small lake or marsh of El Melak, in
+which it loses itself after a source of about 80 miles.
+
+The Orontes, the great river of Assyria, rises in the Buka’a--the deep
+valley known to the ancients as Coele-Syria Proper--springing from
+a number of small brooks, which flow down from the Antilibanus range
+between lat. 34° 5’ and lat. 34° 12’. Its most remote source is near
+Yunin, about seven mites N.N.E. of Baalbek. The stream flows at first
+N.W. by W. into the plain, on reaching which it turns at a right-angle
+to the northeast, and skirts the foot of the Antilibanus range as far as
+Lebweh, where, being joined by a larger stream from the southeast,130 it
+takes its direction and flows N.W. and then N. across the plain to the
+foot of Lebanon. Here it receives the waters of a much more abundant
+fountain, which wells out from the roots of that range, and is regarded
+by the Orientals as the true “head of the stream.” Thus increased the
+river flows northwards for a short space, after which it turns to the
+northeast, and runs in a deep cleft along the base of Lebanon, pursuing
+this direction for 15 or 16 miles to a point beyond Ribleh, nearly
+in lat. 34° 30’. Here the course of the river again changes, becoming
+slightly west of north to the Lake of Hems (Buheiret-Hems), which is
+nine or ten miles below Ribleh. Issuing from the Lake of Hems about lat.
+34° 43’, the Orontes once more flows to the north east, and in five or
+six miles reaches Hems itself, which it leaves on its right bank.
+It then flows for twenty miles nearly due north, after which, on
+approaching Hama (Hamath), it makes a slight bend to the east round
+the foot of Jebel Erbayn, and then entering the rich pasture country of
+El-Ghab’ runs north-west and north to the “Iron Bridge” (Jisr Hadid),
+in lat. 36° 11’. Its course thus far has been nearly parallel with
+the coast of the Mediterranean, and has lain between two ranges of
+mountains, the more western of which has shut it out from the sea.
+At Jisr Hadid the western mountains come to an end, and the Orontes,
+sweeping round their base, runs first west and then south-west down the
+broad valley of Antioch, in the midst of the most lovely scenery, to the
+coast, which it reaches a little above the 36th parallel, in long. 35°
+55’. The course of the Orontes, exclusive of lesser windings, is about
+200 miles. It is a considerable stream almost from its source. At Hamah,
+more than a hundred miles from its mouth, it is crossed by a bridge
+of thirteen arches. At Antioch it is fifty yards in width, and runs
+rapidly. The natives now call it the Nahr-el-Asy, or “Rebel River,”
+ either from its running in an opposite direction to all other streams of
+the country, or (more probably) from its violence and impetuosity.
+
+There is one tributary of the Orontes which deserves a cursory mention.
+This is the Kara Su, or “Black River,” which reaches it from the Aga
+Denghis, or Bahr-el-Abiyad, about five miles below Jisr Hadid and four
+or five above Antioch. This stream brings into the Orontes the greater
+part of the water that is drained from the southern side of Amanus. It
+is formed by a union of two rivers, the upper Kara Su and the Afrin,
+which flow into the Aga Denghis (White Sea), or Lake of Antioch, from
+the north-west, the one entering it at its northern, the other at its
+eastern extremity. Both are considerable streams; and the Kara Su on
+issuing from the lake carries a greater body of water than the Orontes
+itself, and thus adds largely to the volume of that stream in its lower
+course from the point of junction to the Mediterranean.
+
+The Litany, or river of Tyre, rises from a source at no great distance
+from the head springs of the Orontes. The almost imperceptible watershed
+of the Buka’a runs between Yunin and Baalbek, a few miles north of
+the latter; and when it is once passed, the drainage of the water is
+southwards. The highest permanent fountain of the southern stream seems
+to be a small lake near Tel Hushben, which lies about six miles to the
+south-west of the Baalbek ruins. Springing from this source the Litany
+flows along the lower Buka’a in a direction which is generally a little
+west of south, receiving on either side a number of streamlets and
+rills from Libanus and Anti-libanus, and giving out in its turn numerous
+canals for irrigation, which fertilize the thirsty soil. As the stream
+descends with numerous windings, but still with the same general course,
+the valley of the Buka’a contracts more and more, till finally it
+terminates in a gorge, down which thunders the Litany--a gorge a
+thousand feet or more in depth, and so narrow that in one place it
+is actually bridged over by masses of rock which have fallen from the
+jagged sides. Narrower and deeper grows the gorge, and the river chafes
+and foams through it, gradually working itself round to the west, and so
+clearing a way through the very roots of Lebanon to the low coast tract,
+across which it meanders slowly, as if wearied with its long struggle,
+before finally emptying itself into the sea. The course of the Litany
+may be roughly estimated at from 70 to 75 miles.
+
+The Barada, or river of Damascus, rises in the plain of Zebdany--the
+very centre of the Antilibanus. It has its real permanent source in a
+small nameless lake in the lower part of the plain, about lat. 33°
+41’; but in winter it is fed by streams flowing from the valley above,
+especially by one which rises in lat. 33° 46’, near the small hamlet
+of Ain Hawar. The course of the Barada from the small lake is at first
+towards the east; but it soon sweeps round and flows-southward for about
+four miles to the lower end of the plain, after which it again turns to
+the east and enters a romantic glen, running between high cliffs, and
+cutting through the main ridge of the Antilibanus between the Zebdany
+plain and Suk, the Abila of the ancients. From Suk the river flows
+through a narrow but lovely valley, in a course which has a general
+direction of south-east, past Ain Fijoh (where its waters are greatly
+increased), through a series of gorges and glens, to the point where the
+roots of the Antilibanus sink down upon the plain, when it bursts forth
+from the mountains and scatters. Channels are drawn from it on either
+side, and its waters are spread far and wide over the Merj, which it
+covers with fine trees and splendid herbage.
+
+One branch passes right through the city, cutting it in half. Others
+irrigate the gardens and orchards both to the north and to the south.
+Beyond the town the tendency to division still continues. The river,
+weakened greatly through the irrigation, separates into three main
+channels, which flow with divergent courses towards the east, and
+terminate in two large swamps or lakes, the Bahret-esh-Shurkiyeh and the
+Bahret-el-Kibli-yeh, at a distance of sixteen or seventeen miles from
+the city. The Barada is a short stream, its entire course from the plain
+of Zebdany not much exceeding forty miles.
+
+The Jordan is commonly regarded as flowing from two sources in the
+Huleh or plain immediately above Lake Merom, one at Banias (the ancient
+Paneas), the other at Tel-el-Kady, which marks the site of Laish or
+Dan. But the true highest present source of the river is the spring near
+Hasbeiya, called Nebaes-Hasbany, or Eas-en-Neba. This spring rises in
+the torrent-course known as the Wady-el-Teim, which descends from the
+north-western flank of Hermon, and runs nearly parallel with the great
+gorge of the Litany, having a direction from north-east to south-west.
+The water wells forth in abundance from the foot of a volcanic
+bluff, called Eas-el-Anjah, lying directly north of Hasbeiya, and is
+immediately used to turn a mill. The course of the streamlet is very
+slightly west of south down the Wady to the Huleh plain, where it
+is joined, and multiplied sevenfold, by the streams from Banais and
+Tel-el-Kady, becoming at once worthy of the name of river. Hence it
+runs almost due south to the Merom lake, which it enters in lat. 33°
+7’, through a reedy and marshy tract which it is difficult to penetrate.
+Issuing from Merom in lat. 33° 3’, the Jordan flows at first sluggishly
+southward to “Jacob’s Bridge,” passing which, it proceeds in the same
+direction, with a much swifter current down the depressed and narrow
+cleft between Merom and Tiberias, descending at the rate of fifty
+feet in a mile, and becoming (as has been said) a sort of “continuous
+waterfall.” Before reaching Tiberias its course bends slightly to the
+west of south for about two miles, and it pours itself into that “sea”
+ in about lat. 32° 53’. Quitting the sea in lat. 32° 42’, it finally
+enters the track called the Ghor, the still lower chasm or cleft which
+intervenes between Tiberias and the upper end of the Dead Sea. Here the
+descent of the stream becomes comparatively gentle, not much exceeding
+three feet per mile; for though the direct distance between the two
+lakes is less than seventy miles, and the entire fall above 600 feet,
+which would seem to give a descent of nine or ten feet a mile, yet, as
+the course of the river throughout this part of its career is tortuous
+in the extreme, the fall is really not greater than above indicated.
+Still it is sufficient to produce as many as twenty-seven rapids, or
+at the rate of one to every seven miles. In this part of its course
+the Jordan receives two important tributaries, each of which seems to
+deserve a few words.
+
+The Jarmuk, or Sheriat-el-Mandhur, anciently the Hiero-max, drains the
+water, not only from Gaulonitis or Jaulan, the country immediately east
+and south-east of the sea of Tiberias, but also from almost the whole
+of the Hauran. At its mouth it is 130 feet wide, and in the winter it
+brings down a great body of water into the Jordan. In summer, however,
+it shrinks up into an inconsiderable brook, having no more remote
+sources than the perennial springs at Mazarib, Dilly, and one or
+two other places on the plateau of Jaulan. It runs through a fertile
+country, and has generally a deep course far below the surface of the
+plain; ere falling into the Jordan it makes its way through a wild
+ravine, between rugged cliffs of basalt, which are in places upwards of
+a hundred feet in height.
+
+The Zurka, or Jabbok, is a stream of the same character with the
+Hieromax, but of inferior dimensions and importance. It drains a
+considerable portion of the land of Gilead, but has no very remote
+sources, and in summer only carries water through a few miles of its
+lower course. In winter, on the contrary, it is a roaring stream with a
+strong current, and sometimes cannot be forded. The ravine through which
+it flows is narrow, deep, and in some places wild. Throughout nearly
+its whole course it is fringed by thickets of cane and oleander, while
+above, its banks are clothed with forests of oak.
+
+The Jordan receives the Hieromax about four or five miles below the
+point where it issues from the Sea of Tiberias, and the Jabbok about
+half-way between that lake and the Dead Sea. Augmented by these streams,
+and others of less importance from the mountains on either side, it
+becomes a river of considerable size, being opposite Beth-shan (Beisan)
+140 feet wide, and three feet deep, and averaging, in its lower course,
+a width of ninety with a depth of eight or nine feet. Its entire course,
+from the fountain near Hasbeiya to the Dead Sea, including the passage
+of the two lakes through which it flows, is, if we exclude meanders,
+about 130, if we include them, 360 miles. It is calculated to pour into
+the Dead Sea 6,090,000 tons of water daily.
+
+Besides these rivers the Babylonian territory comprised a number of
+important lakes. Of these some of the more eastern have been described
+in a former volume: as the Bahr-i-Nedjif in Lower Chaldsea, and the Lake
+of Khatouniyeh in the tract between the Sinjar and the Khabour. It was
+chiefly, however, towards the west that sheets of water abounded: the
+principal of these were the Sabakhah, the Bahr-el-Melak, and the Lake
+of Antioch in Upper Syria; the Bahr-el-Kades, or Lake of Hems, in the
+central region; and the Damascus lakes, the Lake of Merom, the Sea of
+Galilee or Tiberias, and the Dead Sea, in the regions lying furthest to
+the south. Of these the greater number were salt, and of little value,
+except as furnishing the salt of commerce; but four--the Lake of
+Antioch, the Bahr-el-Kades, the Lake Merom, and the Sea of Galilee-were
+fresh-water basins lying upon the courses of streams which ran through
+them; and these not only diversified the scenery by their clear bright
+aspect, but were of considerable value to the inhabitants, as furnishing
+them with many excellent sorts of fish.
+
+Of the salt lakes the most eastern was the Sabakhah. This is a basin of
+long and narrow form, lying on and just below the 36th parallel. It
+is situated on the southern route from Balis to Aleppo, and is nearly
+equally distant between the two places. Its length is from twelve to
+thirteen miles; and its width, where it is broadest, is about five
+miles. It receives from the north the waters of the Nahr-el-Dhahab, or
+“Golden River” (which has by some been identified with the Daradax of
+Xenophon), and from the west two or three insignificant streams, which
+empty themselves into its western extremity. The lake produces a large
+quantity of salt, especially after wet seasons, which is collected and
+sold by the inhabitants of the surrounding country.
+
+The Bahr-el-Molak, the lake which absorbs the Koweik, or river of
+Aleppo, is less than twenty miles distant from Lake Sabakhah, which it
+very much resembles in its general character. Its ordinary length is
+about nine miles, and its width three or four; but in winter it is
+greatly swollen by the rains, and at that time it spreads out so widely
+that its circumference sometimes exceeds fifty miles. Much salt is
+drawn from its bed in the dry season, and a large part of Syria is hence
+supplied with the commodity. The lake is covered with small islands, and
+greatly frequented by aquatic birds-geese, ducks, flamingoes, and the
+like.
+
+The lakes in the neighborhood of Damascus are three in number, and are
+all of a very similar type. They are indeterminate in size and shape,
+changing with the wetness or dryness of the season; and it is possible
+that sometimes they may be all united in one. The most northern, which
+is called the Bahret-esh-Shurkiyeh, receives about half the surplus
+water of the Barada, together with some streamlets from the outlying
+ranges of Antilibanus towards the north. The central one, called the
+Bahret-el-Kibliyeh, receives the rest of the Barada water, which enters
+it by three or four branches on its northern and western sides. The most
+southern, known as Bahret-Hijaneh, is the receptacle for the stream
+of the Awaaj, and takes also the water from the northern parts of the
+Ledjah, or region of Argob. The three lakes are in the same line--a line
+which runs from N.N.E. to S.S.W. They are, or at least were recently,
+separated by tracts of dry land from two to four miles broad. Dense
+thickets of tall reeds surround them, and in summer almost cover their
+surface. Like the Bahr-el-Melak, they are a home for water-fowl, which
+flock to them in enormous numbers.
+
+By far the largest and most important of the salt lakes is the Great
+Lake of the South--the Bahr Lut (“Sea of Lot”), or Dead Sea. This sheet
+of water, which has always attracted the special notice and observation
+of travellers, has of late years been scientifically surveyed by
+officers of the American navy; and its shape, its size, and even its
+depth, are thus known with accuracy. The Dead Sea is of an oblong form,
+and would be of a very regular contour, were it not for a remarkable
+projection from its eastern shore near its southern extremity. In this
+place, a long and low peninsula, shaped like a human foot, projects
+into the lake, filling up two thirds of its width, and thus dividing the
+expanse of water into two portions, which are connected by a long and
+somewhat narrow passage. The entire length of the sea, from north to
+south, is 46 miles: its greatest width, between its eastern and its
+western shores, is 101 miles. The whole area is estimated at 250
+geographical square miles. Of this space 174 square miles belong to the
+northern portion of the lake (the true “Sea”), 29 to the narrow channel,
+and 46 to the southern portion, which has been called “the back-water,”
+ or “the lagoon.”
+
+The most remarkable difference between the two portions of the lake is
+the contrast they present as to depth. While the depth of the northern
+portion is from 600 feet, at a short distance from the mouth of the
+Jordan, to 800, 1000, 1200, and even 1300 feet, further down, the depth
+of the lagoon is nowhere more than 12 or 13 feet; and in places it is
+so shallow that it has been found possible, in some seasons, to ford the
+whole way across from one side to the other. The peculiarities of the
+Dead Sea, as compared with other lakes, are its depression below the
+sea-level, its buoyancy, and its extreme saltness. The degree of the
+depression is not yet certainly known; but there is reason to believe
+that it is at least as much at 1300 feet, whereas no other lake is known
+to be depressed more than 570 feet. The buoyancy and the saltness are
+not so wholly unparalleled. The waters of Lake Urumiyeh are probably
+as salt and as buoyant; those of Lake Elton in the steppe east of the
+Wolga, and of certain other Russian lakes, appear to be even salter. But
+with these few exceptions (if they are exceptions), the Dead Sea water
+must be pronounced to be the heaviest and saltest water known to us.
+More than one fourth of its weight is solid matter held in solution. Of
+this solid matter nearly one third is common salt, which is more than
+twice as much as is contained in the waters of the ocean.
+
+Of the fresh-water lakes the largest and most important is the Sea of
+Tiberias. This sheet of water is of an oval shape, with an axis, like
+that of the Dead Sea, very nearly due north and south. Its greatest
+length is about thirteen and its greatest width about six miles. Its
+extreme depth, so far as has been ascertained, is 27 fathoms, or 165
+feet. The Jordan flows into its upper end turbid and muddy, and issues
+forth at its southern extremity clear and pellucid. It receives also the
+waters of a considerable number of small streams and springs, some of
+which are warm and brackish; yet its own water is always sweet, cool,
+and transparent, and, having everywhere a shelving pebbly beach, has
+a bright sparkling appearance. The banks are lofty, and in general
+destitute of verdure. What exactly is the amount of depression below the
+level of the Mediterranean remains still, to some extent, uncertain; but
+it is probably not much less than 700 feet. Now, as formerly, the lake
+produces an abundance of fish, which are pronounced, by those who have
+partaken of them, to be “delicious.”
+
+Nine miles above the Sea of Tiberias, on the course of the same stream,
+is the far smaller basin known now as the Bahr-el Huleh, and anciently
+(perhaps) as Merom. This is a mountain tarn, varying in size as the
+season is wet or dry, but never apparently more than about seven miles
+long, by five or six broad. It is situated at the lower extremity of
+the plain called Huleh, and is almost entirely surrounded by flat marshy
+ground, thickly set with reeds and canes, which make the lake itself
+almost unapproachable. The depth of the Huleh is not known. It is a
+favorite resort of aquatic birds, and is said to contain an abundant
+supply of fish.
+
+The Bahr-el-Kades, or Lake of Hems, lies on the course of the Orontes,
+about 139 miles N.N.E. of Merom, and nearly the same distance south of
+the Lake of Antioch. It is a small sheet of water, not more than six
+or eight miles long, and only two or three wide, running in the same
+direction with the course of the river, which here turns from north to
+north-east. According to Abulfeda and some other writers, it is mainly,
+if not wholly, artificial, owing its origin to a dam or embankment
+across the stream, which is from four to five hundred yards in
+length, and about twelve or fourteen feet high. In Abulfeda’s time the
+construction of the embankment was ascribed to Alexander the Great, and
+the lake consequently was not regarded as having had any existence in
+Babylonian times; but traditions of this kind are little to be trusted,
+and it is quite possible that the work above mentioned, constructed
+apparently with a view to irrigation, may really belong to a very much
+earlier age.
+
+Finally, in Northern Syria, 115 miles north of the Bahr-el-Kades, and
+about 60 miles N.W.W. of the Bahr-el-Melak, is the Bahr-el-Abyad (White
+Lake), or Sea of Antioch. [PLATE. VIII., Fig. 1.] This sheet of water
+is a parallelogram, the angles of which face the cardinal points: in its
+greater diameter it extends somewhat more than ten miles, while it
+is about seven miles across. Its depth on the western side, where it
+approaches the mountains, is six or eight feet; but elsewhere it is
+generally more shallow, not exceeding three or four feet. It lies in a
+marshy plain called El-Umk, and is thickly fringed with reeds round the
+whole of its circumference. From the silence of antiquity, some
+writers have imagined that it did not exist in ancient times; but the
+observations of scientific travellers are opposed to this theory. The
+lake abounds with fish of several kinds, and the fishery attracts and
+employs a considerable number of the natives who dwell near it.
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VIII.]
+
+Besides these lakes, there were contained within the limits of
+the Empire a number of petty tarns, which do not merit particular
+description. Such were the Bahr-el-Taka, and other small lakes on the
+right bank of the middle Orontes, the Birket-el-Limum in the
+Lebanon, and the Birket-er-Eam on the southern flank of Hermon. It is
+unnecessary, however, to pursue this subject any further. But a few
+words must be added on the chief cities of the Empire, before this
+chapter is brought to a conclusion.
+
+The cities of the Empire may be divided into those of the dominant
+country and those of the provinces. Those of the dominant country
+were, for the most part, identical with the towns already described
+as belonging to the ancient Chaldaea, Besides Babylon itself, there
+flourished in the Babylonian period the cities of Borsippa, Duraba,
+Sippara or Sepharvaim, Opis, Psittace, Cutha, Orchoe or Erech, and
+Diridotis or Teredon. The sites of most of those have been described in
+the first volume; but it remains to state briefly the positions of some
+few which were either new creations or comparatively undistinguished in
+the earlier times.
+
+Opis, a town of sufficient magnitude to attract the attention of
+Herodotus, was situated on the left or east bank of the Tigris, near the
+point where the Diyaleh or Gyndes joined the main river. Its position
+was south of the Gyndes embouchure, and it might be reckoned as lying
+upon either river. The true name of the place--that which it bears in
+the cuneiform inscriptions--was Hupiya; and its site is probably marked
+by the ruins at Khafaji, near Baghdad, which place is thought to retain,
+in a corrupted form, the original appellation. Psittace or Sitace,
+the town which gave name to the province of Sittacene, was in the near
+neighborhood of Opis, lying on the same side of the Tigris, but lower
+down, at least as low as the modern fort of the Zobeid chief. Its exact
+site has not been as yet discovered. Teredon, or Diriaotis, appears to
+have been first founded by Nebuchadnezzar. It lay on the coast of the
+Persian Gulf, a little west of the mouth of the Euphrates, and protected
+by a quay, or a breakwater, from the high tides that rolled in from the
+Indian Ocean. There is great difficulty in identifying its site, owing
+to the extreme uncertainty as to the exact position of the coast-line,
+and the course of the river, in the time of Nebuchadnezzar. Probably it
+should be sought about Zobair, or a little further inland.. The chief
+provincial cities were Susa and Badaca in Susiana; Anat, Sirki, and
+Carchemish, on the Middle Euphrates; Sidikan on the Khabour; Harran on
+the Bilik; Hamath, Damascus, and Jerusalem, in Inner Syria; Tyre,
+Sidon, Ashdod, Ascalon, and Gaza, upon the coast. Of these, Susa was
+undoubtedly the most important; indeed, it deserves to be regarded
+as the second city of the Empire. Here, between the two arms of the
+Choaspes, on a noble and well-watered plain, backed at the distance
+of twenty-five miles by a lofty mountain range, the fresh breezes from
+which tempered the summer heats, was the ancient palace of the Kissian
+kings, proudly placed upon a lofty platform or mound, and commanding
+a wide prospect of the rich pastures at its base, which extended
+northwards to the roots of the hills, and in every other direction as
+far as the eye could reach. Clustered at the foot of the palace
+mound, more especially on its eastern side, lay the ancient town, the
+foundation of the traditional Memnon who led an army to the defence
+of Troy. The pure and sparkling water of the Choaspes--a drink fit for
+kings--flowed near, while around grew palms, konars, and lemon-trees,
+the plain beyond waving with green grass and golden corn. It may be
+suspected that the Babylonian kings, who certainly maintained a palace
+at this place, and sent high officers of their court to “do their
+business” there, made it their occasional residence, exchanging,
+in summer and early autumn, the heats and swamps of Babylon for the
+comparatively dry and cool region at the base of the Lurish hills. But,
+however, this may have been, at any rate Susa, long the capital of a
+kingdom little inferior to Babylon itself, must have been the first of
+the provincial cities, surpassing all the rest at once in size and in
+magnificence. Among the other cities, Carchemish on the Upper Euphrates,
+Tyre upon the Syrian coast, and Ashdod on the borders of Egypt, held
+the highest place. Carchemish, which has been wrongly identified with
+Circesium, lay certainly high up the river, and most likely occupied a
+site some distance to the north of Balis, which is in lat. 36° nearly.
+It was the key of Syria on the east, commanding the ordinary passage
+of the Euphrates, and being the only great city in this quarter. Tyre,
+which had by this time surpassed its rival, Sidon, was the chief of all
+the maritime towns; and its possession gave the mastery of the Eastern
+Mediterranean to the power which could acquire and maintain it. Ashdod
+was the key of Syria upon the south, being a place of great strength,
+and commanding the coast route between Palestine and Egypt, which was
+usually pursued by armies. It is scarcely too much to say that the
+possession of Ashdod, Tyre, and Carchemish, involved the lordship of
+Syria, which could not be permanently retained except by the occupation
+of those cities.
+
+The countries by which the Babylonian Empire was bounded were Persia on
+the east, Media and her dependencies on the north, Arabia on the south,
+and Egypt at the extreme southwest. Directly to the west she had no
+neighbor, her territory being on that side washed by the Mediterranean.
+
+Of Persia, which must be described at length in the next volume, since
+it was the seat of Empire during the Fifth Monarchy, no more need
+be said here than that it was for the most part a rugged and sterile
+country, apt to produce a brave and hardy race, but incapable of
+sustaining a large population. A strong barrier separated it from the
+great Mesopotamian lowland; and the Babylonians, by occupying a few
+easily defensible passes, could readily prevent a Persian army from
+debouching on their fertile plains. On the other hand, the natural
+strength of the region is so great that in the hands of brave and active
+men its defence is easy; and the Babylonians were not likely, if an
+aggressive spirit led to their pressing eastward, to make any serious
+impression in this quarter, or ever greatly to advance their frontier.
+
+To Media, the power which bordered her upon the north, Babylonia, on the
+contrary, lay wholly open. The Medes, possessing Assyria and Armenia,
+with the Upper Tigris valley, and probably the Mons Masius, could at any
+time, with the greatest ease, have marched armies into the low country,
+and resumed the contest in which Assyria was engaged for so many hundred
+years with the great people of the south. On this side nature had set no
+obstacles; and, if danger threatened, resistance had to be made by means
+of those artificial works which are specially suited for flat countries.
+Long lines of wall, broad dykes, huge reservoirs, by means of which
+large tracts may be laid under water, form the natural resort in such
+a case; and to such defences as these alone, in addition to her armies,
+could Babylonia look in case of a quarrel with the Medes. On this side,
+however, she for many years felt no fear. Political arrangements and
+family ties connected her with the Median reigning house, and she looked
+to her northern neighbor as an ally upon whom she might depend for aid,
+rather than as a rival whose ambitious designs were to be watched and
+baffled.
+
+Babylonia lay open also on the side of Arabia. Here, however, the nature
+of the country is such that population must be always sparse; and the
+habits of the people are opposed to that political union which can alone
+make a race really formidable to others. Once only in their history,
+under the excitement of a religious frenzy, have the Arabs issued forth
+from the great peninsula on an errand of conquest. In general they are
+content to vex and harass without seriously alarming their neighbors.
+The vast space and arid character of the peninsula are adverse to
+the collection and the movement of armies; the love of independence
+cherished by the several tribes indisposes them to union; the affection
+for the nomadic life, which is strongly felt, disinclines them to
+the occupation of conquests. Arabia, as a a conterminous power, is
+troublesome, but rarely dangerous: one section of the nation may almost
+always be played off against another: if “their hand is against every
+man,” “every man’s hand” is also “against them;” blood-feuds divide and
+decimate their tribes, which are ever turning their swords against each
+other; their neighbors generally wish them ill, and will fall upon them,
+if they can take them at a disadvantage; it is only under very peculiar
+circumstances, such as can very rarely exist, that they are likely even
+to attempt anything more serious than a plundering inroad. Babylonia
+consequently, though open to attack on the side of the south as well
+as on that of the north, had little to fear from either quarter. The
+friendliness of her northern neighbor, and the practical weakness of her
+southern one, were equal securities against aggression; and thus on her
+two largest and most exposed frontiers the Empire dreaded no attack.
+
+But it was otherwise in the far south-west. Here the Empire bordered
+upon Egypt, a rich and populous country, which at all times covets
+Syria, and is often strong enough to seize and hold it in possession.
+The natural frontier is moreover weak, no other barrier separating
+between Africa and Asia than a narrow desert, which has never yet proved
+a serious obstacle to an army. From the side of Egypt, if from no other
+quarter, Babylonia might expect to have trouble. Here she inherited from
+her predecessor, Assyria, an old hereditary feud, which might at any
+time break out into active hostility. Here was an ancient, powerful, and
+well-organized kingdom upon her borders, with claims upon that
+portion of her territory which it was most difficult for her to defend
+effectively. By seas and by land equally the strip of Syrian coast lay
+open to the arms of Egypt, who was free to choose her time, and pour
+her hosts into the country when the attention of Babylon was directed
+to some other quarter. The physical and political circumstances alike
+pointed to hostile transactions between Babylon and her south-western
+neighbor. Whether destruction would come from this quarter, or from some
+other, it would have been impossible to predict. Perhaps, on the
+whole, it may be said that Babylon might have been expected to contend
+successfully with Egypt--that she had little to fear from Arabia--that
+against Persia Proper it might have been anticipated that she would
+be able to defend herself--but that she lay at the mercy of Media. The
+Babylonian Empire was in truth an empire upon sufferance. From the time
+of its establishment with the consent of the Medes, the Modes might
+at any time have destroyed it. The dynastic tie alone prevented this
+result. When that tie was snapped, and when moreover, by the victories
+of Cyrus, Persian enterprise succeeded to the direction of Median
+power, the fate of Babylon was sealed. It was impossible for the
+long straggling Empire of the south, lying chiefly in low, flat, open
+regions, to resist for any considerable time the great kingdom of the
+north, of the high plateau, and of the mountain-chains.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. CLIMATE AND PRODUCTIONS.
+
+
+The Babylonian Empire, lying as it did between the thirtieth and
+thirty-seventh parallels of north latitude, and consisting mostly of
+comparatively low countries, enjoyed a climate which was, upon the
+whole, considerably warmer than that of Media, and less subject to
+extreme variations. In its more southern parts-Susiana, Chaldaea (or
+Babylonia Proper), Philistia, and Edom---the intensity of the summer
+heat must have been great; but the winters were mild and of short
+duration. In the middle regions of Central Mesopotamia, the Euphrates
+valley, the Palmyrene, Coele-Syria, Judaea, and Phoenicia, while the
+winters were somewhat colder and longer, the summer warmth was more
+tolerable. Towards the north, along the flanks of Masius, Taurus, and
+Amanus, a climate more like that of eastern Media prevailed, the summers
+being little less hot than those of the middle region, while the winters
+were of considerable severity. A variety of climate thus existed, but a
+variety within somewhat narrow limits. The region was altogether hotter
+and drier than is usual in the same latitude. The close proximity of the
+great Arabian desert, the small size of the adjoining seas, the want of
+mountains within the region having any great elevation, and the general
+absence of timber, combined to produce an amount of heat and dryness
+scarcely known elsewhere outside the tropics.
+
+Detailed accounts of the temperature, and of the climate generally, in
+the most important provinces of the Empire, Babylonia and Mesopotamia
+Proper, have been already given, and on these points the reader is
+referred to the first volume. With regard to the remaining provinces, it
+may be noticed, in the first place, that the climate of Susiana differs
+but very slightly from that of Babylonia, the region to which it is
+adjacent. The heat in summer is excessive, the thermometer, even in the
+hill country, at an elevation of 5000 feet, standing often at 107°
+Fahr. in the shade. The natives construct for themselves serdaubs,
+or subterranean apartments, in which they live during the day, thus
+somewhat reducing the temperature, but probably never bringing it much
+below 100 degrees. They sleep at night in the open air on the flat roofs
+of their houses. So far as there is any difference of climate at this
+season between Susiana and Babylonia, it is in favor of the former. The
+heat, though scorching, is rarely oppressive; and not unfrequently a
+cool, invigorating breeze sets in from the mountains, which refreshes
+both mind and body. The winters are exceedingly mild, snow being unknown
+on the plains, and rare on the mountains, except at a considerable
+elevation. At this time, however--from December to the end of
+March--rain falls in tropical abundance; and occasionally there are
+violent hail-storms, which inflict serious injury on the crops. The
+spring-time in Susiana is delightful. Soft airs fan the cheek, laden
+with the scent of flowers; a carpet of verdure is spread over the
+plains; the sky is cloudless, or overspread with a thin gauzy veil; the
+heat of the sun is not too great; the rivers run with full banks and
+fill the numerous canals; the crops advance rapidly towards perfection;
+and on every side a rich luxuriant growth cheers the eye of the
+traveller.
+
+On the opposite side of the Empire, in Syria and Palestine, a moister,
+and on the whole a cooler climate prevails. In Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon
+there is a severe winter, which lasts from October to April; much snow
+falls, and the thermometer often marks twenty or thirty degrees of
+frost. On the flanks of the mountain ranges, and in the highlands of
+Upper and Coele-Syria, of Damascus, Samaria, and Judsea, the cold is
+considerably less; but there are intervals of frost; snow falls, though
+it does not often remain long upon the ground; and prolonged chilling
+rains make the winter and early spring unpleasant. In the low regions,
+on the other hand, in the _Shephelah_, the plain of Sharon, the
+Phoenician coast tract, the lower valley of the Orontes, and again in
+the plain of Esdraelon and the remarkable depression from the Merom lake
+to the Dead Sea, the winters are exceedingly mild; frost and snow are
+unknown; the lowest temperature is produced by cold rains and fogs,
+which do not bring the thermometer much below 40°. During the summer
+these low regions, especially the Jordan valley or Ghor, are excessively
+hot, the heat being ordinarily of that moist kind which is intolerably
+oppressive. The upland plains and mountain flanks experience also a
+high temperature, but there the heat is of a drier character, and is
+not greatly complained of; the nights even in summer are cold, the dews
+being often heavy; cool winds blow occasionally, and though the sky is
+for months without a cloud, the prevailing heat produces no injurious
+effects on those who are exposed to it. In Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon the
+heat is of course still less; refreshing breezes blow almost constantly;
+and the numerous streams and woods give a sense of coolness beyond the
+markings of the thermometer.
+
+There is one evil, however, to which almost the whole Empire must have
+been subject. Alike in the east and in the west, in Syria and Palestine,
+no less than in Babylonia Proper and Susiana, there are times when
+a fierce and scorching wind prevails for days together--a wind whose
+breath withers the herbage and is unspeakably depressing to man. Called
+in the east the Sherghis, and in the west the Khamsin, this fiery
+sirocco comes laden with fine particles of heated sand, which at once
+raise the temperature and render the air unwholesome to breathe. In
+Syria these winds occur commonly in the spring, from February to April;
+but in Susiana and Babylonia the time for them is the height of summer.
+They blow from various quarters, according to the position, with respect
+to Arabia, occupied by the different provinces. In Palestine the worst
+are from the east, the direction in which the desert is nearest; in
+Lower Babylonia they are from the south; in Susiana from the west or the
+north-west. During their continuance the air is darkened, a lurid glow
+is cast over the earth, the animal world pines and droops, vegetation
+languishes, and, if the traveller cannot obtain shelter, and the wind
+continues, he may sink and die under its deleterious influence.
+
+The climate of the entire tract included within the limits of the Empire
+was probably much the same in ancient times as in our own days. In the
+low alluvial plains indeed near the Persian Gulf it is probable that
+vegetation was anciently more abundant, the date-palm being cultivated
+much more extensively then than at present; and so far it might appear
+reasonable to conclude that the climate of that region must have been
+moister and cooler than it now is. But if we may judge by Strabo’s
+account of Susiana, where the climatic conditions were nearly the same
+as in Babylonia, no important change can have taken place, for Strabo
+not only calls the climate of Susiana “fiery and scorching,” but says
+that in Susa, during the height of summer, if a lizard or a snake
+tried to cross the street about noon-day, he was baked to death before
+accomplishing half the distance. Similarly on the west, though there is
+reason to believe that Palestine is now much more denuded of timber than
+it was formerly, and its climate should therefore be both warmer and
+drier, yet it has been argued with great force from the identity of the
+modern with the ancient vegetation, that in reality there can have
+been no considerable change. If then there has been such permanency of
+climate in the two regions where the greatest alteration seems to have
+taken place in the circumstances whereby climate is usually affected,
+it can scarcely be thought that elsewhere any serious change has been
+brought about.
+
+The chief vegetable productions of Babylonia Proper in ancient times
+are thus enumerated by Berosus. “The land of the Babylonians,” he
+says, “produces wheat as an indigenous plant,” and has also barley,
+and lentils, and vetches, and sesame; the banks of the streams and the
+marshes supply edible roots, called gongoe, which have the taste
+of barley-cakes. Palms, too, grow in the country, and apples, and
+fruit-trees of various kinds. Wheat, it will be observed, and barley are
+placed first, since it was especially as a grain country that Babylonia
+was celebrated. The testimonies of Herodotus, Theophrastus, Strabo, and
+Pliny as to the enormous returns which the Babylonian farmers obtained
+from their corn lands have been already cited. No such fertility is
+known anywhere in modern times; and, unless the accounts are grossly
+exaggerated, we must ascribe it, in part, to the extraordinary vigor of
+a virgin soil, a deep and rich alluvium; in part, perhaps, to a peculiar
+adaptation of the soil to the wheat plant, which the providence of God
+made to grow spontaneously in this region, and nowhere else, so far as
+we know, on the whole face of the earth.
+
+Besides wheat, it appears that barley, millet, and lentils were
+cultivated for food, while vetches were grown for beasts, and sesame
+for the sake of the oil which can be expressed from its seed. All grew
+luxuriantly, and the returns of the barley in particular are stated at a
+fabulous amount. But the production of first necessity in Babylonia
+was the date-palm, which flourished in great abundance throughout the
+region, and probably furnished the chief food of the greater portion
+of the inhabitants. The various uses to which it was applied have been
+stated in the first volume, where a representation of its mode of growth
+has been also given.
+
+In the adjoining country of Susiana, or at any rate in the alluvial
+portion of it, the principal products of the earth seem to have been
+nearly the same as in Babylonia, while the fecundity of the soil was but
+little less. Wheat and barley returned to the sower a hundred or even
+two hundred fold. The date-palm grew plentifully, more especially in the
+vicinity of the towns. Other trees also were common, as probably konars,
+acacias, and poplars, which are still found scattered in tolerable
+abundance over the plain country. The neighboring mountains could
+furnish good timber of various kinds; but it appears that the palm was
+the tree chiefly used for building. If we may judge the past by
+the present, we may further suppose that Susiana produced fruits in
+abundance; for modern travellers tell us that there is not a fruit known
+in Persia which does not thrive in the province of Khuzistan.
+
+Along the Euphrates valley to a considerable distance--at least as
+far as Anah (or Hena)--the character of the country resembles that of
+Babylonia and Susiana, and the products cannot have been very different.
+About Anah the date-palm begins to fail, and the olive first makes its
+appearance. Further up a chief fruit is the mulberry. Still higher, in
+northern Mesopotamia, the mulberry is comparatively rare, but its
+place is supplied by the walnut, the vine, and the pistachio-nut.
+This district produces also good crops of grain, and grows oranges,
+pomegranates, and the commoner kinds of fruit abundantly.
+
+Across the Euphrates, in Northern Syria, the country is less suited for
+grain crops; but trees and shrubs of all kinds grow luxuriantly, the
+pasture is excellent, and much of the land is well adapted for the
+growth of cotton. The Assyrian kings cut timber frequently in this
+tract; and here are found at the present day enormous planes, thick
+forests of oak, pine, and ilex, walnuts, willows, poplars, ash-trees,
+birches, larches, and the carob or locust tree. Among wild shrubs are
+the oleander with its ruddy blossoms, the myrtle, the bay, the arbutus,
+the clematis, the juniper, and the honeysuckle; among cultivated
+fruit-trees, the orange, the pomegranate, the pistachio-nut, the
+vine, the mulberry, and the olive. The adis, an excellent pea, and the
+Lycoperdon, or wild potato, grow in the neighborhood of Aleppo. The
+castor-oil plant is cultivated in the plain of Edlib. Melons, cucumbers,
+and most of the ordinary vegetables are produced in abundance and of
+good quality everywhere.
+
+In Southern Syria and Palestine most of the same forms of vegetation
+occur, with several others of quite a new character. These are due
+either to the change of latitude, or to the tropical heat of the
+Jordan and Dead Sea valley, or finally to the high elevation of Hermon,
+Lebanon, and Anti-Lebanon. The date-palm fringes the Syrian shore as
+high as Beyrut, and formerly flourished in the Jordan valley, where,
+however, it is not now seen, except in a few dwarfed specimens near the
+Tiberias lake. The banana accompanies the date along the coast, and
+even grows as far north as Tripoli. The prickly pear, introduced from
+America, has completely neutralized itself, and is in general request
+for hedging. The fig mulberry (or true sycamore), another southern form,
+is also common, and grows to a considerable size. Other denizens of
+warm climes, unknown in Northern Syria, are the jujube, the tamarisk,
+theelasagnus or wild olive, the gum-styrax plant (_Styrax officinalis_),
+the egg-plant, the Egyptian papyrus, the sugar-cane, the scarlet
+misletoe, the solanum that produces the “Dead Sea apple” (_Solanum
+Sodomceum_), the yellow-flowered acacia, and the liquorice plant. Among
+the forms due to high elevation are the famous Lebanon cedar, several
+oaks and juniper, the maple, berberry, jessamine, ivy, butcher’s broom,
+a rhododendron, and the gum-tragacanth plant. The fruits additional to
+those of the north are dates, lemons, almonds, shaddocks, and limes.
+
+The chief mineral products of the Empire seem to have been bitumen, with
+its concomitants, naphtha and petroleum, salt, sulphur, nitre, copper,
+iron, perhaps silver, and several sorts of precious stones. Bitumen was
+furnished in great abundance by the springs at Hit or Is, which were
+celebrated in the days of Herodotus; it was also procured from Ardericca
+(Kir-Ab), and probably from Earn Ormuz, in Susiana, and likewise from
+the Dead Sea. Salt was obtainable from the various lakes which had no
+outlet, as especially from the Sabakhab, the Bahr-el-Melak, the Dead
+Sea, and a small lake near Tadmor or Palmyra. The Dead Sea gave also
+most probably both sulphur and nitre, but the latter only in small
+quantities. Copper and iron seem to have been yielded by the hills of
+Palestine. Silver was perhaps a product of the Anti-Lebanon.
+
+It may be doubted whether any gems were really found in Babylonia
+itself, which, being purely alluvial, possesses no stone of any kind.
+Most likely the sorts known as Babylonian came from the neighboring
+Susiana, whose unexplored mountains may possess many rich treasures.
+According to Dionysius, the bed of the Choaspes produced numerous
+agates, and it may well be that from the same quarter came that “beryl
+more precious than gold,” and those “highly reputed sard,” which Babylon
+seems to have exported to other countries. The western provinces may,
+however, very probably have furnished the gems which are ascribed
+to them, as amethysts, which are said to have been found in the
+neighborhood of Petra, alabaster, which came from near Damascus, and the
+cyanus, a kind of lapis-lazuli, which was a production of Phoenicia. No
+doubt the Babylonian love of gems caused the provinces to be carefully
+searched for stones; and it is not improbable that they yielded besides
+the varieties already named, and the other unknown kinds mentioned by
+Pliny, many, if not most, of the materials which we find to have
+been used for seals by the ancient people. These are, cornelian,
+rock-crystal, chalcedony, onyx, jasper, quartz, serpentine, sienite,
+haematite, green felspar, pyrites, loadstone, and amazon-stone.
+
+Stone for building was absent from Babylonia Proper and the alluvial
+tracts of Susiana, but in the other provinces it abounded. The Euphrates
+valley could furnish stone at almost any point above Hit; the mountain
+regions of Susiana could supply it in whatever quantity might be
+required; and in the western provinces it was only too plentiful. Near
+to Babylonia the most common kind was limestone; but about Had-disah on
+the Euphrates there was also a gritty, silicious rock alternating with
+iron-stone, and in the Arabian Desert were sandstone and granite. Such
+stone as was used in Babylon itself, and in the other cities of the
+low country, probably either came down the Euphrates, or was brought
+by canals from the adjacent part of Arabia. The quantity, however, thus
+consumed was small, the Babylonians being content for most uses with
+the brick, of which their own territory gave them a supply practically
+inexhaustible.
+
+The principal wild animals known to have inhabited the Empire in ancient
+times are the following: the lion, the panther or large leopard, the
+hunting leopard, the bear, the hyena, the wild ox, the buffalo (?), the
+wild ass, the stag, the antelope, the ibex or wild goat, the wild sheep,
+the wild boar, the wolf, the jackal, the fox, the hare, and the rabbit.
+Of these, the lion, leopard, bear, stag, wolf, jackal, and fox seem to
+have been very widely diffused, while the remainder were rarer, and,
+generally speaking, confined to certain localities. The wild ass was
+met with only in the dry parts of Mesopotamia, and perhaps of Syria, the
+buffalo and wild boar only in moist regions, along the banks of rivers
+or among marshes. The wild ox was altogether scarce; the wild sheep, the
+rabbit, and the hare, were probably not common.
+
+To this list may be added as present denizens of the region, and
+therefore probably belonging to it in ancient times, the lynx, the
+wildcat, the ratel, the sable, the genet, the badger, the otter, the
+beaver, the polecat, the jerboa, the rat, the mouse, the marmot,
+the porcupine, the squirrel, and perhaps the alligator. Of these the
+commonest at the present day are porcupines, badgers, otters, rats,
+mice, and jerboas. The ratel, sable, and genet belong only to the north;
+the beaver is found nowhere but in the Khabour and middle Euphrates;
+the alligator, if a denizen of the region at all exists only in the
+Euphrates.
+
+The chief birds of the region are eagles, vultures, falcons, owls,
+hawks, many kinds of crows, magpies, jackdaws, thrushes, blackbirds,
+nightingales, larks, sparrows, goldfinches, swallows, doves of fourteen
+kinds, francolins, rock partridges, gray partridges, black partridges,
+quails, pheasants, capercailzies, bustards, flamingoes, pelicans,
+cormorants, storks, herons, cranes, wild-geese, ducks, teal,
+kingfishers, snipes, woodcocks, the sand-grouse, the hoopoe, the green
+parrot, the becafico, the locust-bird, the humming-bird (?), and
+the bee-eater. The eagle, pheasant, capercailzie, quail, parrot,
+locust-bird, becafico, and humming-bird are rare; the remainder are all
+tolerably common. Besides these, we know that in ancient times ostriches
+wore found within the limits of the Empire, though now they have
+retreated further south into the Great Desert of Arabia. Perhaps
+bitterns may also formerly have frequented some of the countries
+belonging to it, though they are not mentioned among the birds of the
+region by modern writers.
+
+There is a bird of the heron species, or rather of a species between
+the heron and the stork, which seems to deserve a few words of special
+description. It is found chiefly in Northern Syria, in the plain of
+Aleppo and the districts watered by the Koweik and Sajur rivers. The
+Arabs call it Tair-el-Raouf, or “the magnificent.” This bird is of a
+grayish-white, the breast white, the joints of the wings tipped with
+scarlet, and the under part of the beak scarlet, the upper part being of
+a blackish-gray. The beak is nearly five inches long, and two thirds of
+an inch thick. The circumference of the eye is red; the feet are of a
+deep yellow; and the bird in its general form strongly resembles the
+stork; but its color is darker. It is four feet high, and covers a
+breadth of nine feet when the wings are spread. The birds of this
+species are wont to collect in large flocks on the North Syrian rivers,
+and to arrange themselves in several rows across the streams where they
+are shallowest. Here they squat side by side, as close to one another as
+possible, and spread out their tails against the current, thus forming a
+temporary dam. The water drains off below them, and when it has reached
+its lowest point, at a signal from one of their number who from the bank
+watches the proceedings, they rise and swoop upon the fish, frogs, etc.,
+which the lowering of the water has exposed to view.
+
+Fish are abundant in the Chaldaean marshes, and in almost all the
+fresh-water lakes and rivers. [PLATE. VIII., Fig.] The Tigris and
+Euphrates yield chiefly barbel and carp; but the former stream has also
+eels, trout, chub, shad-fish, siluruses, and many kinds which have
+no English names. The Koweik contains the Aleppo eel (_Ophidium
+masbacambahis_), a very rare variety; and in other streams of
+Northern Syria are found lampreys, bream, dace, and the black-fish
+(_Macroptero-notus niger_), besides carp, trout, chub, and barbel. Chub,
+bream, and the silurus are taken in the Sea of Galilee. The black-fish
+is extremely abundant in the Bahr-el-Taka and the Lake of Antioch.
+
+Among reptiles may be noticed, besides snakes, lizards, and frogs, which
+are numerous, the following less common species--iguanoes, tortoises of
+two kinds, chameleons, and monitors. Bats also were common in Babylonia
+Proper, where they grew to a great size. Of insects the most remarkable
+are scorpions, tarantulas, and locusts. These last come suddenly in
+countless myriads with the wind, and, settling on the crops, rapidly
+destroy all the hopes of the husbandman, after which they strip
+the shrubs and trees of their leaves, reducing rich districts in an
+incredibly short space of time to the condition of howling wildernesses.
+[PLATE. VIII., Fig. 3.] If it were not for the locust-bird, which is
+constantly keeping down their numbers, these destructive insects would
+probably increase so as to ruin utterly the various regions exposed to
+their ravages.
+
+The domestic animals employed in the countries which composed the Empire
+were, camels, horses, mules, asses, buffaloes, cows and oxen, goats,
+sheep, and dogs. Mules as well as horses seem to have been anciently
+used in war by the people of the more southern regions-by the Susianians
+at any rate, if not also by the Babylonians. Sometimes they were ridden;
+sometimes they were employed to draw carts or chariots. They were
+spirited and active animals, evidently of a fine breed, such as that for
+which Khuzistan is famous at the present day. [PLATE. VIII., Fig. 4.]
+The asses from which these mules were produced must also have been of
+superior quality, like the breed for which Baghdad is even now famous,
+The Babylonian horses are not likely to have been nearly so good; for
+this animal does not flourish in a climate which is at once moist and
+hot. Still, at any rate under the Persians, Babylonia seems to have been
+a great breeding-place for horses, since the stud of a single satrap
+consisted of 800 stallions and 16,000 mares. If we may judge of the
+character of Babylonian from that of Susianian steeds, we may consider
+the breed to have, been strong and large limbed, but not very handsome,
+the head being too large and the legs too short for beauty. [PLATE IX.,
+Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE IX.]
+
+
+The Babylonians were also from very early times famous for their
+breed of dogs. The tablet engraved in a former volume, which gives a
+representation of a Babylonian hound, is probably of a high antiquity,
+not later than the period or the Empire. Dogs are also not unfrequently
+represented on ancient Babylonian stones and cylinders. It would seem
+that, as in Assyria, there were two principal breeds, one somewhat
+clumsy and heavy, of a character not unlike that of our mastiff, the
+other of a much lighter make, nearly resembling our greyhound. The
+former kind is probably the breed known as Indian, which was kept up
+by continual importations from the country whence it was originally
+derived.[PLATE. IX., Fig. 2.]
+
+We have no evidence that camels were employed in the time of the
+Empire, either by the Babylonians themselves or by their neighbors, the
+Susianians; but in Upper Mesopotamia, in Syria, and in Palestine
+they had been in use from a very early date. The Amalekitos and the
+Midianites found them serviceable in war; and the latter people employed
+them also as beasts of burden in their caravan trade. The Syrians of
+Upper Mesopotamia rode upon them in their journeys. It appears that
+they were also sometimes yoked to chariots, though from their size and
+clumsiness they would be but ill fitted for beasts of draught.
+
+Buffaloes were, it is probable, domesticated by the Babylonians at an
+early date. The animal seems to have been indigenous in the country, and
+it is far better suited for the marshy regions of Lower Babylonia and
+Susiana than cattle of the ordinary kind. It is perhaps a buffalo which
+is represented on an ancient tablet already referred to, where a lion
+is disturbed in the middle of his feast off a prostrate animal by a man
+armed with a hatchet. Cows and oxen, however, of the common kind are
+occasionally represented on the cylinders [PLATE IX., Fig. 4.], where
+they seem sometimes to represent animals about to be offered to the
+gods. Goats also appear frequently in this capacity; and they were
+probably more common than sheep, at any rate in the more southern
+districts. Of Babylonian sheep we have no representations at all on the
+monuments; but it is scarcely likely that a country which used wool so
+largely was content to be without them. At any rate they abounded in the
+provinces, forming the chief wealth of the more northern nations.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTEE III. THE PEOPLE.
+
+
+“The Chaldaeans, that bitter and hasty nation.”--Habak. 1. 6.
+
+
+The Babylonians, who, under Nabopolassar and Nebuchadnezzar, held the
+second place among the nations of the East, were emphatically a mixed
+race. The ancient people from whom they were in the main descended--the
+Chaldaeans of the First Empire--possessed this character to a
+considerable extent, since they united Cusbite with Turanian blood, and
+contained moreover a slight Semitic and probably a slight Arian element.
+But the Babylonians of later times--the Chaldaeans of the Hebrew
+prophets--must have been very much more a mixed race than their earlier
+namesakes--partly in consequence of the policy of colonization pursued
+systematically by the later Assyrian kings, partly from the direct
+influence exerted upon them by conquerors. Whatever may have been the
+case with the Arab dynasty, which bore sway in the country from about
+B.C. 1546 till B.C. 1300, it is certain that the Assyrians conquered
+Babylon about B.C. 1300, and almost certain that they established
+an Assyrian family upon the throne of Nimrod, which held for some
+considerable time the actual sovereignty of the country. It was natural
+that under a dynasty of Semites, Semitic blood should flow freely into
+the lower region, Semitic usages and modes of thought become prevalent,
+and the spoken language of the country pass from a Turanian or
+Turano-Cushite to a Semitic type. The previous Chaldaean race blended,
+apparently, with the new comers, and people was produced in which the
+three elements--the Semitic, the Turanian, and the Cushite--held about
+equal shares. The colonization of the Sargonid kings added probably
+other elements in small proportions, and the result was that among
+all the nations inhabiting Western Asia there can have been none so
+thoroughly deserving the title of a “mingled people” as the Babylonians
+of the later Empire.
+
+In mixtures of this kind it is almost always found that some one element
+practically preponderates, and assumes to itself the right of fashioning
+and forming the general character of the race. It is not at all
+necessary that this formative element should be larger than any other;
+on the contrary, it may be and sometimes is extremely small; for it does
+not work by its mass, but by its innate force and strong vital energy.
+In Babylonia, the element which showed itself to possess this superior
+vitality, which practically asserted its pre-eminence and proceeded to
+mold the national character, was the Semitic. There is abundant
+evidence that by the time of the later Empire the Babylonians had become
+thoroughly Semitized; so much so, that ordinary observers scarcely
+distinguished them from their purely Semitic neighbors, the Assyrians.
+No doubt there were differences which a Hippocrates or an Aristotle
+could have detected--differences resulting from mixed descent, as
+well as differences arising from climate and physical geography; but,
+speaking broadly, it must be said that the Semitic element, introduced
+into Babylonia from the north, had so prevailed by the time of the
+establishment of the Empire that the race was no longer one sui generis,
+but was a mere variety of the well-known and widely spread Semitic type.
+
+We possess but few notices, and fewer assured representations, from
+which to form an opinion of the physical characteristics of the
+Babylonians. Except upon the cylinders, there are extant only three or
+four representations of the human forms by Babylonian artists, and
+in the few cases where this form occurs we cannot always feel at all
+certain that the intention is to portray a human being. A few Assyrian
+bas-reliefs probably represent campaigns in Babylonia; but the Assyrians
+vary their human type so little that these sculptures must not be
+regarded as conveying to us very exact information. Tho cylinders are
+too rudely executed to be of much service, and they seem to preserve
+an archaic type which originated with the Proto-Chaldaeans. If we might
+trust the figures upon them as at all nearly representing the truth,
+we should have to regard the Babylonians as of much slighter and sparer
+frames than their northern neighbors, of a physique in fact approaching
+to meagreness. The Assyrian sculptures, however, are far from
+bearing out this idea; from them it would seem that the frames of
+the Babylonians were as brawny and massive as those of the Assyrians
+themselves, while in feature there was not much difference between the
+nations. [PLATE IX., Fig. 3.] Foreheads straight but not high, noses
+well formed but somewhat depressed, full lips, and a well-marked rounded
+chin, constitute the physiognomy of the Babylonians as it appears
+upon the sculptures of their neighbors. This representation is
+not contradicted by the few specimens of actual sculpture left by
+themselves. In these the type approaches nearly to the Assyrian, while
+there is still, such an amount of difference as renders it tolerably
+easy to distinguish between the productions of the two nations. The eye
+is larger, and not so decidedly almond-shaped; the nose is shorter, and
+its depression is still more marked; while the general expression of the
+countenance is altogether more commonplace.
+
+These differences may be probably referred to the influence which
+was exercised upon the physical form of the race by the primitive
+or Proto-Chaldaean element, an influence which appears to have
+been considerable. This element, as has been already observed, was
+predominantly Cushite; and there is reason to believe that the Cushite
+race was connected not very remotely with the negro. In Susiana, where
+the Cushite blood was maintained in tolerable purity--Elymseans and
+Kissians existing side by side, instead of blending together--there was,
+if we may trust the Assyrian remains, a very decided prevalency of a
+negro type of countenance, as the accompanying specimens, carefully
+copied from the sculptures, will render evident. [PLATE IX., Fig. 6.]
+The head was covered with short crisp curls; the eye was large, the nose
+and mouth nearly in the same line, the lips thick. Such a physiognomy
+as the Babylonian appears to have been would naturally arise from an
+intermixture of a race like the Assyrian with one resembling that which
+the later sculptures represent as the main race inhabiting Susiana.
+
+Herodotus remarks that the Babylonians wore their hair long; and this
+remark is confirmed to some extent by the native remains. These in
+general represent the hair as forming a single stiff and heavy curl at
+the back of the head (No. 3). Sometimes, however, they make it take the
+shape of long flowing locks, which depend over the back (No. 1), or
+over the back and shoulders (No. 4), reaching nearly to the waist.
+Occasionally, in lieu of these commoner types, wo have one which closely
+resembles the Assyrian, the hair forming a round mass behind the head
+(No. 2), on which we can sometimes trace indications of a slight wave.
+[PLATE X., Fig. 1.] The national fashion, that to which Herodotus
+alludes, seems to be represented by the three commoner modes. Where
+the round mass is worn, we have probably an Assyrian fashion, which the
+Babylonians aped during the time of that people’s pre-eminence.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE X.]
+
+
+Besides their flowing hair, the Babylonians are represented frequently
+with a large beard. This is generally longer than the Assyrian,
+descending nearly to the waist. Sometimes it curls crisply upon the
+face, but below the chin depends over the breast in long, straight
+locks. At other times it droops perpendicularly from the cheeks and the
+under lip.15 Frequently, however, the beard is shaven off, and the whole
+face is smooth and hairless.
+
+The Chaldaean females, as represented by the Assyrians, are tall
+and large-limbed. Their physiognomy is Assyrian, their hair not very
+abundant. The Babylonian cylinders, on the other hand, make the hair
+long and conspicuous, while the forms are quite as spare and meagre as
+those of the men.
+
+On the whole, it is most probable that the physical type of the later
+Babylonians was nearly that of their northern neighbors. A somewhat
+sparer form, longer and more flowing hair, and features less stern
+and strong, may perhaps have characterized them. They were also, it
+is probable, of a darker complexion than the Assyrians, being to some
+extent Ethiopians by descent, and inhabiting a region which lies four
+degrees nearer to the tropics than Assyria. The Cha’ab Arabs, the
+present possessors of the more southern parts of Babylonia, are nearly
+black; and the “black Syrians,” of whom Strabo speaks, seem intended to
+represent the Babylonians.
+
+Among the moral and mental characteristics of the people, the first
+place is due to their intellectual ability. Inheriting a legacy
+of scientific knowledge, astronomical and arithmetical, from the
+Proto-Chaldaeans, they seem to have not only maintained but considerably
+advanced these sciences by their own efforts. Their “wisdom and
+learning” are celebrated by the Jewish prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, and
+Daniel; the Father of History records their valuable inventions; and an
+Aristotle was not ashamed to be beholden to them for scientific data.
+They were good observers of astronomical phenomena, careful recorders of
+such observations, and mathematicians of no small repute. Unfortunately,
+they mixed with their really scientific studies those occult pursuits
+which, in ages and countries where the limits of true science are not
+known, are always apt to seduce students from the right path, having
+attractions against which few men are proof, so long as it is believed
+that they can really accomplish the end that they propose to themselves.
+The Babylonians were astrologers no less than astronomers; they
+professed to cast nativities, to expound dreams, and to foretell events
+by means of the stars; and though there were always a certain number
+who kept within the legitimate bounds of science, and repudiated the
+astrological pretensions of their brethren, yet on the whole it must
+be allowed that their astronomy was fatally tinged with a mystic and
+unscientific element.
+
+In close connection with the intellectual ability of the Babylonians
+was the spirit of enterprise which led them to engage in traffic and
+to adventure themselves upon the ocean in ships. In a future chapter
+we shall have to consider the extent and probable direction of this
+commerce. It is sufficient to observe in the present place that the same
+turn of mind which made the Phoenicians anciently the great carriers
+between the East and West, and which in modern times has rendered
+the Jews so successful in various branches of trade, seems to have
+characterized the Semitized Babylonians, whose land was emphatically “a
+land of traffic,” and their chief city “a city of merchants.”
+
+The trading spirit which was thus strongly developed in the Babylonian
+people led naturally to the two somewhat opposite vices of avarice and
+over-luxuriousness. Not content with honorable gains, the Babylonians
+“coveted an evil covetousness,” as we learn both from Habakkuk and
+Jeremiah. The “shameful custom” mentioned by Herodotus, which required
+as a religious duty that every Babylonian woman, rich or poor, highborn
+or humble, should once in her life prostitute herself in the temple of
+Beltis, was probably based on the desire of attracting strangers to
+the capital, who would either bring with them valuable commodities
+or purchase the productions of the country. The public auction of
+marriageable virgins had most likely a similar intention. If we may
+believe Curtius, strangers might at any time purchase the gratification
+of any passion they might feel, from the avarice of parents or husbands.
+
+The luxury of the Babylonians is a constant theme with both sacred
+and profane writers. The “daughter of the Chaldaeans” was “tender and
+delicate,” “given to pleasures,” apt to “dwell carelessly.” Her young
+men made themselves “as princes to look at--exceeding in dyed attire
+upon their heads,”--painting their faces, wearing earrings, and clothing
+themselves in robes of soft and rich material. Extensive polygamy
+prevailed. The pleasures of the table were carried to excess.
+Drunkenness was common. Rich unguents were invented. The tables groaned
+under the weight of gold and silver plate. In every possible way
+the Babylonians practised luxuriousness of living, and in respect of
+softness and self-indulgence they certainly did not fall short of any
+nation of antiquity.
+
+There was, however, a harder and sterner side to the Babylonian
+character. Despite their love of luxury, they were at all times brave
+and skilful in war; and, during the period of their greatest strength,
+they were one of the most formidable of all the nations of the East.
+Habakkuk describes them, drawing evidently from the life, as “bitter and
+hasty,” and again as “terrible and dreadful--their horses’ hoofs swifter
+than the leopard’s, and more fierce than the evening wolves.” Hence they
+“smote the people in wrath with a continual stroke”--they “made the
+earth to tremble, and did shake kingdoms”--they carried all before them
+in their great enterprises, seldom allowing themselves to be foiled by
+resistance, or turned from their course by pity. Exercised for centuries
+in long and fierce wars with the well-armed and well-disciplined
+Assyrians, they were no sooner quit of this enemy, and able to take an
+aggressive attitude, than they showed themselves no unworthy successors
+of that long-dominant nation, so far as energy, valor, and military
+skill constitute desert. They carried their victorious arms from the
+shores of the Persian Gulf to the banks of the Nile; wherever they went,
+they rapidly established their power, crushing all resistance, and fully
+meriting the remarkable title, which they seem to have received from
+those who had felt their attacks, of “the hammer of the whole earth.”
+
+The military successes of the Babylonians were accompanied with needless
+violence, and with outrages not unusual in the East, which the
+historian must nevertheless regard as at once crimes and follies. The
+transplantation of conquered races--a part of the policy of Assyria
+which the Chaldaeans adopted--may perhaps have been morally defensible,
+notwithstanding the sufferings which it involved. But the mutilations of
+prisoners, the weary imprisonments, the massacre of non-combatants, the
+refinement of cruelty shown in the execution of children before the eyes
+of their fathers--these and similar atrocities, which are recorded of
+the Babylonians, are wholly without excuse, since they did not so much
+terrify as exasperate the conquered nations, and thus rather endangered
+than added strength or security to the empire. A savage and inhuman
+temper is betrayed by these harsh punishments--a temper common in
+Asiatics, but none the less reprehensible on that account--one that led
+its possessors to sacrifice interest to vengeance, and the peace of
+a kingdom to a tiger-like thirst for blood. Nor was this cruel temper
+shown only towards the subject nations and captives taken in war.
+Babylonian nobles trembled for their heads if they incurred by a slight
+fault the displeasure of the monarch; and even the most powerful class
+in the kingdom, the learned and venerable “Chaldaeans,” ran on one
+occasion the risk of being exterminated, because they could not expound
+a dream which the king had forgotten. If a monarch displeased his court,
+and was regarded as having a bad disposition, it was not thought enough
+simply to make away with him, but he was put to death by torture. Among
+recognized punishments were cutting to pieces and casting into a
+heated furnace. The houses of offenders were pulled down and made into
+dunghills. These practices imply a “violence” and cruelty beyond the
+ordinary Oriental limit; and we cannot be surprised that when final
+judgment was denounced against Babylon, it was declared to be sent, in
+a great measure, “because of men’s blood, and for the violence of the
+land-of the city, and all that dwelt therein.”
+
+It is scarcely necessary to add that the Babylonians were a proud
+people. Pride is unfortunately the invariable accompaniment of success,
+in the nation, if not in the individual; and the sudden elevation of
+Babylon from a subject to a dominant power must have been peculiarly
+trying, more especially to the Oriental temperament. The spirit which
+culminated in Nebuchadnezzar, when, walking in the palace of his
+kingdom, and surveying the magnificent buildings which he had raided on
+every side from the plunder of the conquered nations, and by the labor
+of their captive bands, he exclaimed, “Is not the great Babylon which
+I have built by the might of my power and for the honor of my
+majesty?”--was rife in the people generally, who, naturally enough,
+believed themselves superior to every other nation upon the earth.
+“I am, and there is none else beside me,” was the thought, if not
+the speech, of the people, whose arrogancy was perhaps somewhat less
+offensive than that of the Assyrians, but was quite as intense and as
+deep-seated.
+
+The Babylonians, notwithstanding their pride, their cruelty, their
+covetousness, and their love of luxury, must be pronounced to have been,
+according to their lights, a religious people. The temple in
+Babylonia is not a mere adjunct of the palace, but has almost the same
+pre-eminence over other buildings which it claims in Egypt. The vast
+mass of the Birs-i-Nimrud is sufficient to show that an enormous amount
+of labor was expended in the erection of sacred edifices; and the costly
+ornamentation lavished on such buildings is, as we shall hereafter find,
+even more remarkable than their size. Vast sums wore also expended on
+images of the gods, necessary adjuncts of the religion; and the whole
+paraphernalia of worship exhibited a rare splendor and magnificence. The
+monarchs were devout worshippers of the various deities, and gave much
+of their attention to the building and repair of temples, the erection
+of images, and the like. They bestowed on their children names
+indicative of religious feeling, and implying real faith in the power
+of the gods to protect their votaries. The people generally affected
+similar names--names containing, in almost every case, a god’s name
+as one of their elements. The seals or signets which formed almost a
+necessary part of each man’s costume were, except in rare instances, of
+a religious character. Even in banquets, where we might have expected
+that thoughts of religion would be laid aside, it seems to have been the
+practice during the drinking to rehearse the praises of the deities.
+
+We are told by Nicolas of Damascus that the Babylonians cultivated two
+virtues especially, honesty and calmness. Honesty is the natural, almost
+the necessary virtue of traders, who soon find that it is the best
+policy to be fair and just in their dealings. We may well believe that
+this intelligent people had the wisdom to see their true interests,
+and to understand that trade can never prosper unless conducted with
+integrity and straightforwardness. The very fact that their trade did
+prosper, that their goods were everywhere in request, is sufficient
+proof of their commercial honesty, and of their superiority to those
+tricks which speedily ruin a commerce.
+
+Calmness is not a common Oriental virtue. It is not even in general
+very highly appreciated, being apt to strike the lively, sensitive, and
+passionate Eastern as mere dulness and apathy. In China, however, it
+is a point of honor that the outward demeanor should be calm and placid
+under any amount of provocation; and indignation, fierceness, even
+haste, are regarded as signs of incomplete civilization, which the
+disciples of Confucius love to note in their would-be rivals of the
+West.
+
+We may conceive that some similar notion was entertained by the proud
+Babylonians, who no doubt regarded themselves as infinitely superior
+in manners and culture, no less than in scientific attainments, to the
+“barbarians” of Persia and Greece. While rage boiled in their hearts,
+and commands to torture and destroy fell from their tongues, etiquette
+may have required that the countenance should be unmoved, the eye
+serene, the voice low and gentle. Such contrasts are not uncommonly
+seen in the polite Mandarin, whose apparent calmness drives his European
+antagonist to despair; and it may well be that the Babylonians of the
+sixth and seventh centuries before our era had attained to an equal
+power of restraining the expression of feeling. But real gentleness,
+meekness, and placability were certainly not the attributes of a people
+who were so fierce in their wars and so cruel in their punishments.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTEE IV. THE CAPITAL.
+
+
+Babylon, the capital of the Fourth Monarchy, was probably the largest
+and most magnificent city of the ancient world. A dim tradition current
+in the East gave, it is true, a greater extent, if not a greater
+splendor, to the metropolis of Assyria; but this tradition first appears
+in ages subsequent to the complete destruction of the more northern
+city; and it is contradicted by the testimony of facts. The walls of
+Nineveh have been completely traced, and indicate a city three miles in
+length, by less than a mile and a half in breadth, containing an area of
+about 1800 English acres. Of this area less than one tenth is occupied
+by ruins of any pretension. On the admitted site of Babylon striking
+masses of ruin cover a space considerably larger than that which at
+Nineveh constitutes the whole area of the town. Beyond this space
+in every direction, north, east, south and west, are detached mounds
+indicating the former existence of edifices of some size, while the
+intermediate ground between these mounds and the main ruins shows
+distinct traces of its having been built upon in former days.
+
+Of the actual size of the town, modern research gives us no clear and
+definite notion. One explorer only has come away from the country with
+an idea that the general position of the detached mounds, by which the
+plain around Hillah is dotted, enables him to draw the lines of the
+ancient walls, and mark out the exact position of the city. But the very
+maps and plans which are put forward in support of this view show that
+it rests mainly on hypothesis; nor is complete confidence placed in the
+surveys on which the maps and plans have been constructed. The English
+surveys, which have been unfortunately lost, are said not to have placed
+the detached mounds in any such decided lines as M. Oppert believes them
+to occupy, and the general impression of the British officers who were
+employed on the service is that “no vestige of the walls of Babylon has
+been as yet discovered.” [PLATE XI.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XI.]
+
+
+For the size and plan of the city we are thus of necessity thrown back
+upon the reports of ancient authors. It is not pretended that such
+reports are in this, or in any other case, deserving of implicit
+credence. The ancient historians, even the more trustworthy of them, are
+in the habit of exaggerating in their numbers; and on such subjects as
+measurements they were apt to take on trust the declarations of their
+native guides, who would be sure to make over-statements. Still in
+this instance we have so many distinct authorities--eyewitnesses of the
+facts--and some of them belonging to times when scientific accuracy had
+begun to be appreciated, that we must be very in credulous if we do not
+accept their witness, so far as it is consentient, and not intrinsically
+very improbable.
+
+According to Herodotus, an eye-witness, and the earliest authority on
+the subject the _enceinte_ of Babylon was a square, 120 stades (about 14
+miles) each way--the entire circuit of the wall being thus 56 miles, and
+the area enclosed within them falling little short of 200 square miles.
+Ctesias, also an eyewitness, and the next writer on the subject, reduced
+the circuit of the walls to 360 stades, or 41 miles, and made the area
+consequently little more than 100 square miles. These two estimates are
+respectively the greatest and the least that have come down to us. The
+historians of Alexander, while conforming nearly to the statements of
+Ctesias, a little enlarge his dimensions, making the circuit 365, 368,
+or 385 stades. The differences here are inconsiderable; and it seems to
+be established, on a weight of testimony which we rarely possess in such
+a matter, that the walls of this great town were about forty miles in
+circumference, and enclosed an area as large as that of the Landgraviat
+of Hesse-Homburg.
+
+It is difficult to suppose that the real city--the streets and
+squares--can at any time have occupied one half of this enormous area,
+A clear space, we are told, was left for a considerable distance inside
+the wall--like the _pomaerium_ of the Romans--upon which no houses
+were allowed to be built. When houses began, they were far from being
+continuous; gardens, orchards, even fields, were interspersed among
+the buildings; and it was supposed that the inhabitants, when besieged,
+could grow sufficient corn for their own consumption within the walls.
+Still the whole area was laid out with straight streets, or perhaps one
+should say with roads (for the houses cannot have been continuous
+along them), which cut one another everywhere at right angles, like the
+streets of some German towns. The wall of the town was pierced with a
+hundred gates, twenty-five (we may suppose) in each face, and the roads
+led straight to these portals, the whole area being thus cut up into
+square blocks. The houses were in general lofty, being three or even
+four stories high. They are said to have had vaulted roofs, which were
+not protected externally with any tiling, since the climate was so dry
+as to render such a protection unnecessary. The beams used in the houses
+were of palm-wood, all other timber being scarce in the country; and
+such pillars as the houses could boast were of the same material. The
+construction of these last was very rude. Around posts of palm-wood
+were twisted wisps of rushes, which were covered with plaster, and then
+colored according the taste of the owner.
+
+The Euphrates ran through the town, dividing it nearly in half. Its
+banks were lined throughout with quays of brick laid in bitumen, and
+were further guarded by two walls of brick, which skirted them along
+their whole length. In each of these walls were twenty-five gates,
+corresponding to the number of the streets which gave upon the river;
+and outside each gate was a sloped landing place, by which you could
+descend to the water’s edge, if you had occasion to cross the river.
+Boats were kept ready at these landing-places to convey passengers from
+side to side; while for those who disliked this method of conveyance
+a bridge was provided of a somewhat peculiar construction. A number
+of stone piers were erected in the bed of the stream, firmly clamped
+together with fastenings of iron and lead; wooden drawbridges connected
+pier with pier during the day, and on these passengers passed over; but
+at night they were withdrawn, in order that the bridge might not be used
+during the dark. Diodorus declares that besides this bridge, to which he
+assigns a length of five stades (about 1000 yards) and a breadth of 30
+feet, the two sides of the river were joined together by a tunnel, which
+was fifteen feet wide and twelve high to the spring of its arched roof.
+
+The most remarkable buildings which the city contained were the two
+palaces, one on either side of the river, and the great temple of
+Belus. Herodotus describes the great temple as contained within a square
+enclosure, two stades (nearly a quarter of a mile) both in length and
+breadth. Its chief feature was the _ziggurat_ or tower, a huge solid
+mass of brick-work, built (like all Babylonian temple-towers) in stages,
+square being emplaced on square, and a sort of rude pyramid being thus
+formed, at the top of which was the main shrine of the god. The basement
+platform of the Belus tower was, Herodotus tells us, a stade, or rather
+more than 200 yards, each way. The number of stages was eight. The
+ascent to the highest stage, which contained the shrine of the god, was
+on the outside, and consisted either of steps, or of an inclined plane,
+carried round the four sides of the building, and in this way conducting
+to the top. According to Strabo the tower was a stado (606 feet 9
+inches) in height; but this estimate, if it is anything more than a
+conjecture, must represent rather the length of the winding ascent than
+the real altitude of the building. The great pyramid itself was only 480
+feet high; and it is very questionable whether any Babylonian building
+ever equalled it. About half-way up the ascent was a resting-place with
+seats, where persons commonly sat a while on their way to the summit.
+The shrine which crowned the edifice was large and rich. In the time
+of Herodotus it contained no image; but only a golden table and a large
+couch, covered with a handsome drapery. This, however, was after the
+Persian conquest and the plunder of its principal treasures. Previously,
+if we may believe Diodorus, the shrine was occupied by three colossal
+images of gold--one of Bel, one of Beltis, and the third of Rhea or
+Ishtar. Before the image of Beltis were two golden lions, and near them
+two enormous serpents of silver, each thirty talents in weight. The
+golden table--forty feet long and fifteen broad--was in front of these
+statues, and upon it stood two huge drinking-cups, of the same weight as
+the serpents. The shrine also contained two enormous censers and three
+golden bowls, one for each of the three deities.
+
+At the base of the tower was a second shrine or chapel, which in the
+time of Herodotus contained a sitting image of Bel, made of gold, with
+a golden table in front of it, and a stand for the image, of the same
+precious metal. Here, too, Persian avarice had been busy; for anciently
+this shrine had possessed a second statue, which was a human figure
+twelve cubits high, made of solid gold. The shrine was also rich
+in private offerings. Outside the building, but within the sacred
+enclosure, were two altars, a smaller one of gold, on which it was
+customary to offer sucklings, and a larger one, probably of stone, where
+the worshippers sacrificed full-grown victims.
+
+The great palace was a building of still larger dimensions than the
+great temple. According to Diodorus, it was situated within a triple
+enclosure, the innermost wall being twenty stades, the second forty
+stades, and the outermost sixty stades (nearly seven miles), in
+circumference. The outer wall was built entirely of plain baked brick.
+The middle and inner walls were of the same material, fronted with
+enamelled bricks representing hunting scenes. The figures, according to
+this author, were larger than the life, and consisted chiefly of a great
+variety of animal forms. There were not wanting, however, a certain
+number of human forms to enliven the scene; and among these were two--a
+man thrusting his spear through a lion, and a woman on horseback aiming
+at a leopard with her javelin--which the later Greeks believed to
+represent the mythic Ninus and Semiramis. Of the character of the
+apartments we hear nothing; but we are told that the palace had three
+gates, two of which were of bronze, and that these had to be opened and
+shut by a machine.
+
+But the main glory of the palace was its pleasure-ground--the “Hanging
+Gardens,” which the Greeks regarded as one of the seven wonders of the
+world. This extraordinary construction, which owed its erection to the
+whim of a woman, was a square, each side of which measured 400 Greek
+feet. It was supported upon several tiers of open arches, built one over
+the other, like the walls of a classic theatre, and sustaining at each
+stage, or story, a solid platform, from which the piers of the next tier
+of arches rose. The building towered into the air to the height of at
+least seventy-five feet, and was covered at the top with a great mass of
+earth, in which there grew not merely flowers and shrubs, but tress
+also of the largest size. Water was supplied from the Euphrates through
+pipes, and was raised (it is said) by a screw, working on the principal
+of Archimedes. To prevent the moisture from penetrating into the
+brick-work and gradually destroying the building, there were interposed
+between the bricks and the mass of soil, first a layer of reeds mixed
+with bitumen, then a double layer of burnt brick cemented with gypsum,
+and thirdly a coating of sheet lead. The ascent to the garden was by
+steps. On the way up, among the arches which sustained the building,
+were stately apartments, which, must have been pleasant from their
+coolness. There was also a chamber within the structure containing the
+machinery by which the water was raised.
+
+Of the smaller palace, which was opposite to the larger one, on the
+other side the river, but few details have come down to us. Like the
+larger palace, it was guarded by a triple enclosure, the entire circuit
+of which measured (it is said) thirty stades. It contained a number of
+bronze statues, which the Greeks believed to represent the god Belus,
+and the sovereigns Ninus and Semiramis, together with their officers.
+The walls were covered with battle scenes and hunting scenes, vividly
+represented by means of bricks painted and enamelled.
+
+Such was the general character of the town and its chief edifices, if we
+may believe the descriptions of eye-witnesses. The walls which enclosed
+and guarded the whole--or which, perhaps one should rather say,
+guarded the district within which Babylon was placed--have been already
+mentioned as remarkable for their great extent, but cannot be dismissed
+without a more special and minute description. Like the “Hanging
+Gardens,” they were included among the “world’s seven wonders,”
+ and, according to every account given of them, their magnitude and
+construction were remarkable.
+
+It has been already noticed that, according to the lowest of the ancient
+estimates, the entire length of the walls was 360 stades, or more than
+forty-one miles. With respect to the width we have two very different
+statements, one by Herodotus and the other by Clitarchus and Strabo.
+Herodotus makes the width 50 royal cubits, or about 85 English feet,
+Strabo and Q. Curtius reduced the estimate to 32 feet. There is still
+greater discrepancy with respect to the height of the walls. Herodotus
+says that the height was 200 royal cubits, or 300 royal feet (about 335
+English feet); Ctesias made it 50 fathoms, or 300 ordinary Greek feet;
+Pliny and Solinus, substituting feet for the royal cubits of Herodotus,
+made the altitude 235 feet; Philostratus and Q. Curtius, following
+perhaps some one of Alexander’s historians, gave for the height 150
+feet; finally Clitarchus, as reported by Diodorus Siculus, and Strabo,
+who probably followed him, have left us the very moderate estimate of 75
+feet. It is impossible to reconcile these numbers. The supposition that
+some of them belong properly to the outer, and others to the inner wall,
+will not explain the discrepancies--for the measurements cannot by any
+ingenuity be reduced to two sets of dimensions. The only conclusion
+which it seems possible to draw from the conflicting testimony is that
+the numbers were either rough guesses made by very unskilful travellers,
+or else were (in most cases) intentional exaggerations palmed upon them
+by the native ciceroni. Still the broad facts remain--first, that the
+walls enclosed an enormous space, which was very partially occupied by
+buildings; secondly, that they were of great and unusual thickness;
+and thirdly, that they were of a vast height--seventy or eighty feet at
+least in the time of Alexander, after the wear and tear of centuries and
+the violence of at least three conquerors.
+
+The general character of the construction is open to but little doubt.
+The wall was made of bricks, either baked in kilns, or (more probably)
+dried in the sun, and laid in a cement of bitumen, with occasional
+layers of reeds between the courses. Externally it was protected by a
+wide and deep moat. On the summit were low towers, rising above the
+wall to the height of some ten or fifteen feet, and probably serving as
+guardrooms for the defenders. These towers are said to have been 250 in
+number; they were least numerous on the western face of the city, where
+the wall ran along the marshes. They were probably angular, not round;
+and instead of extending through the whole thickness of the wall, they
+were placed along its outer and inner edge, tower facing tower, with
+a wide space between them--“enough,” Herodotus says, “for a four-horse
+chariot to turn in.” The wall did not depend on them for its strength,
+but on its own height and thickness, which were such as to render
+scaling and mining equally hopeless.
+
+Such was Babylon, according to the descriptions of the ancients--a
+great city, built on a very regular plan, surrounded by populous suburbs
+interspersed among fields and gardens, the whole being included within a
+large square strongly fortified enceinte. When we turn from this picture
+of the past to contemplate the present condition of the localities, we
+are at first struck with astonishment at the small traces which remain
+of so vast and wonderful a metropolis. “The broad walls of Babylon”
+ are “utterly broken” down, and her “high gates burned with fire.”
+ “The golden city hath ceased.” God has “swept it with the bosom of
+destruction.” “The glory of the kingdoms, the beauty of the Chaldees’
+excellency,” is become “as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrha.” The
+traveller who passes through the land is at first inclined to say that
+there are no ruins, no remains, of the mighty city which once lorded it
+over the earth. By and by, however, he begins to see that though ruins,
+in the common acceptation of the term, scarcely exist--though there are
+no arches, no pillars, but one or two appearances of masonry even yet
+the whole country is covered with traces of exactly that kind which it
+was prophesied Babylon should leave. Vast “heaps” or mounds, shapeless
+and unsightly, are scattered at intervals over the entire region where
+it is certain that Babylon anciently stood, and between the “heaps” the
+soil is in many places composed of fragments of pottery and bricks, and
+deeply impregnated with nitre, infallible indications of its having once
+been covered with buildings. As the traveller descends southward from
+Baghdad he finds these indications increase, until, on nearing the
+Euphrates, a few miles beyond Mohawil, he notes that they have become
+continuous, and finds himself in a region of mounds, some of which are
+of enormous size.
+
+These mounds begin about five miles above Hillah, and extend for a
+distance of about three miles from north to south along the course of
+the river, lying principally on its left or eastern bank. The ruins on
+this side consist chiefly of three great masses of building. The most
+northern, to which the Arabs of the present day apply the name of
+BABIL--the true native appellation of the ancient citys--is a vast pile
+of brick-work of an irregular quadrilateral shape, with precipitous
+sides furrowed by ravines, and with a flat top. [PLATE X., Fig.,3.] Of
+the four faces of the ruin the southern seems to be the most perfect.
+It extends a distance of about 200 yards, or almost exactly a stade,
+and runs nearly in a straight line from west to east. At its eastern
+extremity it forms a right angle with the east face, which runs nearly
+due north for about 180 yards, also almost in a straight line. The
+western and northern faces are apparently much worn away. Here are
+the chief ravines, and here is the greatest seeming deviation from the
+original lines of the building. The greatest height of the Babil mound
+is 130 or 140 feet. It is mainly composed of sun-dried brick, but shows
+signs of having been faced with fire-burnt brick, carefully cemented
+with an excellent white mortar. The bricks of this outer facing bear the
+name and titles of Nebuchadnezzar. A very small portion of the original
+structure has been laid bare enough however to show that the lines
+of the building did not slope like those of a pyramid, but were
+perpendicular, and that the side walls had, at intervals, the support of
+buttresses.
+
+This vast building, whatever it was, stood within a square enclosure,
+two sides of which, the northern and eastern, are still very distinctly
+marked. A long low line of rampart runs for 400 yards parallel to the
+east face of the building, at a distance of 120 or 130 yards, and a
+similar but somewhat longer line of mound runs parallel to the north
+face at rather a greater distance from it. On the west a third line
+could be traced in the early part of the present century; but it appears
+to be now obliterated. Here and on the south are the remains of
+an ancient canal, the construction of which may have caused the
+disappearance of the southern, and of the lower part of the western
+line. [PLATE XII., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XII.]
+
+
+Below the Babil mound, which stands isolated from the rest of the ruins,
+are two principal masses--the more northern known to the Arabs as EL
+KASR, “the Palace,” and the more southern as “the mound of Amran,” from
+the tomb of a reputed prophet Amran-ibn-Ali, which crowns its summit.
+The Kasr mound is an oblong square, about 700 yards long by 600 broad,
+with the sides facing the cardinal points. [PLATE XII., Fig. 2.] Its
+height above the plain is 70 feet. Its longer direction is from north
+to south. As far as it has been penetrated, it consists mainly of
+rubbish-loose bricks, tiles, and fragments of stone. In a few places
+only are there undisturbed remains of building. One such relic is a
+subterranean passage, seven feet in height, floored and walled with
+baked brick, and covered in at the top with great blocks of sandstone,
+which may either have been a secret exit or more probably an enormous
+drain. Another is the Kasr, or “palace” proper, whence the mound has
+its name. This is a fragment of excellent brick masonry in a wonderful
+state of preservation, consisting of walls, piers, and buttresses, and
+in places ornamented with pilasters, but of too fragmentary a character
+to furnish the modern inquirer with any clue to the original plan of the
+building. The bricks are of a pale yellow color and of the best possible
+quality, nearly resembling our fire-bricks. They are stamped, one and
+all, with the name and titles of Nebuchadnezzar. The mortar in which
+they are laid is a fine lime cement, which adheres so closely to the
+bricks that it is difficult to obtain a specimen entire. In the dust
+at the foot of the walls are numerous fragments of brick, painted, and
+covered with a thick enamel or glaze. Here, too, have been found a few
+fragments of sculptured stone, and slabs containing an account of the
+erection of a palatial edifice by Nebuchadnezzar. Near the northern edge
+of the mound, and about midway in its breadth, is a colossal figure of a
+lion, rudely carved in black basalt, standing over the prostrate figure
+of a man with arms outstretched. A single tree grows on the huge ruin,
+which the Arabs declare to be of a species not known elsewhere, and
+regard as a remnant of the hanging garden of Bokht-i-nazar. It is a
+tamarisk of no rare kind, but of very great ago, in consequence of
+which, and of its exposed position, the growth and foliage are somewhat
+peculiar.
+
+South of the Kasr mound, at the distance of about 800 yards, is the
+remaining great mass of ruins, the mound of Jumjuma, or of Amran. [PLATE
+XII., Fig. 3.] The general shape of this mound is triangular,107 but it
+is very irregular and ill-defined, so as scarcely to admit of accurate
+description. Its three sides face respectively a little east of north,
+a little south of east, and a little south of west. The south-western
+side, which runs nearly parallel with the Euphrates, and seems to have
+been once washed by the river, is longer than either of the others,
+extending a distance of above a thousand yards, while the south-eastern
+may be 800 yards, and the north-eastern 700. Innumerable ravines
+traverse the mound on every side, penetrating it nearly to its centre.
+The surface is a series of undulations. Neither masonry nor sculpture is
+anywhere apparent.
+
+All that meets the eye is a mass of debris; and the researches hitherto
+made have failed to bring to light any distinct traces of building.
+Occasionally bricks are found, generally of poor material, and bearing
+the names and titles of some of the earlier Babylonian monarchs; but the
+trenches opened in the pile have in no case laid bare even the smallest
+fragment of a wall.
+
+Besides the remains which have been already described, the most
+remarkable are certain long lines of rampart on both sides of the river,
+which lie outside of the other ruins, enclosing them all, except the
+mound of Babil. On the left bank of the stream there is to be traced,
+in the first place, a double line of wall or rampart, having a direction
+nearly due north and south, which lies east of the Kasr and Amran
+mounds, at the distance from them of about 1000 yards. Beyond this is a
+single line of rampart to the north-east, traceable for about two miles,
+the direction of which is nearly from north-west to south-east, and a
+double line of rampart to the south-east, traceable for a mile and a
+half, with a direction from northeast to south-west. The two lines in
+this last case are from 600 to 700 yards apart, and diverge from one
+another as they run out to the north-east. The inner of the two meets
+the north-eastern rampart nearly at a right angle, and is clearly a
+part of the same work. It is questioned, however, whether this line of
+fortification is ancient, and not rather a construction belonging to
+Parthian times.
+
+A low line of mounds is traceable between the western face of the Amran
+and Kasr hills, and the present eastern bank of the river, bounding a
+sort of narrow valley, in which either the main stream of the Euphrates,
+or at any rate a branch from it, seems anciently to have flowed.
+
+On the right bank of the stream the chief remains are of the same kind.
+West of the river, a rampart, twenty feet high, runs for nearly a mile
+parallel with the general line of the Amran mound, at the distance of
+about 1000 yards from the old course of the stream. At either extremity
+the line of the rampart turns at a right angle, running down towards the
+river, and being traceable towards the north for 400 yards and towards
+the south for fifty or sixty. It is evident that there was once, before
+the stream flowed in its present channel, a rectangular enclosure, a
+mile long and 1000 yards broad, opposite to the Amran mound; and there
+are indications that within this _enceinte_ was at least one important
+building, which was situated near the south-east angle of the enclosure,
+on the banks of the old course of the river. The bricks found at this
+point bear the name of Neriglissar.
+
+There are also, besides the ramparts and the great masses of ruin above
+described, a vast number of scattered and irregular heaps of hillocks
+on both sides of the river, chiefly, however, upon the eastern bank.
+Of these one only seems to deserve distinct mention. This is the mound
+called El Homeira, “the Red,” which lies due east of the Kasr, distant
+from it about 800 yards--a mound said to be 300 yards long by 100 wide,
+and to attain an elevation of 60 or 70 feet. It is composed of baked
+brick of a bright red color, and must have been a building of a very
+considerable height resting upon a somewhat confined base. Its bricks
+are inscribed along their edges, not (as is the usual practice) on their
+lower face.
+
+The only other ancient work of any importance of which some remains are
+still to be traced is a brick embankment on the left bank of the stream
+between the Kasr and the Babil mounds, extending for a distance of
+a thousand yards in a line which has a slight curve and a general
+direction of S.S.W. The bricks of this embankment are of a bright red
+color, and of great hardness. They are laid wholly in bitumen. The
+legend which they bear shows that the quay was constructed by Nabonidus.
+[PLATE XIII.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XIII.]
+
+
+Such then are the ruins of Babylon--the whole that can now with
+certainty be assigned to the “beauty of the Chaldees’ excellency”--the
+“great Babylon” of Nebuchadnezzar. Within a space little more than three
+miles long and a mile and three quarters broad are contained all the
+undoubted remains of the greatest city of the old world. These remains,
+however, do not serve in any way to define the ancient limits of the
+place. They are surrounded on every side by nitrous soil, and by low
+heaps which it has not been thought worth while to excavate, but which
+the best judges assign to the same era as the great mounds, and believe
+to mark the sites of the lesser temples and the other public buildings
+of the ancient city. Masses of this kind are most frequent to the north
+and east. Sometimes they are almost continuous for miles; and if we take
+the Kasr mound as a centre, and mark about it an area extending five
+miles in each direction (which would give a city of the size described
+by Ctesias and the historians of Alexander), we shall scarcely find a
+single square mile of the hundred without some indications of ancient
+buildings upon its surface. The case is not like that of Nineveh, where
+outside the walls the country is for a considerable distance singularly
+bare of ruins. The mass of Babylonian remains extending from Babil to
+Amran does not correspond to the whole _enceinte_ of Nineveh, but to the
+mound of Koyunjik. It has every appearance of being, not the city, but
+“the heart of the city”--the “Royal quarter” outside of which were the
+streets and squares, and still further off, the vanished walls. It may
+seem strange that the southern capital should have so greatly exceeded
+the dimensions of the northern one. But, if we follow the indications
+presented by the respective sites, we are obliged to conclude that there
+was really this remarkable difference.
+
+It has to be considered in conclusion how far we can identify the
+various ruins above described with the known buildings of the ancient
+capital, and to what extent it is possible to reconstruct upon the
+existing remains the true plan of the city. Fancy, if it discards the
+guidance of fact, may of course with the greatest ease compose plans
+of a charming completeness. A rigid adherence to existing data will
+produce, it is to be feared, a somewhat meagre and fragmentary result;
+but most persons will feel that this is one of the cases where the maxim
+of Hesiod applies--“the half is preferable to the whole.”
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 182]
+
+The one identification which may be made upon certain and indeed
+indisputable evidence is that of the Kasr mound with the palace built
+by Nebuchadnezzar. The tradition which has attached the name of Kasr or
+“Palace” to this heap is confirmed by inscriptions upon slabs found on
+the spot, wherein Nebuchadnezzar declares the building to be his “Grand
+Palace.” The bricks of that part of the ruin which remains uncovered
+bear, one and all, the name of this king; and it is thus clear that
+here stood in ancient times the great work of which Berosus speaks as
+remarkable for its height and splendor. If a confirmation of the fact
+were needed after evidence of so decisive a character, it would be found
+in the correspondence between the remains found on the mound and the
+description left us of the “greater palace” by Diodorus. Diodorus
+relates that the walls of this edifice were adorned with colored
+representations of hunting scenes; and modern explorers find that the
+whole soil of the mound, and especially the part on which the fragment
+of ruin stands, is full of broken pieces of enamelled brick, varied in
+hue, and evidently containing portions of human and animal forms.
+
+But if the Kasr represents the palace built by Nebuchadnezzar, as is
+generally allowed by those who have devoted their attention to the
+subject, it seems to follow almost as a certainty that the Amran mound
+is the site of that old palatial edifice to which the erection
+of Nebuchadnezzar was an addition. Berosus expressly states that
+Nebuchadnezzar’s building “adjoined upon” the former palace, a
+description which is fairly applicable to the Amran mound by means of a
+certain latitude of interpretation, but which is wholly inapplicable to
+any of the other ruins. This argument would be conclusive, even if it
+stood alone. It has, however, received an important corroboration in the
+course of recent researches. From the Amran mound, and from this part
+of Babylon only, have monuments been recovered of an earlier date than
+Nebuchadnezzar. Here and here alone did the early kings leave memorials
+of their presence in Babylon; and here consequently, we may presume,
+stood the ancient royal residence.
+
+If, then, all the principal ruins on the east bank of the river, with
+the exception of the Babil mound and the long lines marking walls
+or embankments, be accepted as representing the “great palace” or
+“citadel” of the classical writers we must recognize in the remains west
+of the ancient course of the river-the oblong square enclosure and
+the important building at its south-east angle--the second or “smaller
+palace” of Ctesias, which was joined to the larger one, according to
+that writer, by a bridge and a tunnel. This edifice, built or at any
+rate repaired by Neriglissar, lay directly opposite the more ancient
+part of the eastern palace, being separated from it by the river, which
+anciently flowed along the western face of the Kasr and Amran mounds.
+The exact position of the bridge cannot be fixed. With regard to the
+tunnel, it is extremely unlikely that any such construction was ever
+made. The “Father of History” is wholly silent on the subject, while
+he carefully describes the bridge, a work far less extraordinary.
+The tunnel rests on the authority of two writers only--Diodorus and
+Philostratus--who both wrote after Babylon was completely ruined. It
+was probably one of the imaginations of the inventive Ctesias, from whom
+Diodorus evidently derived all the main points of his description.
+
+Thus far there is no great difficulty in identifying the existing
+remains with buildings mentioned by ancient authors; but, at the point
+to which we are now come, the subject grows exceedingly obscure, and it
+is impossible to offer more than reasonable conjectures upon the true
+character of the remaining ruins. The descriptions of ancient writers
+would lead us to expect that we should find among the ruins unmistakable
+traces of the great temple of Belus, and at least some indication of the
+position occupied by the Hanging Gardens. These two famous constructions
+can scarcely, one would think, have wholly perished. More especially,
+the Belus temple, which was a stade square, and (according to some) a
+stade in height, must almost of necessity have a representative among
+the existing remains. This, indeed, is admitted on all hands; and the
+controversy is thereby narrowed to the question, which of two
+great ruins--the only two entitled by their size and situation to
+attention--has the better right to be regarded as the great and
+celebrated sanctuary of the ancient Babylon.
+
+That the mound of Babil is the _ziggurat_ or tower of a Babylonian
+temple scarcely admits of a doubt. Its square shape, its solid
+construction, its isolated grandeur, its careful emplacement with the
+sides facing the cardinal points, and its close resemblance to other
+known Babylonian temple-towers, sufficiently mark it for a building
+of this character, or at any rate raise a presumption which it would
+require very strong reasons indeed to overcome. Its size moreover
+corresponds well with the accounts which have come down to us of the
+dimensions of the Belus temple, and its name and proximity to the other
+main ruins show that it belonged certainly to the ancient capital.
+Against its claim to be regarded as the remains of the temple of
+Bolus two objections only can be argued: these are the absence of any
+appearance of stages, or even of a pyramidical shape, from the present
+ruin, and its position on the same side of the Euphrates with the
+palace. Herodotus expressly declares that the temple of Belus and
+the royal palace were upon opposite sides of the river, and states,
+moreover, that the temple was built in stages, which rose one above the
+other to the number of eight. Now these two circumstances, which do not
+belong at present to the Babil mound, attach to a ruin distant from it
+about eleven or twelve miles--a ruin which is certainly one of the most
+remarkable in the whole country, and which, if Babylon had really been
+of the size asserted by Herodotus, might possibly have been included
+within the walls. The Birs-i-Nimrud had certainly seven, probably eight
+stages, and it is the only ruin on the present western bank of
+the Euphrates which is at once sufficiently grand to answer to the
+descriptions of the Belus temple, and sufficiently near to the other
+ruin to make its original inclusion within the walls not absolutely
+impossible. Hence, ever since the attention of scholars was first
+directed to the subject of Babylonian topography, opinion has been
+divided on the question before us, and there have not been wanting
+persons to maintain that the Birs-i-Nimrud is the true temple of
+Belus, if not also the actual tower of Babel, whose erection led to the
+confusion of tongues and general dispersion of the sons of Adam.
+
+With this latter identification we are not in the present place
+concerned. With respect to the view that the Birs is the sanctury
+of Belus, it may be observed in the first place that the size of the
+building is very much smaller than that ascribed to the Belus temple;
+secondly, that it was dedicated to Kebo, who cannot be identified with
+Bel; and thirdly, that it is not really any part of the remains of the
+ancient capital, but belongs to an entirely distinct town. The cylinders
+found in the ruin by Sir Henry Eawlinson declare the building to have
+been “the wonder of Borsippa;” and Borsippa, according to all the
+ancient authorities, was a town by itself--an entirely distinct place
+from Babylon. To include Borsippa within the outer wall of Babylon is to
+run counter to all the authorities on the subject, the inscriptions, the
+native writer, Berosus, and the classical geographers generally. Nor
+is the position thus assigned to the Belus temple in harmony with the
+statement of Herodotus, which alone causes explorers to seek for the
+temple on the west side of the river. For, though the expression which
+this writer uses does not necessarily mean that the temple was in the
+exact centre of one of the two divisions of the town, it certainly
+implies that it lay towards the middle of one division--well within
+it--and not upon its outskirts. It is indeed inconceivable that the
+main sanctuary of the place, where the kings constantly offered their
+worship, should have been nine or ten miles from the palace! The
+distance between the Amran mound and Babil, which is about two miles, is
+quite as great as probability will allow us to believe existed between
+the old residence of the kings and the sacred shrine to which they were
+in the constant habit of resorting.
+
+Still there remain as objections to the identification of the great
+temple with the Babil mound the two arguments already noticed. The Babil
+mound has no appearance of stages such as the Birs presents, nor has it
+even a pyramidical shape. It is a huge platform with a nearly level
+top, and sinks, rather than rises, in the centre. What has become, it is
+asked, of the seven upper stages of the great Belus tower, if this ruin
+represents it? Whither have they vanished? How is it that in crumbling
+down they have not left something like a heap towards the middle? To
+this it may be replied that the destruction of the Belus tower has not
+been the mere work of the elements--it was violently broken down either
+by Xerxes, or by some later king, who may have completely removed all
+the upper stages. Again, it has served as a quarry to the hunters after
+bricks for more than twenty centuries; so that it is only surprising
+that it still retains so much of its original shape. Further, when
+Alexander entered Babylon more than 2000 years ago 10,000 men were
+employed for several weeks in clearing away the rubbish and laying bare
+the foundations of the building. It is quite possible that a conical
+mass of crumbled brick may have been removed from the top of the mound
+at this time.
+
+The difficulty remains that the Babil mound is on the same side of the
+Euphrates with the ruins of the Great Palace, whereas Herodotus makes
+the two buildings balance each other, one on the right and the other
+on the left bank of the stream. Now here it is in the first place to
+be observed that Herodotus is the only writer who does this. No other
+ancient author tells us anything of the relative situation of the two
+buildings. We have thus nothing to explain but the bald statement of a
+single writer--a writer no doubt of great authority, but still one not
+wholly infallible. We might say, then, that Herodotus probably made a
+mistake--that his memory failed him in this instance, or that he mistook
+his notes on the subject. Or we may explain his error by supposing that
+he confounded a canal from the Euphrates, which seems to have
+anciently passed between the Babil mound and the Kasr (called Shebil by
+Nebuchadnezzar) with the main stream. Or, finally, we may conceive
+that at the time of his visit the old palace lay in ruins, and that the
+palace of Nerig-lissar on the west bank of the stream was that of which
+he spoke. It is at any rate remarkable, considering how his authority is
+quoted as fixing the site of the Belus tower to the west bank, that, in
+the only place where he gives us any intimation of the side of the river
+on which he would have placed the tower, it is the east and not the west
+bank to which his words point. He makes those who saw the treachery of
+Zopyrus at the Belian and Kissian gates, which must have been to the
+east of the city, at once take refuge in the famous sanctuary, which he
+implies was in the vicinity.
+
+On the whole, therefore, it seems best to regard the Babil mound as the
+ziggurat of the great temple of Bel (called by some “the tomb of Belus”)
+which the Persians destroyed and which Alexander intended to restore.
+With regard to the “hanging gardens,” as they were an erection of less
+than half the size of the tower, it is not so necessary to suppose that
+distinct traces must remain of them. Their debris may be confused with
+those of the Kasr mound, on which one writer places them. Or they may
+have stood between the Kasr and Amran ruins, where are now some mounds
+of no great height. Or, possibly, their true site is in the modern El
+Homeira, the remarkable red mound which lies east of the Kasr at the
+distance of about 800 yards, and attains an elevation of sixty-five
+feet. Though this building is not situated upon the banks of the
+Euphrates, where Strabo and Diodorus place the gardens, it abuts upon
+a long low valley into which the Euphrates water seems formerly to have
+been introduced, and which may therefore have been given the name of
+the river. This identification is, however, it must be allowed, very
+doubtful.
+
+The two lines of mounds which enclose the long low valley above
+mentioned are probably the remains of an embankment which here confined
+the waters of a great reservoir. Nebuchadnezzar relates that he
+constructed a large reservoir, which he calls the Yapur-Shapu, in
+Babylon, and led water into it by means of an “eastern canal”--the
+Shebil. The Shebil canal, it is probable, left the Euphrates at some
+point between Babil and the Kasr, and ran across with a course nearly
+from west to east to the top of the Yapur-Shapu. This reservoir seems to
+have been a long and somewhat narrow parallelogram, running nearly from
+north to south, which shut in the great palace on the east and protected
+it like a huge moat. Most likely it communicated with the Euphrates
+towards the south by a second canal, the exact line of which cannot be
+determined. Thus the palatial residence of the Babylonian kings looked
+in both directions upon broad sheets of water, an agreeable prospect in
+so hot a climate; while, at the same time, by the assignment of a double
+channel to the Euphrates, its floods were the more readily controlled,
+and the city was preserved from those terrible inundations which in
+modern times have often threatened the existence of Baghdad.
+
+The other lines of mound upon the east side of the river may either be
+Parthian works, or (possibly) they may be the remains of some of those
+lofty walls whereby, according to Diodorus, the greater palace was
+surrounded and defended. The fragments of them which remain are so
+placed that if the lines were produced they would include all the
+principal ruins on the left bank except the Babil tower. They may
+therefore be the old defences of the Eastern palace; though, if so,
+it is strange that they run in lines which are neither straight nor
+parallel to those of the buildings enclosed by them. The irregularity
+of these ramparts is certainly a very strong argument in favor of
+their having been the work of a people considerably more barbarous and
+ignorant than the Babylonians. [PLATE XIV.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XIV.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. ARTS AND SCIENCES.
+
+
+That the Babylonians were among the most ingenious of all the nations of
+antiquity, and had made considerable progress in the arts and sciences
+before their conquest by the Persians, is generally admitted. The
+classical writers commonly parallel them with the Egyptians; and though,
+from their habit of confusing Babylon with Assyria, it is not always
+quite certain that the inhabitants of the more southern country--the
+real Babylonians--are meant, still there is sufficient reason to believe
+that, in the estimation of the Greeks and Romans, the people of
+the lower Euphrates were regarded as at least equally advanced in
+civilization with those of the Nile valley and the Delta. The branches
+of knowledge wherein by general consent the Babylonians principally
+excelled were architecture and astronomy. Of their architectural works
+two at least were reckoned among the “Seven Wonders,” while others, not
+elevated to this exalted rank, were yet considered to be among the most
+curious and admirable of Oriental constructions. In astronomical science
+they were thought to have far excelled all other nations, and the first
+Greeks who made much progress in the subject confessed themselves the
+humble disciples of Babylonian teachers.
+
+In the account, which it is proposed to give, in this place, of
+Babylonian art and science, so far as they are respectively known to us,
+the priority will be assigned to art, which is an earlier product of
+the human mind than science; and among the arts the first place will be
+given to architecture, as at once the most fundamental of all the fine
+arts, and the one in which the Babylonians attained their greatest
+excellence. It is as builders that the primitive Chaldaean people, the
+progenitors of the Babylonians, first appear before us in history;
+and it was on his buildings that the great king of the later Empire,
+Nebuchadnezzar, specially prided himself. When Herodotus visited Babylon
+he was struck chiefly by its extraordinary edifices; and it is the
+account which the Greek writers gave of these erections that has, more
+than anything else, procured for the Babylonians the fame that they
+possess and the position that they hold among the six or seven leading
+nations of the old world.
+
+The architecture of the Babylonians seems to have culminated in the
+Temple. While their palaces, their bridges, their walls, even their
+private houses were remarkable, their grandest works, their most
+elaborate efforts, were dedicated to the honor and service, not of man,
+but of God. The Temple takes in Babylonia the same sort of rank which it
+has in Egypt and in Greece. It is not, as in Assyria, a mere adjunct
+of the palace. It stands by itself, in proud independence, as the
+great building of a city, or a part of a city; it is, if not absolutely
+larger, at any rate loftier and more conspicuous than any other edifice:
+it often boasts a magnificent adornment: the value of the offerings
+which are deposited in it is enormous: in every respect it rivals the
+palace, while in some it has a decided preeminence. It draws all eyes
+by its superior height and sometimes by its costly ornamentation; it
+inspires awe by the religious associations which belong to it; finally,
+it is a stronghold as well as a place of worship, and may furnish a
+refuge to thousands in the time of danger.
+
+A Babylonian temple seems to have stood commonly within a walled
+enclosure. In the case of the great temple of Belus at Babylon, the
+enclosure is said to have been a square of two stades each way, or,
+in other words, to have contained an area of thirty acres. The temple
+itself ordinarily consisted of two parts. Its most essential feature
+was a _ziggurat_, or tower, which was either square, or at any rate
+rectangular, and built in stages, the smallest number of such stages
+being two, and the largest known number seven. At the summit of the
+tower was probably in every case a shrine, or chapel, of greater or
+less size, containing altars and images. The ascent to this was on the
+outside of the towers, which were entirely solid; and it generally wound
+round the different faces of the towers, ascending them either by means
+of steps or by an inclined plane. Special care was taken with regard to
+the emplacement of the tower, either its sides or its angles being
+made exactly to confront the cardinal points. It is said that the
+temple-towers were used not merely for religious purposes but also as
+observatories, a use with a view to which this arrangement of their
+position would have been serviceable.
+
+Besides the shrine at the summit of the temple-tower or ziggurat, there
+was commonly at the base of the tower, or at any rate somewhere
+within the enclosure, a second shrine or chapel, in which the ordinary
+worshipper, who wished to spare himself the long ascent, made his
+offerings. Here again the ornamentation was most costly, lavish use
+being made of the precious metals for images and other furniture. Altars
+of different sizes were placed in the open air in the vicinity of this
+lower shrine, on which were sacrificed different classes of victims,
+gold being used occasionally as the material of the altar.
+
+The general appearance of a Babylonian temple, or at any rate of its
+chief feature, the tower or _ziggurat_, will be best gathered from a
+more particular description of a single building of the kind; and the
+building which it will be most convenient to take for that purpose is
+that remarkable edifice which strikes moderns with more admiration than
+any other now existing in the country, and which has also been more
+completely and more carefully examined than any other Babylonian
+ruins--the Birs-i-Nimrud, or ancient temple of Nebo at Borsippa. The
+plan of this tower has been almost completely made out from data still
+existing on the spot; and a restoration of the original building may be
+given with a near approach to certainty. [PLATE XV., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XV.]
+
+
+Upon a platform of crude brick, raised a few feet above the level of
+the alluvial plain, was built the first or basement stage of the great
+edifice, an exact square, 272 feet each way, and and probably twenty-six
+feet in perpendicular height. On this was erected a second stage of
+exactly the same height, but a square of only 230 feet; which however
+was not placed exactly in the middle of the first, but further from its
+northeastern than its south-western edge, twelve feet only from the one
+and thirty feet from the other. The third stage, which was imposed in
+the same way upon the second, was also twenty-six feet high, and was a
+square of 188 feet. Thus far the plan had been uniform and without any
+variety; but at this point an alteration took place. The height of the
+fourth stage, instead of being twenty-six, was only fifteen feet. In
+other respects however the old numbers were maintained; the fourth stage
+was diminished equally with the others, and was consequently a square of
+146 feet. It was emplaced upon the stage below it exactly as the former
+stages had been. The remaining stages probably followed the same rule
+of diminution--the fifth being a square of 104, the sixth one of 24, and
+the seventh one of 20 feet. Each of these stages had a height of
+fifteen feet. Upon the seventh or final stage was erected the shrine
+or tabernacle, which was probably also fifteen feet high, and about
+the same length and breadth. Thus the entire height of the building,
+allowing three feet for the crude brick platform, was 150 feet.
+
+The ornamentation of the edifice was chiefly by means of color. The
+seven stages represented the Seven Spheres, in which moved (according
+to ancient Chaldaean astronomy) the seven planets. To each planet fancy,
+partly grounding itself upon fact, had from of old assigned a peculiar
+tint or hue. The Sun was golden, the Moon silver; the distant Saturn,
+almost beyond the region of light, was black; Jupiter was orange the
+fiery Mars was red; Venus was a pale Naples yellow; Mercury a deep blue.
+The seven stages of the tower, like the seven walls of Ecbatana, gave
+a visible embodiment to these fancies. The basement stage, assigned to
+Saturn, was blackened by means of a coating of bitumen spread over the
+face of the masonry; the second stage, assigned to Jupiter, obtained the
+appropriate orange color by means of a facing of burnt bricks of that
+hue; the third stage, that of Mars, was made blood-red by the use
+of half-burnt bricks formed of a bright red clay; the fourth stage,
+assigned to the Sun, appears to have been actually covered with thin
+plates of gold; the fifth, the stage of Venus, received a pale yellow
+tint from the employment of bricks of that hue; the sixth, the sphere of
+Mercury, was given an azure tint by vitrifaction, the whole stage having
+been subjected to an intense heat after it was erected, whereby the
+bricks composing it were converted into a mass of blue slag; the seventh
+stage, that of the Moon, was probably, like the fourth, coated with
+actual plates of metal. Thus the building rose up in stripes of varied
+color, arranged almost as nature’s cunning arranges hues in the rainbow,
+tones of red coming first, succeeded by a broad stripe of yellow, the
+yellow being followed by blue. Above this the glowing silvery summit
+melted into the bright sheen of the sky. [PLATE XVI.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XVI.]
+
+
+The faces of the various stages were, as a general rule, flat and
+unbroken, unless it were by a stair or ascent, of which however there
+has been found no trace. But there were two exceptions to this general
+plainness. The basement stage was indented with a number of shallow
+squared recesses, which seem to have been intended for a decoration. The
+face of the third stage was weak on account of its material, which was
+brick but half-burnt. Here then the builders, not for ornament’s sake,
+but to strengthen their work, gave to the wall the support of a number
+of shallow buttresses. They also departed from their usual practice,
+by substituting for the rigid perpendicular of the other faces a slight
+slope outwards for some distance from the base. These arrangements,
+which are apparently part of the original work, and not remedies applied
+subsequently, imply considerable knowledge of architectural principles
+on the part of the builders, and no little ingenuity in turning
+architectural resources to account.
+
+With respect to the shrine which was emplaced upon the topmost, or
+silver stage, little is definitely known. It appears to have been of
+brick; and we may perhaps conclude from the analogy of the old Chaldaean
+shrines at the summits of towers, as well as from that of the Belus
+shrine at Babylon, that it was richly ornamented both within and
+without; but it is impossible to state anything as to the exact
+character of the ornamentation.
+
+The tower is to be regarded as fronting to the north-east, the coolest
+side and that least exposed to the sun’s rays from the time that they
+become oppressive in Babylonia. On this side was the ascent, which
+consisted probably of abroad staircase extending along the whole front
+of the building. The side platforms (those towards the south-east and
+north-west)--at any rate of the first and second stages, probably
+of all--were occupied by a series of chambers abutting upon the
+perpendicular wall, as the priests’ chambers of Solomon’s temple abutted
+upon the side walls of that building. In these were doubtless lodged the
+priests and other attendants upon the temple service. The side chambers
+seem sometimes to have communicated with vaulted apartments within
+the solid mass of the structure, like those of which we hear in the
+structure supporting the “hanging gardens.” It is possible that there
+may have been internal stair-cases, connecting the vaulted apartments
+of one stage with those of another; but the ruin has not yet been
+sufficiently explored for us to determine whether or not there was such
+communication.
+
+The great Tower is thought to have been approached through a vestibule
+of considerable size. Towards the north-east the existing ruin
+is prolonged in an irregular manner and it is imagined that this
+prolongation marks the site of a vestibule or propylaeum, originally
+distinct from the tower, but now, through the crumbling down of both
+buildings, confused with its ruins. As no scientific examination has
+been made of this part of the mound, the above supposition can only be
+regarded as a conjecture. Possibly the excrescence does not so much mark
+a vestibule as a second shrine, like that which is said to have existed
+at the foot of the Belus Tower at Babylon. Till, however, additional
+researches have been made, it is in vain to think of restoring the plan
+or elevation of this part of the temple.
+
+From the temples of the Babylonians we may now pass to their
+palaces--constructions inferior in height and grandeur, but covering a
+greater space, involving a larger amount of labor, and admitting of more
+architectural variety. Unfortunately the palaces have suffered from the
+ravages of time even more than the temples, and in considering their
+plan and character we obtain little help from the existing remains.
+Still, something may be learnt of them from this source, and where
+it fails we may perhaps be allowed to eke out the scantiness of our
+materials by drawing from the elaborate descriptions of Diodorus such
+points as have probability in their favor.
+
+The Babylonian palace, like the Assyrian, and the Susianian, stood upon
+a lofty mound or platform. This arrangement provided at once for safety,
+for enjoyment, and for health. It secured a pure air, freedom from the
+molestation of insects, and a position only assailable at a few points.
+The ordinary shape of the palace mound appears to have been square;
+its elevation was probably not less than fifty or sixty feet. It was
+composed mainly of sun-dried bricks, which however were almost certainly
+enclosed externally by a facing of burnt brick, and may have been
+further strengthened within by walls of the same material, which perhaps
+traversed the whole mound. The entire mass seems to have been carefully
+drained, and the collected waters were conveyed through subterranean
+channels to the level of the plain at the mound’s base. The summit
+of the platform was no doubt paved, either with stone or burnt
+brick--mainly, it is probable, with the latter; since the former
+material was scarce, and though a certain number of stone pavement slabs
+have been found, they are too rare and scattered to imply anything like
+the general use of stone paving. Upon the platform, most likely towards
+the centre, rose the actual palace, not built (like the Assyrian
+palaces) of crude brick faced with a better material, but constructed
+wholly of the finest and hardest burnt brick laid in a mortar of extreme
+tenacity, with walls of enormous thickness, parallel to the sides of the
+mound, and meeting each other at right angles. Neither the ground-plan
+nor the elevation of a Babylonian palace can be given; nor can even
+a conjectural restoration of such a building be made, since the small
+fragment of Nebuchadnezzar’s palace which remains has defied all
+attempts to reduce it to system. We can only say that the lines of
+the building were straight; that the walls rose, at any rate to a
+considerable height, without windows; and that the flatness of the
+straight line was broken by numerous buttressses and pilasters. We
+have also evidence that occasionally there was an ornamentation of the
+building, either within or without, by means of sculptured stone slabs,
+on which were represented figures of a small size, carefully wrought.
+The general ornamentation, however, external as well as internal, we
+may well believe to have been such as Diodorus states, colored
+representations on brick of war-scenes, and hunting-scenes, the
+counterparts in a certain sense of those magnificent bas-reliefs which
+everywhere clothed the walls of palaces in Assyria. It has been already
+noticed that abundant remains of such representations have been found
+upon the Kasr mound. [PLATE XV., Fig. 2.] They seem to have alternated
+with cuneiform inscriptions, in white on a blue ground, or else with a
+patterning of rosettes in the same colors.
+
+Of the general arrangement of the royal palaces, of their height, their
+number of stories, their roofing, and their lighting, we know absolutely
+nothing. The statement made by Herodotus, that many of the private
+houses in the town had three or four stories, would naturally lead us
+to suppose that the palaces were built similarly; but no ancient author
+tells us that this was so. The fact that the walls which exist, though
+of considerable height, show no traces of windows, would seem to imply
+that the lighting, as in Assyria, was from the top of the apartment,
+either from the ceiling, or from apertures in the part of the walls
+adjoining the ceiling. Altogether, such evidence as exists favors
+the notion that the Babylonian palace, in its character and general
+arrangements, resembled the Assyrian, with only the two differences,
+that Babylonian was wholly constructed of burnt brick, while in the
+Assyrian the sun-dried material was employed to a large extent; and,
+further, that in Babylonia the decoration of the walls was made, not
+by slabs of alabaster, which did not exist in the country, but
+mainly--almost entirely--by colored representations upon the
+brickwork.
+
+Among the adjuncts of the principal palace at Babylon was the remarkable
+construction known to the Greeks and Romans as “the Hanging Garden.” The
+accounts which, Diodorus, Strabo, and Q. Curtius give of this structure
+are not perhaps altogether trustworthy; still, it is probable that they
+are in the main at least founded on fact. We may safely believe that a
+lofty structure was raised at Babylon on several tiers of arches, which
+supported at the top a mass of earth, wherein grew, not merely flowers
+and shrubs, but trees of a considerable size. The Assyrians had been in
+the habit of erecting structures of a somewhat similar kind, artificial
+elevations to support a growth of trees and shrubs; but they were
+content to place their garden at the summit of a single row of pillars
+or arches, and thus to give it a very moderate height. At Babylon the
+object was to produce an artificial imitation of a mountain. For this
+purpose several tiers of arches were necessary; and these appear to have
+been constructed in the manner of a Roman amphitheatre, one directly
+over another so that the outer wall formed from summit to base a single
+perpendicular line. Of the height of the structure various accounts are
+given, while no writer reports the number of the tiers of arches. Hence
+there are no sufficient data for a reconstruction of the edifice.
+
+Of the walls and bridge of Babylon, and of the ordinary houses of the
+people, little more is known than has been already reported in the
+general description of the capital. It does not appear that they
+possessed any very great architectural merit. Some skill was shown in
+constructing the piers of the bridge, which presented an angle to the
+current and then a curved line, along which the water slid gently.
+[PLATE XV., Fig. 3.] The loftiness of the houses, which were of three or
+four stories, is certainly surprising, since Oriental houses have very
+rarely more than two stories. Their construction, however, seems to have
+been rude; and the pillars especially--posts of palm, surrounded
+with wisps of rushes, and then plastered and painted--indicate a low
+condition of taste and a poor and coarse style of domestic architecture.
+
+The material used by the Babylonians in their constructions seems
+to have been almost entirely brick. Like the early Chaldaeans, they
+employed bricks of two kinds, both the ruder sun-dried sort, and the
+very superior kiln-baked article. The former, however, was only applied
+to platforms, and to the interior of palace mounds and of very thick
+walls, and was never made by the later people the sole material of a
+building. In every case there was at least a revetement of kiln-dried
+brick, while the grander buildings were wholly constructed of it. The
+baked bricks used were of several different qualities, and (within
+rather narrow limits) of different sizes. The finest quality of brick
+was yellow, approaching to our Stourbridge or fire-brick; another very
+hard kind was blue, approaching to black; the commoner and coarser
+sorts were pink or red, and these were sometimes, though rarely, but
+half-baked, in which case they were weak and friable. The shape was
+always square; and the dimensions varied between twelve and fourteen
+inches for the length and breadth, and between three and four inches
+for the thickness. [PLATE XVII., Fig. 1.] At the corners of buildings,
+half-bricks were used in the alternate rows, since otherwise the
+joinings must have been all one exactly over another. The bricks were
+always made with a mold, and were commonly stamped on one face with
+an inscription. They were, of course, ordinarily laid horizontally.
+Sometimes, however, there was a departure from this practice. Rows of
+bricks were placed vertically, separated from one another by single
+horizontal layers. This arrangement seems to have been regarded as
+conducing to strength, since it occurs only where there is an evident
+intention of supporting a weak construction by the use of special
+architectural expedients.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XVII.]
+
+
+The Babylonian builders made use of three different kinds of cement. The
+most indifferent was crude clay, or mud, which was mixed with chopped
+straw, to give it greater tenacity, and was applied in layers of
+extraordinary thickness. This was (it is probable) employed only where
+it was requisite that the face of the building should have a certain
+color. A cement superior to clay, but not of any very high value, unless
+as a preventive against damp, was bitumen, which was very generally used
+in basements and in other structures exposed to the action of water.
+Mortar, however, or lime cement was far more commonly employed than
+either of the others, and was of very excellent quality, equal indeed to
+the best Roman material.
+
+There can be no doubt that the general effect of the more ambitious
+efforts of the Babylonian architects was grand and imposing. Even now,
+in their desolation and ruin, their great size renders them impressive;
+and there are times and states of atmosphere under which they fill
+the beholder with a sort of admiring awe, akin to the feeling which is
+called forth by the contemplation of the great works of nature. Rude
+and inartificial in their idea and general construction, without
+architectural embellishment, without variety, without any beauty
+of form, they yet affect men by their mere mass, producing a direct
+impression of sublimity, and at the same time arousing a sentiment
+of wonder at the indomitable perseverance which from materials so
+unpromising could produce such gigantic results. In their original
+condition, when they were adorned with color, with a lavish display of
+the precious metals, with pictured representations of human life, and
+perhaps with statuary of a rough kind, they must have added to
+the impression produced by size a sense of richness and barbaric
+magnificence. The African spirit, which loves gaudy hues and costly
+ornament, was still strong among the Babylonians, even after they had
+been Semitized; and by the side of Assyria, her colder and more
+correct northern sister, Babylonia showed herself a true child of the
+south--rich, glowing, careless of the laws of taste, bent on provoking
+admiration by the dazzling brilliancy of her appearance.
+
+It is difficult to form a decided opinion as to the character of
+Babylonian mimetic art. The specimens discovered are so few, so
+fragmentary, and in some instances so worn by time and exposure, that
+we have scarcely the means of doing justice to the people in respect of
+this portion of their civilization. Setting aside the intaglios on
+seals and gems, which have such a general character of quaintness and
+grotesqueness, or at any rate of formality, that we can scarcely look
+upon many of them as the serious efforts of artists doing their best, we
+possess not half a dozen specimens of the mimetic art of the people in
+question. We have one sculpture in the round, one or two modelled clay
+figures, a few bas-reliefs, one figure of a king engraved on stone,
+and a few animal forms represented the same material. Nothing more has
+reached us but fragments of pictorial representations too small for
+criticism to pronounce upon, and descriptions of ancient writers too
+incomplete to be of any great value.
+
+The single Babylonian sculpture in the round which has come down to our
+times is the colossal lion standing over the prostrate figure of a
+man, which is still to be seen on the Kasr mound, as has been already
+mentioned. The accounts of travellers uniformly state that it is a work
+of no merit--either barbarously executed, or left unfinished by the
+sculptor--and probably much worn by exposure to the weather. A sketch
+made by a recent visitor and kindly communicated to the author, seems to
+show that, while the general form of the animal was tolerably well hit
+off, the proportions were in some respects misconceived, and the details
+not only rudely but incorrectly rendered. The extreme shortness of
+the legs and the extreme thickness of the tail are the most prominent
+errors; there is also great awkwardness in the whole representation of
+the beast’s shoulder. The head is so mutilated that it is impossible
+to do more than conjecture its contour. Still the whole figure is not
+without a certain air of grandeur and majesty. [PLATE XVII., Fig. 3.]
+
+The human appears to be inferior to the animal form. The prostrate man
+is altogether shapeless, and can never, it would seem, have been very
+much better than it is at the present time.
+
+Modelled figures in clay are of rare occurrence. The best is one figured
+by Ker Porter, which represents a mother with a child in her arms. The
+mother is seated in a natural and not ungraceful attitude on a rough
+square pedestal. She is naked except for a hood, or mantilla, which
+covers the head, shoulders, and back, and a narrow apron which hangs
+down in front. She wears earrings and a bracelet. The child, which
+sleeps on her left shoulder, wears a shirt open in front, and a short
+but full tunic, which is gathered into plaits. Both figures are in
+simple and natural taste, but the limbs of the infant are somewhat too
+thin and delicate. The statuette is about three inches and a half high,
+and shows signs of having been covered with a tinted glaze. [PLATE
+XVII., Fig. 2.]
+
+The single figure of a king which we possess is clumsy and ungraceful.
+It is chiefly remarkable for the elaborate ornamentation of the
+head-dress and the robes, which have a finish equal to that of the best
+Assyrian specimens. The general proportions are not bad; but the form is
+stiff, and the drawing of the right hand is peculiarly faulty, since it
+would be scarcely possible to hold arrows in the manner represented.
+[PLATE XVIII., Fig. 2.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VXIII.]
+
+
+The engraved animal forms have a certain amount of merit. The figure
+of a dog sitting, which is common on the “black stones,” is drawn with
+spirit; [PLATE XVIII., Fig. 1.] and a bird, sometimes regarded as a
+cock, but more resembling a bustard, is touched with a delicate hand,
+and may be pronounced superior to any Assyrian representation of the
+feathered tribe. [PLATE XVIII., Fig. 3.] The hound on a bas-relief,
+given in the first volume of this work, is also good; and the cylinders
+exhibit figures of goats, cows, deer, and even monkeys, which are
+truthful and meritorious. [PLATE XIX., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XIX.]
+
+
+It has been observed that the main characteristic of the engravings
+on gems and cylinders, considered as works of mimetic art, is their
+quaintness and grotesqueness. A few specimens, taken almost at random
+from the admirable collection of M. Felix Lajard, will sufficiently
+illustrate this feature. In one the central position is occupied by
+a human figure whose left arm has two elbow-joints, while towards the
+right two sitting figures threaten one another with their fists, in the
+upper quarter, and in the lower two nondescript animals do the same with
+their jaws. [PLATE XVIII., Fig. 4.] The entire drawing of this design
+seems to be intentionally rude. The faces of the main figures are
+evidently intended to be ridiculous; and the heads of the two animals
+are extravagantly grotesque. On another cylinder three nondescript
+animals play the principal part. One of them is on the point of taking
+into his mouth the head of a man who vainly tries to escape by flight.
+Another, with the head of a pike, tries to devour the third, which has
+the head of a bird and the body of a goat. This kind intention seems to
+be disputed by a naked man with a long beard, who seizes the fish-headed
+monster with his right hand, and at the same time administers from
+behind a severe kick with his right foot. The heads of the three main
+monsters, the tail and trousers of the principal one, and the whole of
+the small figure in front of the flying man, are exceedingly quaint, and
+remind one of the pencil of Fuseli. [PLATE XIX., Fig. 3.] The third of
+the designs approaches nearly to the modern caricature. It is a drawing
+in two portions. The upper line of figures represents a procession of
+worshippers who bear in solemn state their offerings to a god. In the
+lower line this occupation is turned to a jest. Nondescript animals
+bring with a serio-comic air offerings which consist chiefly of game,
+while a man in a mask seeks to steal away the sacred tree from the
+temple wherein the scene is enacted. [PLATE XIX., Fig. 4.]
+
+It is probable that the most elaborate and most artistic of the
+Babylonian works of art were of a kind which has almost wholly perished.
+What bas-relief was to the Assyrian, what painting is to moderns, that
+enamelling upon brick appears to have been to the people of Babylon. The
+mimetic power, which delights in representing to itself the forms and
+actions of men, found a vent in this curious byway of the graphic
+art; and the images of the Chaldaeans, portrayed upon the wall, with
+vermilion, and other hues, formed the favorite adornment of palaces and
+public buildings, at once employing the artist, gratifying the taste of
+the native connoisseur, and attracting the admiration of the foreigner.
+
+The artistic merit of these works can only be conjectured. The
+admiration of the Jews, or even that of Diodorus, who must be viewed
+here as the echo of Ctesias, is no sure test; for the Jews were a people
+very devoid of true artistic appreciation; and Ctesias was bent on
+exaggerating the wonders of foreign countries to the Greeks. The fact of
+the excellence of Assyrian art at a somewhat earlier date lends however
+support to the view that the wall-painting of the Babylonians had some
+real artistic excellence. We can scarcely suppose that there was any
+very material difference, in respect of taste and aesthetic power,
+between the two cognate nations, or that the Babylonians under
+Nebuchadnezzar fell very greatly short of the Assyrians under
+Asshur-bani-pal. It is evident that the same subjects--war scenes and
+hunting scenes--approved themselves to both people; and it is likely
+that their treatment was not very different. Even in the matter
+of color, the contrast was not sharp nor strong; for the Assyrians
+partially colored their bas-reliefs.
+
+Tho tints chiefly employed by the Babylonians in their colored
+representations were white, blue, yellow, brown, and black. The blue was
+of different shades, sometimes bright and deep, sometimes exceedingly
+pale. The yellow was somewhat dull, resembling our yellow ochre. The
+brown was this same hue darkened. In comparatively rare instances the
+Babylonians made use of a red, which they probably obtained with some
+difficulty. Objects were colored, as nearly as possible, according to
+their natural tints--water a light blue, ground yellow, the shafts of
+spears black, lions a tawny brown, etc. No attempt was made to shade
+the figures or the landscape, much less to produce any general effect
+by means of _chiaroscuro_; but the artist trusted for his effect to
+a careful delineation of forms, and a judicious arrangement of simple
+hues.
+
+Considerable metallurgic knowledge and skill were shown in the
+composition of the pigments, and the preparation and application of
+the glaze wherewith they are covered. The red used was a sub-oxide of
+copper; the yellow was sometimes oxide of iron, sometimes antimoniate of
+lead--the Naples yellow of modern artists; the blue was either cobalt or
+oxide of copper; the white was oxide of tin. Oxide of load was added in
+some cases, not as a coloring matter, but as a flux, to facilitate the
+fusion of the glaze. In other cases the pigment used was covered with a
+vitreous coat of an alkaline silicate of alumina.
+
+The pigments were not applied to an entirely flat surface. Prior to the
+reception of the coloring matter and the glaze, each brick was modelled
+by the hand, the figures being carefully traced out, and a slight
+elevation given to the more important objects. A very low bas-relief was
+thus produced, to which the colors were subsequently applied, and the
+brick was then baked in the furnace.
+
+It is conjectured that the bricks were not modelled singly and
+separately. A large mass of clay was (it is thought) taken, sufficient
+to contain a whole subject, or at any rate a considerable portion of
+a subject. On this the modeller made out his design in low relief. The
+mass of clay was then cut up into bricks, and each brick was taken and
+painted separately with the proper colors, after which they were all
+placed in the furnace and baked. When baked, they were restored to their
+original places in the design, a thin layer of the finest mortar serving
+to keep them in place.
+
+From the mimetic art of the Babylonians, and the branches of knowledge
+connected with it, we may now pass to the purely mechanical arts--as the
+art by which hard stones were cut, and those of agriculture, metallurgy,
+pottery, weaving, carpet-making, embroidery, and the like.
+
+The stones shaped, bored, and engraved by Babylonian artisans were
+not merely the softer and more easily worked kinds, as alabaster,
+serpentine, and lapis-lazuli, but also the harder sorts-cornelian,
+agate, quartz, jasper, sienite, loadstone, and green felspar or
+amazon-stone. These can certainly not have been cut without emery, and
+scarcely without such devices as rapidly revolving points, or discs, of
+the kind used by modern lapidaries. Though the devices are in general
+rude, the work is sometimes exceedingly delicate, and implies a complete
+mastery over tools and materials, as well as a good deal of artistic
+power. As far as the mechanical part of the art goes, the Babylonians
+may challenge comparison with the most advanced of the nations of
+antiquity; they decidedly excel the Egyptians, and fall little, if at
+all, short of the Greeks and Romans.
+
+The extreme minuteness of the work in some of the Babylonian seals and
+gems raises a suspicion that they must have been engraved by the help of
+a powerful magnifying-glass. A lens has been found in Assyria; and there
+is much reason to believe that the convenience was at least as well
+known in the lower country. Glass was certainly in use, and was cut into
+such shapes as were required. It is at any rate exceedingly likely that
+magnifying-glasses, which were undoubtedly known to the Greeks in the
+time of Aristophanes, were employed by the artisans of Babylon during
+the most flourishing period of the Empire.
+
+Of Babylonian metal-work we have scarcely any direct means of judging.
+The accounts of ancient authors imply that the Babylonians dealt freely
+with the material, using gold and silver for statues, furniture, and
+utensils, bronze for gates and images, and iron sometimes for the
+latter. We may assume that they likewise employed bronze and iron for
+tools and weapons, since those metals were certainly so used by the
+Assyrians. Lead was made of service in building; where iron was also
+employed, if great strength was needed. The golden images are said to
+have been sometimes solid, in which case we must suppose them to have
+been cast in a mold; but undoubtedly in most cases the gold was a mere
+external covering, and was applied in plates, which were hammered into
+shape upon some cheaper substance below. Silver was no doubt used
+also in plates, more especially when applied externally to walls, or
+internally to the woodwork of palaces; but the silver images, ornamental
+figures, and utensils of which we hear, were most probably solid. The
+bronze works must have been remarkable. We are told that both the town
+and the palace gates were of this material, and it is implied that the
+latter were too heavy to be opened in the ordinary manner. Castings
+on an enormous scale would be requisite for such purposes; and the
+Babylonians must thus have possessed the art of running into a single
+mold vast masses of metal. Probably the gates here mentioned were
+solid; but occasionally, it would seem, the Babylonians had gates of a
+different kind, composed of a number of perpendicular bars, united by
+horizontal ones above and below [as in PLATE XIX., Fig. 2.]. They had
+also, it would appear, metal gateways of a similar character.
+
+The metal-work of personal ornaments, such as bracelets and armlets, and
+again that of dagger handles, seems to have resembled the work of the
+Assyrians.
+
+Small figures in bronze were occasionally cast by the Babylonians, which
+were sometimes probably used as amulets, while perhaps more generally
+they wore mere ornaments of houses, furniture, and the like. Among these
+may be noticed figures of dogs in a sitting posture, much resembling the
+dog represented among the constellations, figures of men, grotesque
+in character, and figures of monsters. An interesting specimen, which
+combines a man and a monster, was found by Sir R. Ker Porter at Babylon.
+[PLATE XX., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XX.]
+
+
+The pottery of the Babylonians was of excellent quality, and is scarcely
+to be distinguished from the Assyrian, which it resembles alike in form
+and in material. The bricks of the best period were on the whole better
+than any used in the sister country, and may compare for hardness and
+fineness with the best Roman. The earthenware is of a fine terra-cotta,
+generally of a light red color, and slightly baked, but occasionally of
+a yellow hue, with a tinge of green. It consists of cups, jars, vases,
+and other vessels. They appear to have been made upon the wheel, and
+are in general unornamented. From representations upon the cylinders, it
+appears that the shapes were often elegant. Long and narrow vases with
+thin necks seem to have been used for water vessels; these had rounded
+or pointed bases, and required therefore the support of a stand. Thin
+jugs were also in use, with slight elegant handles. It is conjectured
+that sometimes modelled figures may have been introduced at the sides as
+handles to the vases; but neither the cylinders nor the extant remains
+confirm this supposition. The only ornamentation hitherto observed
+consists in a double band which seems to have been carried round some of
+the vases in an incomplete spiral. The vases sometimes have two handles;
+but they are plain and small, adding nothing to the beauty of the
+vessels. Occasionally the whole vessel is glazed with a rich blue color.
+[PLATE XX., Fig. 3.]
+
+The Babylonians certainly employed glass for vessels for a small size.
+They appear not to have been very skilful blowers, since their bottles
+are not unfrequently misshappen. [PLATE XX., Fig. 3.] They generally
+stained their glass with, some coloring matter, and occasionally
+ornamented it with a ribbing. Whether they were able to form masses
+of glass of any considerable size, whether they used it, like the
+Egyptians, for beads and bugles, or for mosaics, is uncertain. If we
+suppose a foundation in fact for Pliny’s story of the great emerald (?)
+presented by a king of Babylon to an Egyptian Pharaoh, we must conclude
+that very considerable masses of glass were produced by the Babylonians,
+at least occasionally; for the said emerald, which can scarcely have
+been of any other material, was four cubits (or six feet) long and three
+cubits (or four and a half feet) broad.
+
+Of all the productions of the Babylonians none obtained such, high
+repute in ancient times as their textile fabrics. Their carpets
+especially were of great celebrity, and were largely exported to foreign
+countries. They were dyed of various colors, and represented objects
+similar to those found on the gems, as griffins and such like monsters.
+Their position in the ancient world may be compared to that which is
+now borne by the fabrics of Turkey and Persia, which are deservedly
+preferred to those of all other countries.
+
+Next to their carpets, the highest, character was borne by their
+muslins. Formed of the finest cotton, and dyed of the most brilliant
+colors, they seemed to the Oriental the very best possible material for
+dress. The Persian kings preferred them for their own wear; and they
+had an early fame in foreign countries at a considerable distance from
+Babylonia. It is probable that they were sometimes embroidered with
+delicate patterns, such as those which may be seen on the garments of
+the early Babylonian kings.
+
+Besides woollen and cotton fabrics, the Babylonians also manufactured
+a good deal of linen cloth, the principal seat of the manufacture being
+Borsippa. This material was produced, it is probable, chiefly for home
+consumption, long linen robes being generally worn by the people.
+
+From the arts of the Babylonians we may now pass to their science--an
+obscure subject, but one which possesses more than common interest. If
+the classical writers were correct in their belief that Chaldaea was
+the birthplace of Astronomy, and that their own astronomical science was
+derived mainly from this quarter, it must be well worth inquiry what the
+amount of knowledge was which the Babylonians attained on the subject,
+and what were the means whereby they made their discoveries.
+
+On the broad flat plains of Chaldsea, where the entire celestial
+hemisphere is continually visible to every eye, and the clear
+transparent atmosphere shows night after night the heavens gemmed with
+countless stars, each shining with a brilliancy unknown in our moist
+northern climes, the attention of man was naturally turned earlier than
+elsewhere to these luminous bodies, and attempts were made to grasp, and
+reduce to scientific form, the array of facts which nature presented to
+the eye in a confused and tangled mass. It required no very long course
+of observation to acquaint men with a truth, which at first sight none
+would have suspected--namely, that the luminous points whereof the sky
+was full were of two kinds, some always maintaining the same position
+relatively to one another, while others were constantly changing their
+places, and as it were wandering about the sky. It is certain that the
+Babylonians at a very early date distinguished from the fixed stars
+those remarkable five, which, from their wandering propensities, the
+Greeks called the “planets,” and which are the only erratic stars that
+the naked eye, or that even the telescope, except at a very high power,
+can discern. With these five they were soon led to class the Moon, which
+was easily observed to be a wandering luminary, changing her place among
+the fixed stars with remarkable rapidity. Ultimately, it came to be
+perceived that the Sun too rose and set at different parts of the year
+in the neighborhood of different constellations, and that consequently
+the great luminary was itself also a wanderer, having a path in the sky
+which it was possible, by means of careful observation, to mark out.
+
+But to do this, to mark out with accuracy the courses of the Sun and
+Moon among the fixed stars, it was necessary, or at least convenient, to
+arrange the stars themselves into groups. Thus, too, and thus only, was
+it possible to give form and order to the chaotic confusion in which
+the stars seem at first sight to lie, owing to the irregularity of
+their intervals, the difference in their magnitude, and their apparent
+countlessness. The most uneducated eye, when raised to the starry
+heavens on a clear night, fixes here and there upon groups of stars: in
+the north, Cassiopeia, the Great Bear, the Pleiades--below the Equator,
+the Southern Cross--must at all times have impressed those who beheld
+them with a certain sense of unity. Thus the idea of a “constellation”
+ is formed; and this once done, the mind naturally progresses in the same
+direction, and little by little the whole sky is mapped out into certain
+portions or districts to which names are given--names taken from some
+resemblance, real or fancied, between the shapes of the several groups
+and objects familiar to the early observers. This branch of practical
+astronomy is termed “uranography” by moderns; its utility is very
+considerable; thus and thus only can we particularize the individual
+stars of which we wish to speak; thus and thus only can we retain in
+our memory the general arrangement of the stars and their positions
+relatively to each other.
+
+There is reason to believe that in the early Babylonian astronomy
+the subject of uranography occupied a prominent place. The Chaldaean
+astronomers not only seized on and named those natural groups which
+force themselves upon the eye, but artificially arranged the whole
+heavens into a certain number of constellations or asterisms. The very
+system of uranography which maintains itself to the present day on our
+celestial globes and maps, and which is still acknowledged--albeit under
+protest--in the nomenclature of scientific astronomers, came in all
+probability from this source, reaching us from the Arabians, who took
+it from the Greeks who derived it from the Babylonians. The Zodiacal
+constellations at any rate, or those through which the sun’s course lies
+would seem to have had this origin; and many of them may be distinctly
+recognized on Babylonian monuments which are plainly of a stellar
+character. The accompanying representation, taken from a conical black
+stone in the British Museum [PLATE XX., Fig. 2.], and belonging to the
+twelfth century before our era, is not perhaps, strictly speaking, a
+zodiac, but it is almost certainly an arrangement of constellations
+according to the forms assigned them in Babylonian uranography. [PLATE
+XXI.] The Ram, the Bull, the Scorpion, the Serpent, the Dog, the Arrow,
+the Eagle or Vulture may all be detected on the stone in question, as
+may similar forms variously arranged on other similar monuments.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXI.]
+
+
+The Babylonians called the Zodiacal constellations the “Houses of the
+Sun,” and distinguished from them another set of asterisms, which they
+denominated the “Houses of the Moon.” As the Sun and Moon both move
+through the sky in nearly the same plane, the path of the Moon merely
+crossing and recrossing that of the Sun, but never diverging from it
+further than a few degrees, it would seem that these “Houses of the
+Moon,” or lunar asterisms, must have been a division of the Zodiacal
+stars different from that employed with respect to the sun, either
+in the number of the “Houses,” or in the point of separation between
+“House” and “House.”
+
+The Babylonians observed and calculated eclipses; but their power of
+calculation does not seem to have been based on scientific knowledge,
+nor to have necessarily implied sound views as to the nature of eclipses
+or as to the size, distance, and real motions of the heavenly bodies.
+The knowledge which they possessed was empirical. Their habits of
+observation led them to discover the period of 223 lunations or 18 years
+10 days, after which eclipses--especially those of the the moon--recur
+again in the same order. Their acquaintance with this cycle would enable
+them to predict lunar eclipses with accuracy for many ages, and solar
+eclipses without much inaccuracy for the next cycle or two.
+
+That the Babylonians carefully noted and recorded eclipses is witnessed
+by Ptolemy, who had access to a continuous series of such observations
+reaching back from his own time to B.C. 747. Five of these--all eclipses
+of the moon--were described by Hipparchus from Babylonian sources, and
+are found to answer all the requirements of modern science. They belong
+to the years B.C. 721, 720, 621, and 523. One of them, that of B.C. 721,
+was total at Babylon. The others were partial, the portion of the moon
+obscured varying from one digit to seven.
+
+There is no reason to think that the observation of eclipses by the
+Babylonians commenced with Nabonassar. Ptolemy indeed implies that the
+series extant in his day went no higher; but this is to be accounted for
+by the fact, which Berosus mentioned, that Nabonassar destroyed, as
+far as he was able, the previously existing observations, in order that
+exact chronology might commence with his own reign.
+
+Other astronomical achievements of the Babylonians were the following.
+They accomplished a catalogue of the fixed stars, of which the Greeks
+made use in compiling their stellar tables. They observed and recorded
+their observations upon occultations of the planets by the sun and moon.
+They invented the _gnomon_ and the _polos_, two kinds of sundial, by
+means of which they were able to measure time during the day, and to
+fix the true length of the solar day, with sufficient accuracy. They
+determined correctly within a small fraction the length of the synodic
+revolution of the moon. They knew that the true length of the solar
+year was 365 days and a quarter, nearly. They noticed comets, which they
+believed to be permanent bodies, revolving in orbits like those of
+the planets, only greater. They ascribed eclipses of the sun to the
+interposition of the moon between the sun and the earth. They had
+notions not far from the truth with respect to the relative distance
+from the earth of the sun, moon, and planets. Adopting, as was natural,
+a geocentric system, they decided that the Moon occupied the position
+nearest to the earth; that beyond the Moon was Mercury, beyond Mercury
+Venus, beyond Venus Mars, beyond Mars Jupiter, and beyond Jupiter, in
+the remotest position of all, Saturn. This arrangement was probably
+based upon a knowledge, more or less exact, of the periodic times which
+the several bodies occupy in their (real or apparent) revolutions. From
+the difference in the times the Babylonians assumed a corresponding
+difference in the size of the orbits, and consequently a greater or less
+distance from the common centre.
+
+Thus far the astronomical achievements of the Babylonians rest upon
+the express testimony of ancient writers--a testimony confirmed in many
+respects by the monuments already deciphered. It is suspected that, when
+the astronomical tablets which exist by hundreds in the British Museum
+come to be thoroughly understood, it will be found that the acquaintance
+of the Chaldaean sages with astronomical phenomena, if not also with
+astronomical laws, went considerably beyond the point at which we should
+place it upon the testimony of the Greek and Roman writers. There is
+said to be distinct evidence that they observed the four satellites of
+Jupiter, and strong reason to believe that they were acquainted likewise
+with the seven satellites of Saturn. Moreover, the general laws of the
+movements of the heavenly bodies seem to have been so far known to
+them that they could state by anticipation the position of the various
+planets throughout the year.
+
+In order to attain the astronomical knowledge which they seem to have
+possessed, the Babylonians must undoubtedly have employed a certain
+number of instruments. The invention of sun-dials, as already observed,
+is distinctly assigned to them. Besides these contrivances for measuring
+time during the day, it is almost certain that they must have possessed
+means of measuring time during the night. The clepsydra, or water-clock,
+which was in common use among the Greeks as early as the fifth century
+before our era, was probably introduced into Greece from the East,
+and is likely to have been a Babylonian invention. The astrolabe, an
+instrument for measuring the altitude of stars above the horizon, which
+was known to Ptolemy, may also reasonably be assigned to them. It has
+generally been assumed that they were wholly ignorant of the telescope.
+But if the satellites of Saturn are really mentioned, as it is thought
+that they are, upon some of the tablets, it will follow--strange as it
+may seem to us--that the Babylonians possessed optical instruments of
+the nature of telescopes, since it is impossible, even in the clear and
+vapor-loss sky of Chaldaea, to discern the faint moons of that distant
+planet without lenses. A lens, it must be remembered, with a fair
+magnifying power, has been discovered among the Mesopotamian ruins.
+A people ingenious enough to discover the magnifying-glass would be
+naturally led on to the invention of its opposite. When once lenses
+of the two contrary kinds existed, the elements of a telescope were in
+being. We could not assume from these data that the discovery was made;
+but if it shall ultimately be substantiated that bodies invisible to the
+naked eye were observed by the Babylonians, we need feel no difficulty
+in ascribing to them the possession of some telescopic instrument.
+
+The astronomical zeal of the Babylonians was in general, it must be
+confessed, no simple and pure love of an abstract science. A school of
+pure astronomers existed among them; but the bulk of those who engaged
+in the study undoubtedly pursued it in the belief that the heavenly
+bodies had a mysterious influence, not only upon the seasons, but upon
+the lives and actions of men--an influence which it was possible to
+discover and to foretell by prolonged and careful observation. The
+ancient writers, Biblical and other, state this fact in the strongest
+way; and the extant astronomical remains distinctly confirm it.
+The great majority of the tablets are of an astrological character,
+recording the supposed influence of the heavenly bodies, singly, in
+conjunction, or in opposition, upon all sublunary affairs, from the fate
+of empires to the washing of hands or the paring of nails. The modern
+prophetical almanac is the legitimate descendant and the sufficient
+representative of the ancient Chaldee Ephemeris, which was just as
+silly, just as pretentious, and just as worthless.
+
+The Chaldee astrology was, primarily and mainly, genethlialogical.
+It inquired under what aspect of the heavens persons were born, or
+conceived, and, from the position of the celestial bodies at one or
+other of these moments, it professed to deduce the whole life and
+fortunes of the individual. According to Diodorus, it was believed
+that a particular star or constellation presided over the birth of each
+person, and thenceforward exercised over his life a special malign or
+benignant influence. But his lot depended, not on this star alone, but
+on the entire aspect of the heavens at a certain moment. To cast the
+horoscope was to reproduce this aspect, and then to read by means of it
+the individual’s future.
+
+Chaldee astrology, was not, however, limited to genethlialogy. The
+Chaldaeans professed to predict from the stars such things as the
+changes of the weather, high winds and storms, great heats, the
+appearance of comets, eclipses, earthquakes, and the like. They
+published lists of luck and unlucky days, and tables showing what aspect
+of the heavens portended good or evil to particular countries. Curiously
+enough, it appears that they regarded their art as locally limited to
+the regions inhabited by themselves and their kinsmen, so that while
+they could boldly predict storm, tempest, failing or abundant crops,
+war, famine, and the like, for Syria, Babylonia, and Susiana, they could
+venture on no prophecies with respect to other neighboring lands, as
+Persia, Media, Armenia.
+
+A certain amount of real meteorological knowledge was probably mixed
+up with the Chaldaean astrology. Their calendars, like modern almanacs,
+boldly predicted the weather for fixed days in the year. They must
+also have been mathematicians to no inconsiderable extent, since their
+methods appear to have been geometrical. It is said that the Greek
+mathematicians often quoted with approval the works of their Chaldaean
+predecessors, Ciden, Naburianus, and Sudinus. Of the nature and extent
+of their mathematical acquirements, no account, however, can be given,
+since the writers who mention them enter into no details on the subject.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. MANNERS AND CUSTOMS.
+
+
+“Girded with girdles upon their loins, exceeding in dyed attire upon
+their heads, all of them princes to look to, after the manner of the
+Babylonians of Chaldaea, the land of their nativity.”--Ezek. xxiii. 15.
+
+
+The manners and customs of the Babylonians, though not admitting of that
+copious illustration from ancient monuments which was found possible in
+the case of Assyria, are yet sufficiently known to us, either from the
+extant remains or from the accounts of ancient writers of authority, to
+furnish materials for a short chapter. Herodotus, Strabo, Diodorus, and
+Nicolas of Damascus, present us with many interesting traits of this
+somewhat singular people; the sacred writers contemporary with the acme
+of the nation add numerous touches; while the remains, though scanty,
+put distinctly and vividly before our eyes a certain number of curious
+details.
+
+Herodotus describes with some elaboration the costume of the Babylonians
+in his day. He tells us that they wore a long linen gown reaching down
+to their feet, a woollen gown or tunic above this, a short cloak or cape
+of a white color, and shoes like those of the Boeotians. Their hair they
+allowed to grow long, but confined it by a head-band or a turban; and
+they always carried a walking-stick with a carving of some kind on
+the handle. This portraiture, it is probable, applies to the richer
+inhabitants of the capital, and represents the Babylonian gentleman
+of the fifth century before our era, as he made his appearance in the
+streets of the metropolis.
+
+The cylinders seem to show that the ordinary Babylonian dress was
+less complicated. The worshipper who brings an offering to a god is
+frequently represented with a bare head, and wears apparently but
+one garment, a tunic generally ornamented with a diagonal fringe, and
+reaching from the shoulder to a little above the knee. The tunic is
+confined round the waist by a belt. [PLATE XXII., Fig. 1.] Richer
+worshippers, who commonly present a goat, have a fillet or headband, not
+a turban, round the head. They wear generally the same sort of tunic
+as the others; but over it they have a long robe, shaped like a modern
+dressing-gown, except that it has no sleeves, and does not cover the
+right shoulder. [PLATE XXII., Fig. 1.] In a few instances only we see
+underneath this open gown a long inner dress or robe, such as that
+described by Herodotus. [PLATE XXII., Fig. 2.] A cape or tippet of the
+kind which he describes is worn sometimes by a god, but is never seen,
+it is believed, in any representation of a mortal.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXII.]
+
+
+The short tunic, worn by the poorer worshippers, is seen also in a
+representation (hereafter to be given) of hunters attacking a lion. A
+similar garment is worn by the man--probably a slave--who accompanies
+the dog, supposed to represent an Indian hound; and also by a warrior,
+who appears on one of the cylinders conducting six foreign captives.
+[PLATE XXII., Fig. 4.] There is consequently much reason to believe that
+such a tunic formed the ordinary costume of the common people, as it
+does at present of the common Arab inhabitants of the country. It left
+the arms and right shoulder bare, covering only the left. Below the belt
+it was not made like a frock but lapped over in front, being in fact
+not so much a garment as a piece of cloth wrapped round the body.
+Occasionally it is represented as patterned; but this is somewhat
+unusual. [PLATE XXII., Fig. 3.]
+
+In lieu of the long robe reaching to the feet, which seems to have
+been the ordinary costume of the higher classes, we observe sometimes
+a shorter, but still a similar garment--a sort of coat without sleeves,
+fringed down both sides, and reaching only a little below the knee. The
+worshippers who wear this robe have in most cases the head adorned with
+a fillet. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXIII.]
+
+
+It is unusual to find any trace of boots or shoes in the representations
+of Babylonians. A shoe patterned with a sort of check work was worn
+by the king; and soldiers seem to have worn a low boot in their
+expeditions. But with rare exceptions the Babylonians are represented
+with bare feet on the monuments; and if they commonly wore shoes in the
+time of Herodotus, we may conjecture that they had adopted the practice
+from the example of the Medes and Persians. A low boot, laced in front,
+was worn by the chiefs of the Susianians. Perhaps the “peculiar shoe” of
+the Babylonians was not very different. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 1.]
+
+The girdle was an essential feature of Babylonian costume, common to
+high and low, to the king and to the peasant. It was a broad belt,
+probably of leather, and encircled the waist rather high up. The warrior
+carried his daggers in it; to the common man it served the purpose of
+keeping in place the cloth which he wore round his body. According to
+Herodotus, it was also universal in Babylonia to carry a seal and a
+walking-stick.
+
+Special costumes, differing considerably from those hitherto described,
+distinguished the king and the priests. The king wore a long gown,
+somewhat scantily made, but reaching down to the ankles, elaborately
+patterned and fringed. Over this, apparently, he had a close-fitting
+sleeved vest, which came down to the knees, and terminated in a set of
+heavy tassels. The girdle was worn outside the outer vest, and in war
+the monarch carried also two cross-belts, which perhaps supported his
+quiver. The upper vest was, like the under one, richly adorned with
+embroidery. From it, or from the girdle, depended in front a single
+heavy tassel attached by a cord, similar to that worn by the early kings
+of Assyria.
+
+Tho tiara of the monarch was very remarkable. It was of great height,
+nearly cylindrical, but with a slight tendency to swell out toward the
+crown, which was ornamented with a row of feathers round its entire
+circumference. The space below was patterned with rosettes, sacred
+trees, and mythological figures. From the centre of the crown there rose
+above the feathers a projection resembling in some degree the projection
+which distinguishes the tiara of the Assyrian kings, the rounded, and
+not squared, at top. This head-dress, which has a heavy appearance, was
+worn low on the brow, and covered nearly all the back of the head. It
+can scarcely have been composed of a heaver material than cloth or felt.
+Probably it was brilliantly colored.
+
+The monarch wore bracelets, but (apparently) neither necklaces nor
+earrings. Those last are assigned by Nicolas of Damascus to a Babylonian
+governor; and they were so commonly used by the Assyrians that we
+can scarcely suppose them unknown to their kindred and neighbors. The
+Babylonian monuments, however, contain no traces of earrings as worn by
+men, and only a few doubtful ones of collars or necklaces; whence we
+may at any rate conclude that neither were worn at all generally.
+The bracelets which encircle the royal wrist resemble the most common
+bracelet of the Assyrians, consisting of a plain band, probably of
+metal, with a rosette in the centre.
+
+The dress of the priests was a long robe or gown, flounced and striped,
+over which they seem to have worn an open jacket of a similar character.
+A long scarf or riband depended from behind down their backs. They
+carried on their heads an elaborate crown or mitre, which is assigned
+also to many of the gods. In lieu of this mitre, we find sometimes,
+though rarely, a horned cap; and, in one or two instances, a mitre of a
+different kind. In all sacrificial and ceremonial acts the priests seem
+to have worn their heads covered. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 6.]
+
+On the subject of the Babylonian military costume our information is
+scanty and imperfect. In the time of Herodotus the Chaldaeans seem to
+have had the same armature as the Assyrians--namely, bronze helmets,
+linen breastplates, shields, spears, daggers, and maces or clubs; and,
+at a considerably earlier date, we find in Scripture much the same
+arms, offensive and defensive, assigned them. There is, however, one
+remarkable difference between the Biblical account and that given by
+Herodotus. The Greek historian says nothing of the use of bows by the
+Chaldaeans; while in Scripture the bow appears as their favorite weapon,
+that which principally renders them formidable. The monuments are on
+this point thoroughly in accordance with Scripture. The Babylonian king
+already represented carries a bow and two arrows. The soldier conducting
+captives has a bow an arrow, and a quiver. A monument of an earlier
+date, which is perhaps rather Proto-Chaldaean than pure Babylonian, yet
+which has certain Babylonian characteristics, makes the arms of a king
+a bow and arrow, a club (?), and a dagger. In the marsh fights of
+the Assyrians, where their enemies are probably Chaldaeans of the low
+country, the bow is the sole weapon which we see in use.
+
+The Babylonian bow nearly resembles the ordinary curved bow of the
+Assyrians. It has a knob at either extremity, over which the string
+passes, and is thicker towards the middle than at the two ends; the bend
+is slight, the length when strung less than four feet. [PLATE XXIII.,
+Fig. 2.] The length of the arrow is about three feet. It is carefully
+notched and feathered, and has a barbed point. The quiver, as
+represented in the Assyrian sculptures, has nothing remarkable about
+it; but the single extant Babylonian representation makes it terminate
+curiously with a large ornament resembling a spearhead. It is difficult
+to see the object of this appendage, which must have formed no
+inconsiderable addition to the weight of the quiver. [PLATE XXIII., Fig.
+3.]
+
+Babylonian daggers were short, and shaped like the Assyrian; but their
+handles were less elegant and less elaborately ornamented. They were
+worn in the girdle (as they are at the present day in all eastern
+countries) either in pairs or singly. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 3.]
+
+Other weapons of the Babylonians, which we may be sure they used in
+war, though the monuments do not furnish any proof of the fact, were the
+spear and the bill or axe. These weapons are exhibited in combination
+upon one of the most curious of the cylinders, where a lion is disturbed
+in his meal off an ox by two rustics, one of whom attacks him in front
+with a spear, while the other seizes his tail and assails him in the
+rear with an axe. [PI. XXIII., Fig. 5.] With the axe here represented
+may be compared another, which is found on a clay tablet brought from
+Sinkara, and supposed to belong to the early Chaldaean period.30 The
+Sinkara axe has a simple square blade: the axe upon the cylinder has a
+blade with long curved sides and a curved edge; while, to balance the
+weight of the blade, it has on the lower side three sharp spikes. The
+difference between the two implements marks the advance of mechanical
+art in the country between the time of the first and that of the fourth
+monarchy. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 4.]
+
+Babylonian armies seem to have been composed, like Assyrian, of three
+elements--infantry, cavalry, and chariots. Of the chariots we appear
+to have one or two representations upon the cylinders, but they are too
+rudely carved to be of much value. It is not likely that the chariots
+differed much either in shape or equipment from the Assyrian, unless
+they were, like those of Susiana, ordinarily drawn by mules. A peculiar
+car, four-wheeled, and drawn by four horses, with an elevated platform
+in front and a seat behind for the driver, which the cylinders
+occasionally exhibit, is probably not a war-chariot, but a sacred
+vehicle, like the tensa or thensa of the Romans. [PLATE XXIV., Fig. 2.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXIV.]
+
+
+The Prophet Habakkuk evidently considered the cavalry of the Babylonians
+to be their most formidable arm. “They are terrible and dreadful,” he
+said; “from them shall proceed judgment and captivity; their horses
+also are swifter than the leopards, and are more fierce than the evening
+wolves; and their horsemen shall spread themselves, and their horsemen
+shall come from far; they shall fly, as the eagle that hasteth to
+eat.” Similarly Ezekiel spoke of the “desirable young men, captains
+and rulers, great lords and renowned; all of them riding upon horses,”
+ Jeremiah couples the horses with the chariots, as if he doubted whether
+the chariot force or the cavalry were the more to be dreaded. “Behold,
+he shall come up as clouds, and his chariot shall be as a whirlwind; his
+horses are swifter than eagles. Woe unto us! for we are spoiled.” In the
+army of Xerxes the Babylonians seem to have served only on foot, which
+would imply that they were not considered in that king’s time to furnish
+such good cavalry as the Persians, Medes, Cissians, Indians, and
+others, who sent contingents of horse. Darius, however, in the Behistun
+inscription, speaks of Babylonian horsemen; and the armies which overran
+Syria, Palestine, and Egypt, seem to have consisted mainly of horse.
+The Babylonian armies, like the Persian, were vast hosts, poorly
+disciplined, composed not only of native troops, but of contingents
+from the subject nations, Cissians, Elamites, Shuhites, Assyrians, and
+others. They marched with vast noise and tumult, spreading themselves
+far and wide over the country which they were invading, plundering
+and destroying on all sides. If their enemy would consent to a pitched
+battle, they were glad to engage with him; but, more usually, their
+contests resolved themselves into a succession of sieges, the bulk of
+the population attacked retreating to their strongholds, and offering
+behind walls a more or less protracted resistance. The weaker towns were
+assaulted with battering-rams; against the stronger, mounds were raised,
+reaching nearly to the top of the walls, which were then easily scaled
+or broken down. A determined persistence in sieges seems to have
+characterized this people, who did not take Jerusalem till the third,
+nor Tyre till the fourteenth year.
+
+In expeditions it sometimes happened that a question arose as to the
+people or country next to be attacked. In such cases it appears that
+recourse was had to divination, and the omens which were obtained
+decided whither the next effort of the invader should be directed.
+Priests doubtless accompanied the expeditions to superintend the
+sacrifices and interpret them on such occasions. According to Diodorus,
+the priests in Babylonia were a caste, devoted to the service of the
+native deities and the pursuits of philosophy, and held in high honor by
+the people. It was their business to guard the temples and serve at
+the altars of the gods, to explain dreams and prodigies, to understand
+omens, to read the warnings of the stars, and to instruct men how to
+escape the evils threatened in those various ways, by purifications,
+incantations, and sacrifices. They possessed a traditional knowledge
+which had come down from father to son, and which none thought of
+questioning. The laity looked up to them as the sole possessors of a
+recondite wisdom of the last importance to humanity.
+
+With these statements of the lively but inaccurate Sicilian those of the
+Book of Daniel are very fairly, if not entirely, in accordance. A class
+of “wise men” is described as existing at Babylon, foremost among whom
+are the Chaldaeans; they have a special “learning,” and (as it would
+seem) a special “tongue;” their business is to expound dreams and
+prodigies; they are in high favor with the monarch, and are often
+consulted by him. This body of “wise men” is subdivided into four
+classes--“Chaldaeans, magicians, astrologers, and soothsayers”--a
+subdivision which seems to be based upon difference of occupation. It is
+not distinctly stated that they are priests; nor does it seem that
+they were a caste; for Jews are enrolled among their number, and Daniel
+himself is made chief of the entire body. But they form a very distinct
+order, and constitute a considerable power in the state; they have
+direct communication with the monarch, and they are believed to possess,
+not merely human learning, but a supernatural power of predicting future
+events. High civil office is enjoyed by some of their number.
+
+Notices agreeing with these, but of less importance, are contained in
+Herodotus and Strabo. Herodotus speaks of the Chaldaeans as “priests;”
+ Strabo says that they were “philosophers,” who occupied themselves
+principally in astronomy. The latter writer mentions that they were
+divided into sects, who differed one from another in their doctrines. He
+gives the names of several Chaldaeans whom the Greek mathematicians
+were in the habit of quoting. Among them is a Seleucus, who by his name
+should be a Greek.
+
+From these various authorities we may assume that there was in Babylon,
+as in Egypt, and in later Persia, a distinct priest class, which enjoyed
+high consideration. It was not, strictly speaking, a caste. Priests
+may have generally brought up their sons to the occupation; but other
+persons, even foreigners (and if foreigners, then _a fortiori_ natives),
+could be enrolled in the order, and attain its highest privileges.
+It was at once a sacerdotal and a learned body. It had a literature,
+written in peculiar language, which its members were bound to study.
+This language and this literature were probably a legacy from the old
+times of the first (Turano-Cushite) kingdom, since even in Assyria it
+is found that the literature was in the main Turanian, down to the very
+close of the empire. Astronomy, astrology, and mythology were no doubt
+the chief subjects which the priests studied; but history, chronology,
+grammar, law, and natural science most likely occupied some part of
+their attention. Conducting everywhere the worship of the gods, they
+were of course scattered far and wide through the country; but they had
+certain special seats of learning, corresponding perhaps in some sort to
+our universities, the most famous of which were Erech or Orchoe (Warka),
+and Borsippa, the town represented by the modern Birs-i-Nimrud. They
+were diligent students, not wanting in ingenuity, and not content merely
+to hand down the wisdom of their ancestors. Schools arose among them;
+and a boldness of speculation developed itself akin to that which we
+find among the Greeks. Astronomy, in particular, was cultivated with a
+good deal of success; and stores were accumulated of which the Greeks in
+later times understood and acknowledged the value.
+
+In social position the priest class stood high. They had access to the
+monarch: they were feared and respected by the people; the offerings of
+the faithful made them wealthy; their position as interpreters of the
+divine will secured them influence. Being regarded as capable of civil
+employment, they naturally enough obtained frequently important offices,
+which added to their wealth and consideration.
+
+The mass of the people in Babylonia were employed in the two pursuits
+of commerce and agriculture. The commerce was both foreign and domestic.
+Great numbers of the Babylonians were engaged in the manufacture of
+those textile fabrics, particularly carpets and muslins, which Babylonia
+produced not only for her own use, but also for the consumption of
+foreign countries. Many more must have been employed as lapidaries in
+the execution of those delicate engravings on hard stone, wherewith the
+seal, which every Babylonian carried, was as a matter of course adorned.
+The ordinary trades and handicrafts practised in the East no doubt
+flourished in the country. A brisk import and export trade was
+constantly kept up, and promoted a healthful activity throughout the
+entire body politic. Babylonia is called “a land of traffic” by
+Ezekiel, and Babylon “a city of merchants.” Isaiah says “theory of the
+Chaldaeans” was “in their ships.” The monuments show that from very
+early times the people of the low country on the borders of the Persian
+Gulf were addicted to maritime pursuits, and navigated the gulf freely,
+if they did not even venture on the open ocean. And AEschylus is a
+witness that the nautical character still attached to the people after
+their conquest by the Persians; for he calls the Babylonians in the army
+of Xerxes “navigators of ships.”
+
+The Babylonian import trade, so far as it was carried on by themselves,
+seems to have been chiefly with Arabia, with the islands in the Persian
+Gulf, and directly or indirectly with India. From Arabia they must have
+imported the frankincense which they used largely in their religious
+ceremonies; from the Persian Gulf they appear to have derived pearls,
+cotton, and wood for walking sticks from India they obtained dogs and
+several kinds of gems. If we may believe Strabo, they had a colony
+called Gerrha, most favorably situated on the Arabian coast of the gulf,
+which was a great emporium, and conducted not only the trade between
+Babylonia and the regions to the south, but also that which passed
+through Babylonia into the more nothern districts. The products of the
+various countries of Western Asia flowed into Babylonia down the courses
+of the rivers. From Armenia, or rather Upper Mesopotamia, came wine,
+gems, emery, and perhaps stone for building; from Phoenicia, by way
+of Palmyra and Thapsacus, came tin, perhaps copper, probably musical
+instruments, and other objects of luxury; from Media and the countries
+towards the east came fine wool, lapis-lazuli, perhaps silk, and
+probably gold and ivory. But these imports seem to have been brought to
+Babylonia by foreign merchants rather than imported by the exertions of
+native traders. The Armenians, the Phoenicians, and perhaps the Greeks,
+used for the conveyance of their goods the route of the Euphrates. The
+Assyrians, the Paretaceni, and the Medes probably floated theirs down
+the Tigris and its tributaries.
+
+A large-probably the largest-portion of the people must have been
+engaged in the occupations of agriculture. Babylonia was, before all
+things, a grain-producing country--noted for a fertility unexampled
+elsewhere, and to moderns almost incredible. The soil was a deep and
+rich alluvium, and was cultivated with the utmost care. It grew chiefly
+wheat, barley millet, and sesame, which all nourished with wonderful
+luxuriance. By a skilful management of the natural water supply, the
+indispensable fluid was utilized to the utmost, and conveyed to every
+part of the country. Date-groves spread widely over the land, and
+produced abundance of an excellent fruit.
+
+For the cultivation of the date nothing was needed but a proper water
+supply, and a little attention at the time of fructification. The male
+and female palm are distinct trees, and the female cannot produce fruit
+unless the pollen from the male comes in contact with its blossoms. If
+the male and the female trees are grown in proper proximity, natural
+causes will always produce a certain amount of impregnation. But
+to obtain a good crop, art may be serviceably applied. According to
+Herodotus, the Babylonians were accustomed to tie the branches of
+the male to those of the female palm. This was doubtless done at the
+blossoming time, when it would have the effect he mentions, preventing
+the fruit of the female, or date-producing palms, from falling off.
+
+The date palm was multiplied in Babylonia by artificial means. It was
+commonly grown from seed, several stones being planted together for
+greater security; But occasionally it was raised from suckers or
+cuttings. It was important to plant the seeds and cuttings in a sandy
+soil; and if nature had not sufficiently impregnated the ground with
+saline particles, salt had to be applied artificially to the soil
+around as a dressing. The young plants needed a good deal of attention.
+Plentiful watering was required; and transplantation was desirable at
+the end of both the first and second year. The Babylonians are said
+to have transplanted their young trees in the height of summer; other
+nations preferred the springtime.
+
+For the cultivation of grain the Babylonians broke up their land with
+the plough; to draw which they seem to have employed two oxen, placed
+one before the other, in the mode still common in many parts of England.
+The plough had two handles, which the ploughman guided with his two
+hands. It was apparently of somewhat slight construction. The tail rose
+from the lower part of one of the handles, and was of unusual length.
+[PLATE XXIV., Fig. 3.]
+
+It is certain that dates formed the main food of the inhabitants, The
+dried fruit, being to them the staff of life, was regarded by the Greeks
+as their “bread.” It was perhaps pressed into cakes, as is the common
+practice in the country at the present day. On this and goat’s milk,
+which we know to have been in use, the poorer class, it is probable,
+almost entirely subsisted. Palm-wine, the fermented sap of the tree, was
+an esteemed, but no doubt only an occasional beverage. It was pleasant
+to the taste, but apt to leave a headache behind it. Such vegetables
+as gourds, melons, and cucumbers, must have been cheap, and may have
+entered into the diet of the common people. They were also probably the
+consumers of the “pickled bats,” which (according to Strabo) were eaten
+by the Babylonians.
+
+In the marshy regions of the south there were certain tribes whose
+sole, or at any rate whose chief, food was fish. Fish abound in these
+districts, and are readily taken either with the hook or in nets. The
+mode of preparing this food was to dry it in the sun, to pound it fine,
+strain it through a sieve, and then make it up into cakes, or into a
+kind of bread.
+
+The diet of the richer classes was no doubt varied and luxurious.
+Wheaten bread, meats of various kinds, luscious fruits, fish, game,
+loaded the board; and wine, imported from abroad was the usual beverage.
+The wealthy Babylonians were fond of drinking to excess; their banquets
+were magnificent, but generally ended in drunkenness; they were not,
+however, mere scenes of coarse indulgence, but had a certain refinement,
+which distinguishes them from the riotous drinking-bouts of the less
+civilized Modes. Music was in Babylonia a recognized accompaniment of
+the feast; and bands of performers, entering with the wine, entertained
+the guests with concerted pieces. A rich odor of perfume floated around,
+for the Babylonians were connoisseurs in unguents. The eye was delighted
+with a display of gold and silver plate. The splendid dresses of the
+guests, the exquisite carpets and hangings, the numerous attendants,
+gave an air of grandeur to the scene, and seemed half to excuse the
+excess of which too many were guilty.
+
+A love of music appears to have characterized both the Babylonians and
+their near neighbors and kinsmen, the Susianians. In the sculptured
+representations of Assyria, the Susianians are shown to have possessed
+numerous instruments, and to have organized large bands of performers.
+The Prophet Daniel and the historian Ctesias similarly witness to the
+musical taste of the Babylonians, which had much the same character.
+Ctesias said that Annarus (or Nannarus), a Babylonian noble, entertained
+his guests at a banquet with music performed by a company of 150 women.
+Of these a part sang, while the rest played upon instruments, some using
+the pipe, others the harp, and a certain number the psaltery. These same
+instruments are assigned to the Babylonians by the prophet Daniel, who,
+however, adds to them three more--viz., the horn, the sambuca, and an
+instrument called the sumphonia, or “symphony.” It is uncertain whether
+the horn intended was straight, like the Assyrian, or curved, like the
+Roman cornu and lituus. The pipe was probably the double instrument,
+played at the end, which was familiar to the Susianians and Assyrians.
+The harp would seem to have resembled the later harp of the Assyrians;
+but it had fewer strings, if we may judge from a representation upon
+a cylinder. Like the Assyrian, it was carried under one arm, and was
+played by both hands, one on either side of the strings. [PLATE XXV.,
+Fig. 3.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXV.]
+
+
+The character of the remaining instruments is more doubtful. The sambuca
+seems to have been a large harp, which rested on the ground, like the
+harps of the Egyptians. The psaltery was also a stringed instrument,
+and, if its legitimate descendant is the modern santour, we may presume
+that it is represented in the hands of a Susianian musician on the
+monument which is our chief authority for the Oriental music of the
+period. The symphonia is thought by some to be the bagpipe, which is
+called sampogna by the modern Italians: by others it is regarded as a
+sort of organ.
+
+The Babylonians used music, not merely in their private entertainments,
+but also in their religious ceremonies. Daniel’s account of their
+instruments occurs casually in his mention of Nebuchadnezzar’s
+dedication of a colossal idol of gold. The worshippers were to prostrate
+themselves before the idol as soon as they heard the music commence,
+and were probably to continue in the attitude of worship until the sound
+ceased.
+
+The seclusion of women seems scarcely to have been practised in
+Babylonia with as much strictness as in most Oriental countries. The
+two peculiar customs on which Herodotus descants at length--the public
+auction of the marriageable virgins in all the towns of the empire, and
+the religious prostitution authorized in the worship of Beltis--were
+wholly incompatible with the restraints to which the sex has commonly
+submitted in the Eastern world. Much modesty can scarcely have belonged
+to those whose virgin charms were originally offered in the public
+market to the best bidder, and who were required by their religion, at
+least once in their lives, openly to submit to the embraces of a man
+other than their husband. It would certainly seem that the sex had
+in Babylonia a freedom--and not only a freedom, but also a
+consideration--unusual in the ancient world, and especially rare in
+Asia. The stories of Semiramis and Nitocris may have in them no great
+amount of truth; but they sufficiently indicate the belief of the
+Greeks as to the comparative publicity allowed to their women by the
+Babylonians.
+
+The monuments accord with the view of Babylonian manners thus opened to
+us. The female form is not eschewed by the Chaldaean artists. Besides
+images of a goddess (Beltis or Ish-tar) suckling a child, which are
+frequent, we find on the cylinders numerous representations of women,
+engaged in various employments. Sometimes they are represented in a
+procession, visiting the shrine of a goddess, to whom they offer their
+petitions, by the mouth of one of their number, or to whom they bring
+their children for the purpose, probably, of placing them under her
+protection [PLATE XXV., Fig. 5.], sometimes they may be seen amusing
+themselves among birds and flowers in a garden, plucking the fruit from
+dwarf palms, and politely handing it to one another. [PLATE XXV., Fig.
+4.] Their attire is in every case nearly the same; they wear a long but
+scanty robe, reaching to the ankles, ornamented at the bottom with a
+fringe and apparently opening in front. The upper part of the dress
+passes over only one shoulder. It is trimmed round the top with a fringe
+which runs diagonally across the chest, and a similar fringe edges the
+dress down the front where it opens. A band or fillet is worn round the
+head, confining the hair, which is turned back behind the head, and tied
+by a riband, or else held up by the fillet.
+
+Female ornaments are not perceptible on the small figures of
+the cylinders; but from the modelled image in clay, of which a
+representation has been already given, we learn that bracelets and
+earrings of a simple character were worn by Babylonian women, if they
+were not by the men. On the whole, however, female dress seems to have
+been plain and wanting in variety, though we may perhaps suspect that
+the artists do not trouble themselves to represent very accurately such
+diversities of apparel as actually existed.
+
+From a single representation of a priestess it would seem that women
+of that class wore nothing but a petticoat, thus exposing not only the
+arms, but the whole of the body as far as the waist.
+
+The monuments throw a little further light on the daily life of the
+Babylonians. A few of their implements, as saws and hatchets, are
+represented. [PLATE XXV., Fig. 2]; and from the stools, the chairs, the
+tables, and stands for holding water-jars which occur occasionally on
+the cylinders, we may gather that the fashion of their furniture
+much resembled that of their northern neighbors, the Assyrians. It is
+needless to dwell on this subject, which presents no novel features,
+and has been anticipated by the discussion on Assyrian furniture in the
+first volume. The only touch that can be added to what was there said
+is that in Babylonia, the chief--almost the sole-material employed for
+furniture was the wood of the palm-tree, a soft and light fabric which
+could be easily worked, and which had considerable strength, but did not
+admit of a high finish.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. RELIGION.
+
+
+The Religion of the later Babylonians differed in so few respects from
+that of the early Chaldaeans, their predecessors in the same country,
+that it will be unnecessary to detain the reader with many observations
+on the subject. The same gods were worshipped in the same temples and
+with the same rites--the same cosmogony was taught and held--the same
+symbols were objects of religious regard--even the very dress of the
+priests was maintained unaltered; and, could Urukh or Chedorlaomer have
+risen from the grave and revisited the shrines wherein they sacrificed
+fourteen centuries earlier, they would have found but little to
+distinguish the ceremonies of their own day from those in vogue
+under the successors of Nabopolassar. Some additional splendor in the
+buildings, the idols, and perhaps the offerings, some increased use
+of music as a part of the ceremonial, some advance of corruption with
+respect to priestly impostures and popular religious customs might
+probably have been noticed; but otherwise the religion of Nabonidus and
+Belshazzar was that of Urukh and Ilgi, alike in the objects and the mode
+of worship, in the theological notions entertained and the ceremonial
+observances taught and practised.
+
+The identity of the gods worshipped during the entire period is
+sufficiently proved by the repair and restoration of the ancient temples
+under Nebuchadnezzar, and their re-dedication (as a general rule) to
+the same deities. It appears also from the names of the later kings and
+nobles, which embrace among their elements the old divine appellations.
+Still, together with this general uniformity, we seem to see a certain
+amount of fluctuation--a sort of fashion in the religion, whereby
+particular gods were at different times exalted to a higher rank in the
+Pantheon, and were sometimes even confounded with other deities commonly
+regarded as wholly distinct from them. Thus Nebuchadnezzar devoted
+himself in an especial way to Merodach, and not only assigned him titles
+of honor which implied his supremacy over all the remaining gods, but
+even identified him with the great Bel, the ancient tutelary god of the
+capital. Nabonidus, on the other hand, seems to have restored Bel to his
+old position, re-establishing the distinction between him and Merodach,
+and preferring to devote himself to the former.
+
+A similar confusion occurs between the goddesses Beltis and Nana or
+Ishtar, though this is not peculiar to the later kingdom. It may perhaps
+be suspected from such instances of connection and quasi-convertibility,
+that an esoteric doctrine, known to the priests and communicated by
+them to the kings, taught the real identity of the several gods and
+goddesses, who may have been understood by the better instructed to
+represent, not distinct and separate beings, but the several phases
+of the Divine Nature. Ancient polytheism had, it may be surmised, to a
+great extent this origin, the various names and titles of the Supreme,
+which designated His different attributes or the different spheres of
+His operation, coming by degrees to be misunderstood, and to pass, first
+with the vulgar, and at last with all but the most enlightened, for the
+appellations of a number of gods.
+
+The chief objects of Babylonian worship were Bel, Merodach, and Nebo.
+Nebo, the special deity of Borsippa, seems to have been regarded as a
+sort of powerful patron-saint under whose protection it was important
+to place individuals. During the period of the later kingdom, no divine
+element is so common in names. Of the seven kings who form the entire
+list, three certainly, four probably, had appellations composed with it.
+The usage extended from the royal house to the courtiers; and such names
+as Nebu-zar-adan, Samgar-Nebo, and Nebushazban, show the respect which
+the upper class of citizens paid to this god. It may even be suspected
+that when Nebuchadnezzar’s Master of the Eunuchs had to give Babylonian
+names to the young Jewish princes whom he was educating, he designed to
+secure for one of them this powerful patron, and consequently called
+him Abed-Nebo--the servant of Nebo--a name which the later Jews, either
+disdaining or not understanding, have corrupted into the Abed-nogo of
+the existing text.
+
+Another god held in peculiar honor by the Babylonians was Nergal.
+Worshipped at Cutha as the tutelary divinity of the town, he was also
+held in repute by the people generally. No name is more common on the
+cylinder seals. It is sometimes, though not often, an element in the
+names of men, as in “Nergal-shar-ezer, the Eab-mag,” and (if he be a
+different person) in Neriglissar, the king.
+
+Altogether, there was a strong local element in the religion of the
+Babylonians. Bel and Merodach were in a peculiar way the gods of
+Babylon, Nebo of Borsippa, Nergal of Cutha, the Moon of Ur or Hur,
+Beltis of Niffer, Hea or Hoa of Hit, Ana of Erech, the Sun of Sippara.
+Without being exclusively honored at a single site, the deities in
+question held the foremost place each in his own town. There especially
+was worship offered to them; there was the most magnificent of their
+shrines. Out of his own city a god was not greatly respected, unless by
+those who regarded him as their special personal protector.
+
+The Babylonians worshipped their gods indirectly, through images.
+Each shrine had at least one idol, which was held in the most pious
+reverence, and was in the minds of the vulgar identified with the god.
+It seems to have been believed by some that the actual idol ate and
+drank the offerings. Others distinguished between the idol and the god,
+regarding the latter as only occasionally visiting the shrine where he
+was worshipped. Even these last, however, held gross anthropomorphic
+views, since they considered the god to descend from heaven in order to
+hold commerce with the chief priestess. Such notions were encouraged by
+the priests, who furnished the inner shrine in the temple of Bel with a
+magnificent couch and a golden table, and made the principal priestess
+pass the night in the shrine on certain occasions.
+
+The images of the gods were of various materials. Some were of wood,
+others of stone, others again of metal; and these last were either
+solid or plated. The metals employed were gold, silver, brass, or rather
+bronze, and iron. Occasionally the metal was laid over a clay model.
+Sometimes images of one metal were overlaid with plates of another, as
+was the case with one of the great images of Bel, which was originally
+of silver but was coated with gold by Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+The worship of the Babylonians appears to have been conducted with much
+pomp and magnificence. A description has been already given of their
+temples. Attached to these imposing structures was, in every case, a
+body of priests; to whom the conduct of the ceremonies and the custody
+of the treasures were intrusted. The priests were married, and lived
+with their wives and children, either in the sacred structure itself,
+or in its immediate neighborhood. They were supported either by lands
+belonging to the temple, or by the offerings of the faithful. These
+consisted in general of animals, chiefly oxen and goats; but other
+valuables were no doubt received when tendered. The priest always
+intervened between the worshipper and the deities, presenting him to
+them and interceding with uplifted hands on his behalf.
+
+In the temple of Bel at Babylon, and probably in most of the other
+temples both there and elsewhere throughout the country, a great
+festival was celebrated once in the course of each year. We know little
+of the ceremonies with which these festivals were accompanied; but
+we may presume from the analogy of other nations that there were
+magnificent processions on these occasions, accompanied probably with
+music and dancing. The images of the gods were perhaps exhibited either
+on frames or on sacred vehicles. Numerous victims were sacrificed; and
+at Babylon it was customary to burn on the great altar in the precinct
+of Bel a thousand talents’ weight of frankincense. The priests no doubt
+wore their most splendid dresses; the multitude was in holiday costume;
+the city was given up to merry-making. Everywhere banquets were held. In
+the palace the king entertained his lords; in private houses there was
+dancing and revelling. Wine was freely drunk; passion Was excited; and
+the day, it must be feared, too often terminated in wild orgies, wherein
+the sanctions of religion were claimed for the free indulgence of the
+worst sensual appetites. In the temples of one deity excesses of this
+description, instead of being confined to rare occasions, seem to have
+been of every-day occurrence. Each woman was required once in her life
+to visit a shrine of Beltis, and there remain till some stranger cast
+money in her lap and took her away with him. Herodotus, who seems to
+have visited the disgraceful scene, describes it as follows. “Many women
+of the wealthier sort, who are too proud to mix with the others, drive
+in covered carriages to the precinct, followed by a goodly train of
+attendants, and there take their station. But the larger number seat
+themselves within the holy inclosure with wreaths of string about their
+heads--and here there is always a great crowd, some coming and others
+going. Lines of cord mark out paths in all directions among the woman;
+and the strangers pass along them to make their choice. A women who
+has once taken her seat is not allowed to return home till one of the
+strangers throws a silver coin into her lap, and takes her with
+him beyond the holy ground. When he throws the coin, he says these
+words--‘The goddess Mylitta (Beltis) prosper thee.’ The silver coin may
+be of any size; it cannot be refused; for that is forbidden by the law,
+since once thrown it is sacred. The woman goes with the first man who
+throws her money, and rejects no one. When she has gone with him, and
+so satisfied the goddess, she returns home; and from that time forth
+no gift, however great, will prevail with her. Such of the women as are
+tall and beautiful are soon released; but others, who are ugly, have to
+stay a long time before they can fulfil the law. Some have even waited
+three or four years in the precinct.” The demoralizing tendency of this
+religious prostitution can scarcely be overrated.
+
+Notions of legal cleanliness and uncleanliness, akin to those prevalent
+among the Jews, are found to some extent in the religious system of the
+Babylonians. The consummation of the marriage rite made both the man
+and the woman impure, as did every subsequent act of the same kind.
+The impurity was communicated to any vessel that either might touch. To
+remove it, the pair were required first to sit down before a censer of
+burning incense, and then to wash themselves thoroughly. Thus only could
+they re-enter into the state of legal cleanness. A similar impurity
+attached to those who came into contact with a human corpse. The
+Babylonians are remarkable for the extent to which they affected
+symbolism in religion. In the first place they attached to each god a
+special mystic number, which is used as his emblem and may even stand
+for his name in an inscription. To the gods of the First Triad-Ami, Bel,
+and Hea or Hoa--were assigned respectively the numbers 60, 50, and 40;
+to those of the Second Triad--the Moon, the Sun and the Atmosphere--were
+given the other integers, 30, 20, and 10 (or perhaps six). To Beltis was
+attached the number 15, to Nergal 12, to Bar or Nin (apparently) 40, as
+to Hoa; but this is perhaps doubtful. It is probable that every god,
+or at any rate all the principle deities, had in a similar way some
+numerical emblem. Many of these are, however, as yet undiscovered.
+
+Further, each god seems to have had one or more emblematic signs by
+which he could be pictorially symbolized. The cylinders are full of such
+forms, which are often crowded into every vacant space where room
+could be found for them. A certain number can be assigned definitely to
+particular divinities. Thus a circle, plain or crossed, designates the
+Sun-god, San or Shamas; a six-rayed or eight-rayed star the Sun-goddess,
+Gula or Anunit; a double or triple thunderbolt the Atmospheric god, Vul;
+a serpent probably Hoa; a naked female form Nana or Ishtar; a fish Bar
+or Nin-ip. But besides these assignable symbols, there are a vast number
+with regard to which we are still wholly in the dark. Among these may
+
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 229]
+
+
+tree, an ox, a bee, a spearhead. A study of the inscribed cylinders
+shows these emblems to have no reference to the god or goddess named
+in the inscription upon them. Each, apparently, represents a distinct
+deity; and the object of placing them upon a cylinder is to imply the
+devotion of the man whose seal it is to other deities besides those
+whose special servant he considers himself. A single cylinder sometimes
+contains as many as eight or ten such emblems. The principal temples
+of the gods had special sacred appellations. The great temple of Bel
+at Babylon was known as Bit-Saggath, that of the same god at Niffer as
+Kharris-Nipra. that of Beltis at Warka (Erech) as Bit-Ana, that of
+the sun at Sippara as Bit-Parra, that of Anunit at the same place as
+Bit-Ulmis, that of Nebo at Borsippa as Bit-Tsida, etc. It is seldom that
+these names admit of explanation. They had come down apparently from
+the old Chaldaean times, and belonged to the ancient (Turanian) form of
+speech; which is still almost unintelligible. The Babylonians themselves
+probably in few cases understood their meaning. They used the words
+simply as proper names, without regarding them as significative.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. HISTORY AND CHRONOLOGY.
+
+
+The history of the Babylonian Empire commences with Nabopolassar,
+who appears to have mounted the throne in the year B.C. 625; but to
+understand the true character of the kingdom which he set up, its
+traditions and its national spirit, we must begin at a far earlier date.
+We must examine, in however incomplete and cursory a manner, the middle
+period of Babylonian history, the time of obscurity and comparative
+insignificance, when the country was as a general rule, subject to
+Assyria, or at any rate played but a secondary part in the affairs of
+the East. We shall thus prepare the way for our proper subject, while at
+the same time we shall link on the history of the Fourth to that of
+the First Monarchy, and obtain a second line of continuous narrative,
+connecting the brilliant era of Cyaxares and Nebuchadnezzar with the
+obscure period of the first Cushite kings.
+
+It has been observed that the original Chaldaean monarchy lasted,
+under various dynasties from about B.C. 2400 to B.C. 1300, when it was
+destroyed by the Assyrians, who became masters of Babylonia under the
+first Tiglathi-Nin, and governed it for a short time from their own
+capital. Unable, however, to maintain this unity very long, they appear
+to have set up in the country an Assyrian dynasty, over which they
+claimed and sometimes exercised a kind of suzerainty, but which was
+practically independent and managed both the external and internal
+affairs of the kingdom at its pleasure. The first king of this dynasty
+concerning whom we have any information is a Nebuchadnezzar, who was
+contemporary with the Assyrian monarch Asshur-ris-ilim, and made two
+attacks upon his territories. The first of these was by the way of
+the Diyaleh and the outlying Zagros hills, the line taken by the great
+Persian military road in later times. The second was directly across the
+plain. If we are to believe the Assyrian historian who gives an account
+of the campaigns, both attacks were repulsed, and after his second
+failure the Babylonian monarch fled away into his own country hastily.
+We may perhaps suspect that a Babylonian writer would have told a
+different story. At any rate Asshur-ris-ilim was content to defend his
+own territories and did not attempt to retaliate upon his assailant. It
+was not till late in the reign of his son and successor, Tiglath-Pileser
+I., that any attempt was made to punish the Babylonians for their
+audacity. Then, however, that monarch invaded the southern kingdom,
+which had passed into the hands of a king named Merodach-iddin-akhi,
+probably a son of Nebuchadnezzar. After two years of fighting, in which
+he took Eurri-Galzu (Akkerkuf), the two Sipparas, Opis, and even
+Babylon itself, Tiglath-Pileser retired, satisfied apparently with his
+victories; but the Babylonian monarch was neither subdued nor daunted.
+Hanging on the rear of the retreating force, he harassed it by cutting
+off its baggage, and in this way he became possessed of certain Assyrian
+idols, which he carried away as trophies to Babylon. War
+continued between the two countries during the ensuing reigns of
+Merodach-shapik-ziri in Babylon and Asshur-bil-kala in Assyria, but with
+no important successes, so far as appears, on either side.
+
+The century during which these wars took place between Assyria and
+Babylonia, which corresponds with the period of the later Judges in
+Israel, is followed by an obscure interval, during which but little is
+known of either country. Assyria seems to have been at this time in
+a state of great depression. Babylonia, it may be suspected, was
+flourishing; but as our knowledge of its condition comes to us almost
+entirely through the records of the sister country, which here fail
+us, we can only obtain a dim and indistinct vision of the greatness now
+achieved by the southern kingdom. A notice of Asshur-izir-pal’s seems
+to imply that Babylon, during the period in question, enlarged her
+territories at the expense of Assyria, and another in Macrobius, makes
+it probable that she held communications with Egypt. Perhaps these two
+powers, fearing the growing strength of Assyria, united against her,
+and so checked for a while that development of her resources which they
+justly dreaded.
+
+However, after two centuries of comparative depression, Assyria once
+more started forward, and Babylonia was among the first of her neighbors
+whom she proceeded to chastise and despoil. About the year B.C. 880
+Asshur-izir-pal led an expedition to the south-east and recovered the
+territory which, had been occupied by the Babylonians during the period
+of weakness. Thirty years later, his son, the Black-Obelisk king, made
+the power of Assyria still more sensibly felt. Taking advantage of
+the circumstance that a civil war was raging in Babylonia between the
+legitimate monarch Merodach-sum-adin, and his young brother, he marched
+into the country, took a number of the towns, and having defeated and
+slain the pretender, was admitted into Babylon itself. From thence he
+proceeded to overrun Chaldaea, or the district upon the coast, which
+appears at this time to have been independent of Babylon, and governed
+by a number of petty kings. The Babylonian monarch probably admitted the
+suzerainty of the invader, but was not put to any tribute. The Chaldaean
+chiefs, however, had to submit to this indignity. The Assyrian monarch
+returned to his capital, having “struck terror as far as the sea.” Thus
+Assyrian influence was once more extended over the whole of the southern
+country, and Babylonia resumed her position of a secondary power,
+dependent on the great monarchy of the north.
+
+But she was not long allowed to retain even the shadow of an autonomous
+rule. In or about the year B.C. 821 the son and successor of the
+Black-Obelisk king, apparently without any pretext, made a fresh
+invasion of the country. Mero-dach-belatzu-ikm, the Babylonian monarch,
+boldly met him in the field, but was defeated in two pitched battles (in
+the latter of which he had the assistance of powerful allies) and was
+forced to submit to his antagonist. Babylon, it is probable, became at
+once an Assyrian tributary, and in this condition she remained till
+the troubles which came upon Assyria towards the middle of the eighth
+century B.C. gave an opportunity for shaking off the hated yoke. Perhaps
+the first successes were obtained by Pul, who, taking advantage of
+Assyria’s weakness under Asshur-dayan III. (ab. B.C. 770), seems to
+have established a dominion over the Euphrates valley and Western
+Mesopotamia, from which he proceeded to carry his arms into Syria and
+Palestine. Or perhaps Pul’s efforts merely, by still further weakening
+Assyria, paved the way for Babylon to revolt, and Nabonassar, who became
+king of Babylon in B.C. 747, is to be regarded as the re-establisher
+of her independence. In either case it is apparent that the recovery of
+independence was accompanied, or rapidly followed, by a disintegration
+of the country, which was of evil omen for its future greatness. While
+Nabonassar established himself at the head of affairs in Babylon, a
+certain Yakin, the father of Merodach-Baladan, became master of the
+tract upon the coast; and various princes, Nadina, Zakiru, and others,
+at the same time obtained governments, which they administered in their
+own name towards the north. The old Babylonian kingdom was broken up;
+and the way was prepared for that final subjugation which was ultimately
+affected by the Sargonids.
+
+Still, the Babylonians seemed to have looked with complacency on this
+period, and they certainly made it an era from which to date their later
+history. Perhaps, however, they had not much choice in this matter.
+Nabonassar was a man of energy and determination. Bent probably on
+obliterating the memory of the preceding period of subjugation, he
+“destroyed the acts of the kings who had preceded him;” and the result
+was that the war of his accession became almost necessarily the era from
+which subsequent events had to be dated.
+
+Nabonassar appears to have lived on friendly terms with Tiglath-Pileser,
+the contemporary monarch of Assyria, who early in his reign invaded the
+southern country, reduced several princes of the districts about Babylon
+to subjection, and forced Merodach-Baladan, who had succeeded his
+father, Yakin, in the low region, to become his tributary. No war seems
+to have been waged between Tiglath-Pileser and Nabonassar. The king of
+Babylon may have seen with satisfaction the humiliation of his immediate
+neighbors and rivals, and may have felt that their subjugation rather
+improved than weakened his own position. At any rate it tended to place
+him before the nation as their only hope and champion--the sole barrier
+which protected their country from a return of the old servitude.
+
+Nabonassar held the throne of Babylon for fourteen years, from B.C. 747
+to B.C. 733. It has generally been supposed that this period is the same
+with that regarded by Herodotus as constituting the reign of Semiramis.
+As the wife or as the mother of Nabonassar, that lady (according to
+many) directed the affairs of the Babylonian state on behalf of her
+husband or her son. The theory is not devoid of a certain plausibility,
+and it is no doubt possible that it may be true; but at present it is
+a mere conjecture, wholly unconfirmed by the native records; and we may
+question whether on the whole it is not more probable that the Semiramis
+of Herodotus is misplaced. In a former volume it was shown that a
+Semiramis flourished in Assyria towards the end of the ninth and the
+beginning of the eighth centuries B.C.---during the period, that is,
+of Babylonian subjection to Assyria. She may have been a Babylonian
+princess, and have exercised an authority in the southern capital. It
+would seem therefore to be more probable that she is the individual whom
+Herodotus intends, though he has placed her about half a century too
+late, than that there were two persons of the same name within so short
+a time, both queens, and both ruling in Mesopotamia.
+
+Nabonassar was succeeded in the year B.C. 733 by a certain Nadius,
+who is suspected to have been among the independent princes reduced
+to subjection by Tiglath-Pileser in his Babylonian expedition. Nadius
+reigned only two years--from B.C. 733 to B.C. 731--when he was succeeded
+by Ghinzinus and Porus, two princes whose joint rule lasted from
+B.C. 731 to B.C. 726. They were followed by an Elulseus, who has
+been identified with the king of that name called by Menander king of
+Tyre--the Luliya of the cuneiform inscriptions; but it is in the highest
+degree improbable that one and the same monarch should have borne sway
+both in Phoenicia and Chaldaea at a time when Assyria was paramount
+over the whole of the intervening country. Elulseus therefore must
+be assigned to the same class of utterly obscure monarchs with his
+predecessors, Porus, Chinzinus, and Nadius; and it is only with
+Merodach-Baladan, his successor, that the darkness becomes a little
+dispelled, and we once more see the Babylonian throne occupied by a
+prince of some reputation and indeed celebrity.
+
+Merodach-Baladan was the son of a monarch, who in the troublous times
+that preceded, or closely followed, the era of Nabonassar appears to
+have made himself master of the lower Babylonian territory--the true
+Chaldaea--and to have there founded a capital city, which he
+called after his own name, Bit-Yakin. On the death of his father
+Merodach-Baladan inherited this dominion; and it is here that we first
+find him, when, during the reign of Nabonassar, the Assyrians under
+Tiglath-Pileser II. invade the country. Forced to accept the position
+of Assyrian tributary under this monarch, to whom he probably looked
+for protection against the Babylonian king, Nabonassar, Merodach-Baladan
+patiently bided his time, remaining in comparative obscurity during the
+two reigns of Tiglath-Pileser and Shalmaneser his successor, and only
+emerging contemporaneously with the troubles which ushered in the
+dynasty of the Sargonids. In B.C. 721--the year in which Sargon made
+himself master of Nineveh--Merodach-Baladan extended his authority
+over the upper country, and was recognized as king of Babylon. Here he
+maintained himself for twelve years; and it was probably at some point
+of time within this space that he sent embassadors to Hezekiah at
+Jerusalem, with orders to inquire into the particulars of the curious
+astronomical marvel, or miracle, which had accompanied the sickness and
+recovery of that monarch. It is not unlikely that the embassy, whereof
+this was the pretext, had a further political object. Morodach-Baladan,
+aware of his inability to withstand singly the forces of Assyria, was
+probably anxious to form a powerful league against the conquering state,
+which threatened to absorb the whole of Western Asia into its dominion.
+Hezekiah received his advances favorably, as appears by the fact that he
+exhibited to him all his treasures. Egypt, we may presume, was cognizant
+of the proceedings, and gave them her support. An alliance, defensive if
+not also offensive, was probably concluded between Egypt and Judaea on
+the one hand, Babylon, Susiana, and the Aramaean tribes of the middle
+Euphrates on the other. The league would have been formidable but for
+one circumstance--Assyria lay midway between the allied states, and
+could attack either moiety of the confederates separately at her
+pleasure. And the Assyrian king was not slow to take advantage of his
+situation. In two successive years Sargon marched his troops against
+Egypt and against Babylonia, and in both directions carried all before
+him. In Egypt he forced Sabaco to sue for peace. In Babylonia (B.C.
+710) he gained a great victory over Merodach-Baladan and his allies,
+the Aramaeans and Susianians, took Bit-Yakin, into which the defeated
+monarch had thrown himself, and gained possession of his treasures and
+his person. Upon this the whole country submitted; Merodach-Baladan
+was carried away captive into Assyria; and Sargon himself, mounting the
+throne, assumed the title-rarely taken by an Assyrian monarch of “King
+of Babylon.”
+
+But this state of things did not continue long. Sargon died in the year
+B.C. 704, and coincident with his death we find a renewal of troubles in
+Babylonia. Assyria’s yoke was shaken off; various pretenders started
+up; a son of Sargon and brother of Sennacherib re-established Assyrian
+influence for a brief space; but fresh revolts followed. A certain
+Hagisa became king of Babylon for a month. Finally, Merodach-Baladan,
+again appeared upon the scene, having escaped from his Assyrian prison,
+murdered Hagisa, and remounted the throne from which he had been deposed
+seven years previously. But the brave effort to recover independence
+failed. Sennacherib in his second year, B.C. 703, descended upon
+Babylonia, defeated the army which Merodach-Baladan brought against him,
+drove that monarch himself into exile, after a reign of six months, and
+re-attached his country to the Assyrian crown. From this time to
+the revolt of Nabopolassar--a period of above three quarters of a
+century--Babylonia with few and brief intervals of revolt, continued
+an Assyrian fief. The assyrian kings governed her either by means
+of viceroys, such as Belibus, Regibelus, Mesesimordachus, and
+Saos-duchinus, or directly in their own persons, as was the case during
+the reign of Esarhaddon, and during the later years of Asshur-bani-pal.
+
+The revolts of Babylon during this period have been described at length
+in the history of Assyria. Two fall into the reign of Sennacherib,
+one into that of Asshur-bani-pal, his grandson. In the former,
+Merodach-Baladan, who had not yet given up his pretensions to the lower
+country, and a certain Susub, who was acknowledged as king at Babylon,
+were the leaders. In the latter, Saos-duchinus, the Assyrian viceroy,
+and brother of Asshur-bani-pal, the Assyrian king, seduced from
+his allegiance by the hope of making himself independent headed the
+insurrection. In each case the struggle was brief, being begun and
+ended within the year. The power of Assyria at this time so vastly
+preponderated over that of her ancient rival that a single campaign
+sufficed on each occasion of revolt to crush the nascent insurrection.
+
+A tabular view of the chronology of this period is appended.
+
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 237]
+
+
+Having thus briefly sketched the history of the kingdom of Babylon from
+its conquest by Tiglathi-Nin to the close of the long period of Assyrian
+predominance in Western Asia, we may proceed to the consideration of the
+“Empire.” And first, as to the circumstances of its foundation.
+
+When the Medes first assumed an aggressive attitude towards Assyria,
+and threatened the capital with a siege, Babylonia apparently remained
+unshaken in her allegiance. When the Scythian hordes spread themselves
+over Upper Mesopotamia and wasted with fire and sword the fairest
+regions under Assyrian rule, there was still no defection in this
+quarter. It was not till the Scythic ravages were over, and the Medes
+for the second time poured across Zagros into Adiabene, resuming the
+enterprise from which they had desisted at the time of the Scythic
+invasion, that the fidelity of the Southern people wavered.
+Simultaneously with the advance of the Medes against the Assyrian
+capital from the east, we hear of a force threatening it from the south,
+a force which can only have consisted of Susianians, of Babylonians,
+or of both combined. It is probable that the emissaries of Cyaxares had
+been busy in this region for some time before his second attack took
+place, and that by a concerted plan while the Medes debouched from the
+Zagros passes, the south rose in revolt and sent its hasty levies along
+the valley of the Tigris.
+
+In this strait the Assyrian king deemed it necessary to divide his
+forces and to send a portion against the enemy which was advancing from
+the south, while with the remainder he himself awaited the coming of the
+Medes. The troops detached for the former service he placed under the
+command of a certain Nabopolassar? (Nabu-pal-uzur), who was probably
+an Assyrian nobleman of high rank and known capacity. Nabopolassar had
+orders to proceed to Babylon, of which he was probably made viceroy, and
+to defend the southern capital against the rebels. We may conclude that
+he obeyed these orders so far as to enter Babylon and install himself
+in office; but shortly afterwards he seems to have made up his mind
+to break faith with his sovereign, and aim at obtaining for himself
+an independent kingdom out of the ruins of the Assyrian power. Having
+formed this resolve, his first step was to send an embassy to Cyaxares,
+and to propose terms of alliance, while at the same time he arranged
+a marriage between his own son, Nebuchadnezzar, and Amuhia, or Amyitis
+(for the name is written both ways), the daughter of the Median
+monarch.
+
+Cyaxares gladly accepted the terms offered; the young persons were
+betrothed; and Nabopolassar immediately led, or sent, a contingent of
+troops to join the Medes, who took an active part in the great siege
+which resulted in the capture and destruction of the Assyrian capital.
+
+A division of the Assyrian Empire between the allied monarchs followed.
+While Cyaxares claimed for his own share Assyria Proper and the various
+countries dependent on Assyria towards the north and the north-west,
+Nabopolassar was rewarded by his timely defection, not merely by
+independence but by the transfer to his government of Susiana on the
+one hand and of the valley of the Euphrates, Syria, and Palestine on
+the other. The transfer appears to have been effected quietly, the
+Babylonian yoke being peacefully accepted in lieu of the Assyrian
+without the necessity arising for any application of force. Probably
+it appeared to the subjects of Assyria, who had been accustomed to a
+monarch holding his court alternately at Nineveh and at Babylon, that
+the new power was merely a continuation of the old, and the monarch a
+legitimate successor of the old line of Ninevite kings.
+
+Of the reign of Nabopolassar the information which has come down to
+us is scanty. It appears by the canon of Ptolemy that he dated his
+accession to the throne from the year B.C. 625, and that his reign
+lasted twenty-one years, from B.C. 625 to B.C. 604. During the greater
+portion of this period the history of Babylon is a blank. Apparently the
+“golden city” enjoyed her new position at the head of an empire too much
+to endanger it by aggression; and, her peaceful attitude provoking no
+hostility, she was for a while left unmolested by her neighbors. Media,
+bound to her by formal treaty as well as by dynastic interests, could be
+relied upon as a firm friend; Persia was too weak, Lydia too remote, to
+be formidable; in Egypt alone was there a combination of hostile feeling
+with military strength such as might have been expected to lead speedily
+to a trial of strength; but Egypt was under the rule of an aged and wary
+prince, one trained in the school of adversity, whose years forbade his
+engaging in any distant enterprise, and whose prudence led him to think
+more of defending his own country than of attacking others. Thus, while
+Psammetichus lived, Babylon had little to fear from any quarter, and
+could afford to “give herself to pleasures and dwell carelessly.”
+
+The only exertion which she seems to have been called upon to make
+during her first eighteen years of empire resulted from the close
+connection which had been established between herself and Media.
+Cyaxares, as already remarked, proceeded from the capture of Nineveh to
+a long series of wars and conquests. In some, if not in all, of these he
+appears to have been assisted by the Babylonians, who were perhaps bound
+by treaty to furnish a contingent as often as he required it, Either
+Nabopolassar himself, or his son Nebuchadnezzar, would lead out the
+troops on such occasions; and thus the military spirit of both prince
+and people would be pretty constantly exercised.
+
+It was as the leader of such a contingent that Nabopolassar was able
+on one occasion to play the important part of peacemaker in one of the
+bloodiest of all Cyaxares’ wars. After five years’ desperate fighting
+the Medes and Lydians were once more engaged in conflict when an eclipse
+of the sun took place. Filled with superstitious dread the two armies
+ceased to contend, and showed a disposition for reconciliation, of which
+the Babylonian monarch was not slow to take advantage. Having consulted
+with Syennesis of Cilicia, the foremost man of the allies on the other
+side, and found him well disposed to second his efforts, he proposed
+that the sword should be returned to the scabbard, and that a conference
+should be held to arrange terms of peace. This timely interference
+proved effectual. A peace was concluded between the Lydians and the
+Medes, which was cemented by a royal intermarriage: and the result
+was to give to Western Asia, where war and ravage had long been almost
+perpetual, nearly half a century of tranquillity.
+
+Successful in his mediation, almost beyond his hopes, Nabopolassar
+returned from Asia Minor to Babylon. He was now advanced in years,
+and would no doubt gladly have spent the remainder of his days in
+the enjoyment of that repose which is so dear to those who feel the
+infirmities of age creeping upon them. But Providence had
+ordained otherwise. In B.C. 610--probably the very year of the
+eclipse--Psammetichus died, and was succeeded by his son Neco, who was
+in the prime of life and who in disposition was bold and enterprising.
+This monarch very shortly after his accession cast a covetous eye upon
+Syria, and in the year B.C. 608, having made vast preparations, he
+crossed his frontier and invaded the territories of Nabopolassar.
+Marching along the usual route, by the _Shephilah_ and the plain of
+Esdraelon, he learned, when he neared Megiddo, that a body of troops was
+drawn up at that place to oppose him, Josiah, the Jewish king, regarding
+himself as bound to resist the passage through his territories of an
+army hostile to the monarch of whom he held his crown, had collected his
+forces, and, having placed them across the line of the invader’s march,
+was calmly awaiting in this position the approach of his master’s enemy.
+Neco hereupon sent ambassadors to persuade Josiah to let him pass,
+representing that he had no quarrel with the Jews, and claiming a
+divine sanction to his undertaking. But nothing could shake the Jewish
+monarch’s sense of duty; and Neco was consequently forced to engage with
+him, and to drive his troops from their position. Josiah, defeated and
+mortally wounded, returned to Jerusalem, where he died. Neco pressed
+forward through Syria to the Euphrates; and carrying all before him,
+established his dominion over the whole tract lying between Egypt on
+the one hand, and the “Great River” upon the other. On his return three
+months later he visited Jerusalem, deposed Jehoahaz, a younger son of
+Josiah, whom the people had made king, and gave the crown to Jehoiakim,
+his elder brother. It was probably about this time that he besieged and
+took Gaza, the most important of the Philistine towns next to Ashdod.
+
+The loss of this large and valuable territory did not at once arouse the
+Babylonian monarch from his inaction or induce him to make any effort
+for its recovery. Neco enjoyed his conquests in quiet for the space
+of at least three full years. At length, in the year B.C. 605,
+Nabopolassar, who felt himself unequal to the fatigues of a campaign,
+resolved to entrust his forces to Nebuchadnezzar, his son, and to send
+him to contend with the Egyptians. The key of Syria at this time was
+Carchemish, a city situated on the right bank of the Euphrates, probably
+near the site which was afterwards occupied by Hierapolis. Here
+the forces of Neco were drawn up to protect his conquests, and here
+Nebuchadnezzar proceeded boldly to attack them. A great battle was
+fought in the vicinity of the river, which was utterly disastrous to the
+Egyptians, who “fled away” in confusion, and seem not to have ventured
+on making a second stand. Nebuchadnezzar rapidly recovered the lost
+territory, received the submission of Jehoiakim, king of Judah, restored
+the old frontier line, and probably pressed on into Egypt itself, hoping
+to cripple or even to crush his presumptuous adversary. But at this
+point he was compelled to pause. News arrived from Babylon that
+Nabopolassar was dead; and the Babylonian prince, who feared a disputed
+succession, having first concluded a hasty arrangement with Neco,
+returned at his best speed to his capital.
+
+Arriving probably before he was expected, he discovered that his fears
+were groundless. The priests had taken the direction of affairs during
+his absence, and the throne had been kept vacant for him by the Chief
+Priest, or Head of the Order. No pretender had started up to dispute his
+claims. Doubtless his military prestige, and the probability that the
+soldiers would adopt his cause, had helped to keep back aspirants; but
+perhaps it was the promptness of his return, as much as anything, that
+caused the crisis to pass off without difficulty.
+
+Nebuchadnezzar is the great monarch of the Babylonian Empire, which,
+lasting only 88 years--from B.C. 625 to B.C. 538--was for nearly half
+the time under his sway. Its military glory is due chiefly to him, while
+the constructive energy, which constitutes its especial characteristic,
+belongs to it still more markedly through his character and genius.
+It is scarcely too much to say that, but for Nebuchadnezzar, the
+Babylonians would have had no place in history. At any rate, their
+actual place is owing almost entirely to this prince, who to the
+military talents of an able general added a grandeur of artistic
+conception and a skill in construction which place him on a par with the
+greatest builders of antiquity.
+
+We have no complete, or even general account of Nebuchadnezzar’s wars.
+Our chief, our almost sole, information concerning them is derived from
+the Jewish writers. Consequently, those wars only which interested these
+writers, in other words those whose scene is Palestine or its immediate
+vicinity, admit of being placed before the reader. If Nebuchadnezzar had
+quarrels with the Persians, or the Arabians, or the Medes, or the tribes
+in Mount Zagros, as is not improbable, nothing is now known of their
+course or issue. Until some historical document belonging to his time
+shall be discovered, we must be content with a very partial knowledge
+of the external history of Babylon during his reign. We have a tolerably
+full account of his campaigns against the Jews, and some information
+as to the general course of the wars which he carried on with Egypt and
+Phoenicia; but beyond these narrow limits we know nothing.
+
+It appears to have been only a few years after Nebuchadnezzar’s
+triumphant campaign against Neco that renewed troubles broke out in
+Syria. Phoenicia revolted under the leadership of Tyre; and about the
+same time Jehoiakim, the Jewish king, having obtained a promise of aid
+from the Egyptians, renounced his allegiance. Upon this, in his seventh
+year (B.C. 598), Nebuchadnezzar proceeded once more into Palestine
+at the head of a vast army, composed partly of his allies, the Medes,
+partly of his own subjects. He first invested Tyre; but, finding that
+city too strong to be taken by assault, he left a portion of his army to
+continue the siege, while he himself pressed forward against Jerusalem.
+On his near approach, Jehoiakim, seeing that the Egyptians did not care
+to come to his aid, made his submission; but Nebuchadnezzar punished his
+rebellion with death, and, departing from the common Oriental practice,
+had his dead body treated with indignity. At first he placed upon the
+throne Jehoia-chin, the son of the late monarch, a youth of eighteen;
+but three months later, becoming suspicious (probably not without
+reason) of this prince’s fidelity, he deposed him and had him brought
+a captive to Babylon, substituting in his place his uncle, Zedekiah,
+a brother of Jehoiakim and Jehoahaz. Meanwhile the siege of Tyre was
+pressed, but with little effect. A blockade is always tedious; and the
+blockade of an island city, strong in its navy, by an enemy unaccustomed
+to the sea, and therefore forced to depend mainly upon the assistance of
+reluctant allies, must have been a task of such extreme difficulty that
+one is surprised it was not given up in despair. According to the Tyrian
+historians their city resisted all the power of Nebuchadnezzar for
+thirteen years. If this statement is to be relied on, Tyre must have
+been still uncaptured, when the time came for its sister capital to make
+that last effort for freedom in which it perished.
+
+After receiving his crown from Nebuchadnezzar, Zedekiah continued for
+eight years to play the part of a faithful vassal. At length, however,
+in the ninth year, he fancied he saw a way to independence. A young and
+enterprising monarch, Uaphris--the Apries of Herodotus--had recently
+mounted the Egyptian throne. If the alliance of this prince could be
+secured, there was, Zedekiah thought, a reasonable hope that the yoke
+of Babylon might be thrown off and Hebrew autonomy re-established. The
+infatuated monarch did not see that, do what he would, his country
+had no more than a choice of masters, that by the laws of political
+attraction Judaea must gravitate to one or other of the two great
+states between which it had the misfortune of lying. Hoping to free his
+country, he sent ambassadors to Uaphris, who were to conclude a treaty
+and demand the assistance of a powerful contingent, composed of both
+foot and horse. Uaphris received the overture favorably; and Zedekiah at
+once revolted from Babylon, and made preparations to defend himself with
+vigor. It was not long before the Babylonians arrived. Determined to
+crush the daring state, which, weak as it was, had yet ventured to
+revolt against him now for the fourth time, Nebuchadnezzar came in
+person, “he and all his host,” against Jerusalem, and after overcoming
+and pillaging the open country, “built forts” and besieged the city.
+Uaphris, upon this, learning the danger of his ally, marched out of
+Egypt to his relief; and the Babylonian army, receiving intelligence
+of his approach, raised the siege and proceeded in quest of their new
+enemy. According to Josephus a battle was fought, in which the Egyptians
+were defeated; but it is perhaps more probable that they avoided an
+engagement by a precipitate retreat into their own country. At any
+rate the attempt effectually to relieve Jerusalem failed. After a brief
+interval the siege was renewed; a complete blockade was established; and
+in a year and a half from the time of the second investment, the city
+fell.
+
+Nebuchadnezzar had not waited to witness this success of his arms.
+The siege of Tyre was still being pressed at the date of the second
+investment of Jerusalem, and the Chaldaean monarch had perhaps thought
+that his presence on the borders of Phoenicia was necessary to animate
+his troops in that quarter. If this was his motive in withdrawing from
+the Jewish capital, the event would seem to have shown that he judged
+wisely. Tyre, if it fell at the end of its thirteen years’ siege,
+must have been taken in the very year which followed the capture of
+Jerusalem, B.C. 585. We may suppose that Nebuchadnezzar, when he quitted
+Jerusalem and took up his abode at Eiblah in the Coele-Syrian valley,
+turned his main attention to the great Phoenician city, and made
+arrangements which caused its capture in the ensuing year.
+
+The recovery of these two important cities secured to the Babylonian
+monarch the quiet possession thenceforth of Syria and Palestine. But
+still he had not as yet inflicted any chastisement upon Egypt; though
+policy, no less than honor, required that the aggressions of this
+audacious power should be punished. If we may believe Josephus, however,
+the day of vengeance was not very long delayed. Within four years of the
+fall of Tyre, B.C. 581, Nebuchadnezzar, he tells us, invaded Egypt, put
+Uaphris, the monarch who had succored Zedekiah, to death, and placed
+a creature of his own upon the throne. Egyptian history, it is true,
+forbids our accepting this statement as correct in all its particulars.
+Uaphris appears certainly to have reigned at least as late as B.C.
+569, and according to Herodotus, he was put to death, not by a foreign
+invader, but by a rebellious subject. Perhaps we may best harmonize the
+conflicting statements on the subject by supposing that Josephus has
+confounded two distinct invasions of Egypt, one made by Nebuchadnezzar
+in his twenty-third year, B.C. 581, which had no very important
+consequences, and the other eleven years later, B.C. 570, which
+terminated in the deposition of Uaphris, and the establishment on
+the throne of a new king, Amasis, who received a nominal royalty from
+Chaldaean monarch.
+
+Such--as far as they are known--were the military exploits of this great
+king. He defeated Neco, recovered Syria, crushed rebellion in Judaea,
+took Tyre, and humiliated Egypt. According to some writers his successes
+did not stop here. Megasthenes made him subdue most of Africa, and
+thence pass over into Spain and conquer the Iberians. He even went
+further, and declared that, on his return from these regions, he settled
+his Iberian captives on the shores of the Euxine in the country between
+Armenia and the Caucasus! Thus Nebuchadnezzar was made to reign over an
+empire extending from the Atlantic to the Caspian, and from the Caucasus
+to the Great Sahara.
+
+The victories of Nebuchadnezzar were not without an effect on his home
+administration and on the construction of the vast works with which his
+name is inseparably associated. It was through them that he obtained
+that enormous command of “naked human strength” which enabled him,
+without undue oppression of his own people, to carry out on the grandest
+scale his schemes for at once beautifying and benefiting his kingdom.
+From the time when he first took the field at the head of an army
+he adopted the Assyrian system of forcibly removing almost the whole
+population of a conquered country, and planting it in a distant part
+of his dominions. Crowds of captives--the produce of his various
+wars--Jews, Egyptians, Phoenicians, Syrians, Ammonites, Moabites, were
+settled in various parts of Mesopotamia, more especially about Babylon.
+From these unfortunates forced labor was as a matter of course required;
+and it seems to have been chiefly, if not solely, by their exertions
+that the magnificent series of great works was accomplished, which
+formed the special glory of the Fourth Monarchy.
+
+The chief works expressly ascribed to Nebuchadnezzar by the ancient
+writers are the following: He built the great wall of Babylon, which,
+according to the lowest estimate, must have contained more than
+500,000,000 square feet of solid masonry, and must have required
+three or four times that number of bricks. He constructed a new and
+magnificent palace in the neighborhood of the ancient residence of the
+kings. He made the celebrated “Hanging Garden” for the gratification of
+his wife, Amyitis. He repaired and beautified the great temple of Belus
+at Babylon. He dug the huge reservoir near Sippara, said to have been
+140 miles in circumference, and 180 feet deep, furnishing it with
+flood-gates, through which its water could be drawn off for purposes
+of irrigation. He constructed a number of canals, among them the Nahr
+Malcha or “Royal River,” a broad and deep channel which connected the
+Euphrates with the Tigris. He built quays and breakwaters along the
+shores of the Persian Gulf, and he at the same time founded the city of
+Diridotis or Teredon in the vicinity of that sea.
+
+To these constructions may be added, on the authority either of
+Nebuchadnezzar’s own inscriptions or of the existing remains, the
+Birs-i-Nimrud, or great temple of Nebo at Bor-sippa; a vast reservoir
+in Babylon itself, called the Yapur-Shapu; an extensive embankment along
+the course of the Tigris, near Baghdad; and almost innumerable temples,
+walls, and other public buildings at Cutha, Sippara, Borsippa, Babylon,
+Chilmad, Bit-Digla, etc. The indefatigable monarch seems to have either
+rebuilt, or at least repaired, almost every city and temple throughout
+the entire country. There are said to be at least a hundred sites in
+the tract immediately about Babylon, which give evidence, by inscribed
+bricks bearing his legend, of the marvellous activity and energy of this
+king.
+
+We may suspect that among the constructions of Nebuchadnezzar was
+another great work, a work second in utility to none of those above
+mentioned, and requiring for its completion an enormous amount of labor.
+This is the canal called by the Arabs the _Kerek Saideh_, or canal of
+Saideh, which they ascribe to a wife of Nebuchadnezzar, a cutting
+400 miles in length, which commenced at Hit on the Euphrates, and was
+carried along the extreme western edge of the alluvium close to the
+Arabian frontier, finally falling into the sea at the head of the Bubian
+creek, about twenty miles to the west of the Shat el-Arab. The traces
+of this canal which still remain indicate a work of such magnitude
+and difficulty that we can scarcely ascribe it with probability to any
+monarch who has held the country since Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+The Pallacopas, or canal of Opa (Palga Opa), which left the Euphrates
+at Sippara (Mosaib) and ran into a great lake in the neighborhood of
+Borsippa, whence the lands in the neighborhood were irrigated, may also
+have been one of Nebuchadnezzar’s constructions. It was an old canal,
+much out of repair, in the time of Alexander, and was certainly the
+work, not of the Persian conquerors, but of some native monarch anterior
+to Cyrus. The Arabs, who call it the Nahr Abba, regard it as the oldest
+canal in the country.
+
+Some glimpses into the private life and personal character of
+Nebuchadnezzar are afforded us by certain of the Old Testament writers.
+We see him in the Book of Daniel at the head of a magnificent Court,
+surrounded by “princes, governors, and captains, judges, treasurers,
+councillors, and sheriffs;” waited on by eunuchs selected with the
+greatest care, “well-favored” and carefully educated; attended, whenever
+he requires it, by a multitude of astrologers and other “wise men,” who
+seek to interpret to him the will of Heaven. He is an absolute monarch,
+disposing with a word of the lives and properties of his subjects, even
+the highest. All offices are in his gift. He can raise a foreigner
+to the second place in the kingdom, and even set him over the entire
+priestly order. His wealth is enormous, for he makes of pure gold an
+image, or obelisk, ninety feet high and nine feet broad. He is religious
+after a sort, but wavers in his faith, sometimes acknowledging the
+God of the Jews as the only real deity, sometimes relapsing into an
+idolatrous worship, and forcing all his subjects to follow his example.
+Even then, however, his polytheism is of a kind which admits of a
+special devotion to a particular deity, who is called emphatically “his
+god.” In temper he is hasty and violent, but not obstinate; his fierce
+resolves are taken suddenly and as suddenly repented of; he is moreover
+capable of bursts of gratitude and devotion, no less than of accesses of
+fury; like most Orientals, he is vainglorious but he can humble himself
+before the chastening hand of the Almighty; in his better moods he shows
+a spirit astonishing in one of his country and time--a spirit of real
+piety, self-condemnation, and self-abasement, which renders him one of
+the most remarkable characters in Scripture.
+
+A few touches of a darker hue must be added to this portrait of the
+great Babylonian king from the statements of another contemporary, the
+prophet Jeremiah. The execution of Jehoi-akim, and the putting out of
+Zedekiah’s eyes, though acts of considerable severity, may perhaps be
+regarded as justified by the general practice of the age, and therefore
+as not indicating in Nebuchadnezzar any special ferocity of disposition.
+But the ill-treatment of Jehoiakim’s dead body, the barbarity
+of murdering Zedekiah’s sons before his eyes, and the prolonged
+imprisonment both of Zedekiah and of Jehoiachin, though the latter had
+only contemplated rebellion, cannot be thus excused. They were unusual
+and unnecessary acts, which tell against the monarch who authorized
+them, and must be considered to imply a real cruelty of disposition,
+such as is observable in Sargon and Asshur-bani-pal. Nebuchadnezzar, it
+is plain, was not content with such a measure of severity as was
+needed to secure his own interests, but took a pleasure in the wanton
+infliction of suffering on those who had provoked his resentment.
+
+On the other hand, we obtain from the native writer, Berosus, one
+amiable trait which deserves a cursory mention. Nebuchadnezzar was
+fondly attached to the Median princess who had been chosen for him as
+a wife by his father from political motives. Not content with ordinary
+tokens of affection, he erected, solely for her gratification, the
+remarkable structure which the Greeks called the “Hanging Garden.”
+ A native of a mountainous country, Amyitis disliked the tiresome
+uniformity of the level alluvium, and pined for the woods and hills
+of Media. It was to satisfy this longing by the best substitute which
+circumstances allowed that the celebrated Garden was made. Art strove
+to emulate nature with a certain measure of success, and the lofty rocks
+and various trees of this wonderful Paradise, if they were not a very
+close imitation of Median mountain scenery, were at any rate a pleasant
+change from the natural monotony of the Babylonian plain, and must have
+formed a grateful retreat for the Babylonian queen, whom they reminded
+at once of her husband’s love and of the beauty of her native country.
+
+The most remarkable circumstance in Nebuchadnezzar’s life remains to be
+noticed. Towards the close of his reign, when his conquests and probably
+most of his great works were completed, in the midst of complete
+tranquillity and prosperity, a sudden warning was sent him. He dreamt
+a strange dream, and when he sought to know its meaning, the Prophet
+Daniel was inspired to tell him that it portended his removal from the
+kingly office for the space of seven years, in consequence of a curious
+and very unusual kind of madness. This malady, which is not unknown to
+physicians, has been termed “Lycanthropy.” It consists in the belief
+that one is not a man but a beast, in the disuse of language, the
+rejection of all ordinary human food, and sometimes in the loss of the
+erect posture and a preference for walking on all fours. Within a year
+of the time that he received the warning, Nebuchadnezzar was smitten.
+The great king became a wretched maniac. Allowed to indulge in his
+distempered fancy, he eschewed human habitations, lived in the open air
+night and day, fed on herbs, disused clothing, and became covered with
+a rough coat of hair. His subjects generally, it is probable, were not
+allowed to know of his condition, although they could not but be aware
+that he was suffering from some terrible malady. The queen most likely
+held the reins of power, and carried on the government in his name. The
+dream had been interpreted to mean that the lycanthropy would not be
+permanent; and even the date of recovery had been announced, only with
+a certain ambiguity. The Babylonians were thereby encouraged to await
+events, without taking any steps that would have involved them in
+difficulties if the malady ceased. And their faith and patience met
+with a reward. After suffering obscuration for the space of seven years,
+suddenly the king’s intellect returned to him. His recovery was received
+with joy by his Court. Lords and councillors gathered about him. He once
+more took the government into his own hands, issued his proclamations,
+and performed the other functions of royalty. He was now an old man, and
+his reign does not seem to have been much prolonged; but “the glory of
+his kingdon,” his “honor and brightness” returned; his last days were as
+brilliant as his first: his sun set in an unclouded sky, shorn of none
+of the rays that had given splendor to its noonday. Nebuchadnezzar
+expired at Babylon in the forty-fourth year of his reign, B.C. 561,
+after an illness of no long duration. He was probably little short of
+eighty years old at his death.
+
+The successor of Nebuchadnezzar was his son Evil-Mero-dach, who reigned
+only two years, and of whom very little is known. We may expect that the
+marvellous events of his father’s life, which are recorded in the Book
+of Daniel, had made a deep impression upon him, and that he was thence
+inclined to favor the persons, and perhaps the religion, of the Jews.
+One of his first acts was to release the unfortunate Jehoiachin from the
+imprisonment in which he had languished for thirty-five years, and to
+treat him with kindness and respect. He not only recognized his royal
+rank, but gave him precedence over all the captive kings resident at
+Babylon. Josephus says that he even admitted Jehoiachin into the number
+of his most intimate friends. Perhaps he may have designed him some
+further advancement, and may in other respects have entertained projects
+which seemed strange and alarming to his subjects. At any rate he had
+been but two years upon the throne when a conspiracy was formed
+against him; he was accused of lawlessness and intemperance; his
+own brother-in-law, Neriglissar, the husband of a daughter of
+Nebuchadnezzar, headed the malcontents; and Evil-Merodach lost his life
+with his crown.
+
+Neriglissar, the successful conspirator, was at once acknowledged
+king. He is probably identical with the “Nergal-shar-ezer, Rab-Mag,” of
+Jeremiah, who occupied a prominent position among the Babylonian nobles
+left to press the siege of Jerusalem when Nebuchadnezzar retired to
+Riblah. The title of “Rab-Mag,” is one that he bears upon his bricks.
+It is doubtful what exactly his office was; for we have no reason to
+believe that there were at this time any Magi at Babylon; but it was
+certainly an ancient and very high dignity of which even kings might
+be proud. It is remarkable that Neriglissar calls himself the son of
+Bel-sum-iskun, “king of Babylon”--a monarch whose name does not appear
+in Ptolemy’s list, but who is probably to be identified with a chieftain
+so called, who assumed the royal title in the troubles which preceded
+the fall of the Assyrian Empire.
+
+During his short reign of four years, or rather three years and a
+few months, Neriglissar had not time to distinguish himself by many
+exploits. So far as appears, he was at peace with all his neighbors, and
+employed his time principally in the construction of the Western
+Palace at Babylon, which was a large building placed at one corner of a
+fortified inclosure, directly opposite the ancient royal residence, and
+abutting on the Euphrates. If the account which Diodorus gives of this
+palace be not a gross exaggeration of the truth, it must have been a
+magnificent erection, elaborately ornamented with painting and sculpture
+in the best style of Babylonian art, though in size it may have been
+inferior to the old residence of the kings on the other side of the
+river.
+
+Neriglissar reigned from B.C. 559 to B.C. 556, and dying a natural death
+in the last-named year, left his throne to his son, Laborosoarchod,
+or Labossoracus. This prince, who was a mere boy, and therefore quite
+unequal to the task of governing a great empire in critical times, was
+not allowed to retain the crown many months. Accused by those
+about him--whether justly or unjustly we cannot say--of giving many
+indications of a bad disposition, he was deposed and put to death by
+torture. With him power passed from the House of Nabopolassar, which had
+held the throne for just seventy years.
+
+On the death of Laborosoarchod the conspirators selected one of their
+number, a certain Nabonadius or Nabannidochus, and invested him with the
+sovereignty. He was in no way related to the late monarch, and his claim
+to succeed must have been derived mainly from the part which he had
+played in the conspiracy. But still he was a personage of some rank, for
+his father had, like Neriglissar, held the important office of Rab Mag.
+It is probable that one of his first steps on ascending the throne was
+to connect himself by marriage with the royal house which had preceded
+him in the kingdom. Either the mother of the late king Laborosoarchod,
+and widow of Neriglissar, or possibly some other daughter of
+Nebuchadnezzar, was found willing to unite her fortune with those of the
+new sovereign, and share the dangers and the dignity of his position.
+Such a union strengthened the hold of the reigning monarch on the
+allegiance of his subjects, and tended still more to add stability to
+his dynasty. For as the issue of such a marriage would join in one the
+claims of both royal houses, he would be sure to receive the support of
+all parties in the state. Very shortly after the accession of Nabonadius
+(B.C. 555) he received an embassy from the far north-west. An important
+revolution had occurred on the eastern frontier of Babylonia three years
+before, in the reign of Neriglissar; but its effects only now began to
+make themselves felt among the neighboring nations. Had Cyrus, on taking
+the crown, adopted the policy of Astyages, the substitution of Persia
+for Media as the ruling Arian nation would have been a matter of small
+account. But there can be little doubt that he really entered at once
+on a career of conquest, Lydia, at any rate, felt herself menaced by the
+new power, and seeing the danger which threatened the other monarchies
+of the time, if they allowed the great Arian kingdom to attack them
+severally with her full force, proposed a league whereby the common
+enemy might, she thought, be resisted with success. Ambassadors seem
+to have been sent from Sardis to Babylon in the very year in which
+Nabonadius became king. He therefore had at once to decide whether he
+would embrace the offer made him, and uniting with Lydia and Egypt in
+a league against Persia, make that power his enemy, or refuse the
+proffered alliance and trust to the gratitude of Cyrus for the future
+security of his kingdom. It would be easy to imagine the arguments pro
+and contra which presented themselves to his mind at this conjuncture;
+but as they would be destitute of a historical foundation, it is perhaps
+best to state simply the decision at which he is known to have arrived.
+This was an acceptance of the Lydian offer. Nabonadius consented to join
+the proposed league; and a treaty was probably soon afterwards concluded
+between the three powers whereby they united in an alliance offensive
+and defensive against the Persians.
+
+Knowing that he had provoked a powerful enemy by this bold act, and
+ignorant how soon he might be called upon to defend his kingdom, from
+the entire force of his foe, which might be suddenly hurled against him
+almost at any moment, Nabonadius seems to have turned his attention at
+once to providing means of defence. The works ascribed by Herodotus to a
+queen, Nitocris, whom he makes the mother of Nabonadius (Labynetus)
+must be regarded as in reality constructions of that monarch himself,
+undertaken with the object of protecting Babylon from Cyrus. They
+consisted in part of defences within the city, designed apparently to
+secure it against an enemy who should enter by the river, in part of
+hydraulic works intended to obstruct the advances of an army by the
+usual route. The river had hitherto flowed in its natural bed through
+the middle of the town. Nabonadius confined the stream by a brick
+embankment carried the whole way along both banks, after which he built
+on the top of the embankment a wall of a considerable height, pierced
+at intervals by gateways, in which were set gates of bronze. He likewise
+made certain cuttings, reservoirs, and sluices at some distance from
+Babylon towards the north, which were to be hindrances to an enemy’s
+march, though in what way is not very apparent. Some have supposed that
+besides these works there was further built at the same time a great
+wall which extended entirely across the tract between the two rivers--a
+huge barrier a hundred feet high and twenty thick--meant, like the Roman
+walls in Britain and the great wall of China, to be insurmountable by an
+unskillful foe; but there is ground for suspecting that this belief is
+ill-founded, having for its sole basis a misconception of Xenophon’s.
+
+Nabonadius appears to have been allowed ample time to carry out to the
+full his system of defences, and to complete all his preparations.
+The precipitancy of Croesus, who plunged into a war with Persia
+single-handed, asking no aid from his allies, and the promptitude of
+Cyrus, who allowed him no opportunity of recovering from his first false
+step, had prevented Nabonadius from coming into actual collision with
+Persia in the early part of his reign. The defeat of Croesus in the
+battle of Pteria, the siege of Sardis, and its capture, followed so
+rapidly on the first commencement of hostilities, that whatever his
+wishes may have been, Nabonadius had it not in his power to give any
+help to his rash ally. Actual war was thus avoided at this time; and
+no collision having occurred, Cyrus could defer an attack on the great
+kingdom of the south until he had consolidated his power in the north
+and the northeast, which he rightly regarded as of the last importance.
+Thus fourteen years intervened between the capture of Sardis by the
+Persian arms and the commencement of the expedition against Babylon.
+
+When at last it was rumored that the Persian king had quitted Ecbatana
+(B.C. 539) and commenced his march to the south-west, Nabonadius
+received the tidings with indifference. His defences were completed: his
+city was amply provisioned; if the enemy should defeat him in the open
+field, he might retire behind his walls, and laugh to scorn all attempts
+to reduce his capital either by blockade or storm. It does not appear to
+have occurred to him that it was possible to protect his territory. With
+a broad, deep, and rapid river directly interposed between him and his
+foe, with a network of canals spread far and wide over his country, with
+an almost inexhaustible supply of human labor at his command for
+the construction of such dikes, walls, or cuttings as he should deem
+advisable, Nabonadius might, one would have thought, have aspired to
+save his land from invasion, or have disputed inch by inch his enemy’s
+advance towards the capital. But such considerations have seldom had
+much force with Orientals, whose notions of war and strategy are even
+now of the rudest and most primitive description. To measure one’s
+strength as quickly as possible with that of one’s foe, to fight one
+great pitched battle in order to decide the question of superiority
+in the field, and then, if defeated, either to surrender or to retire
+behind walls, has been the ordinary conception of a commander’s duties
+in the East from the time of the Ramesside kings to our own day. No
+special blame therefore attaches to Nabonadius for his neglect. He
+followed the traditional policy of Oriental monarchs in the course which
+he took. And his subjects had less reason to complain of his resolution
+than most others, since the many strongholds in Babylonia must have
+afforded them a ready refuge, and the great fortified district within
+which Babylon itself stood must have been capable of accommodating with
+ease the whole native population of the country.
+
+If we may trust Herodotus, the invader, having made all his preparations
+and commenced his march, came to a sudden pause midway between Ecbatana
+and Babylon. One of the sacred white horses, which drew the chariot of
+Ormazd, had been drowned in crossing a river; and Cyrus had thereupon
+desisted from his march, and, declaring that he would revenge himself
+on the insolent stream, had set his soldiers to disperse its waters into
+360 channels. This work employed him during the whole summer and autumn;
+nor was it till another spring had come that he resumed his expedition.
+To the Babylonians such a pause must have appeared like irresolution.
+They must have suspected that the invader had changed his mind and would
+not venture across the Tigris. If the particulars of the story reached
+them, they probably laughed at the monarch who vented his rage on
+inanimate nature, while he let his enemies escape scot free.
+
+Cyrus, however, had a motive for his proceedings which will appear
+in the sequel. Having wintered on the banks of the Gyndes in a mild
+climate, where tents would have been quite a sufficient protection to
+his army, he put his troops in motion at the commencement of spring,
+crossed the Tigris apparently unopposed, and soon came in sight of the
+capital. Here he found the Babylonian army drawn out to meet him under
+the command of Nabonadius himself, who had resolved to try the chance
+of a battle. An engagement ensued, of which we possess no details; our
+informants simply tell us that the Babylonian monarch was completely
+defeated, and that, while most of his army sought safety within the
+walls of the capital, he himself with a small body of troops threw
+himself into Borsippa, an important town lying at a short distance from
+Babylon towards the south-west. It is not easy to see the exact object
+of this movement. Perhaps Nabonadius thought that the enemy would
+thereby be obliged to divide his army, which might then more easily be
+defeated; perhaps he imagined that by remaining without the walls he
+might be able to collect such a force among his subjects and allies as
+would compel the beleaguering army to withdraw. Or, possibly, he merely
+followed an instinct of self-preservation, and fearing that the soldiers
+of Cyrus might enter Babylon with his own, if he fled thither, sought
+refuge in another city.
+
+It might have been supposed that his absence would have produced anarchy
+and confusion in the capital; but a step which he had recently
+taken with the object of giving stability to his throne rendered
+the preservation of order tolerably easy. At the earliest possible
+moment--probably when he was about fourteen--he had associated with him
+in the government his son, Belshazzar, or Bel-shar-uzur, the grandson
+of the great Nebuchadnezzar. This step, taken most likely with a view to
+none but internal dangers, was now found exceedingly convenient for
+the purposes of the war. In his father’s absence Belshazzar took
+the direction of affairs within the city, and met and foiled for a
+considerable time all the assaults of the Persians. He was young and
+inexperienced, but he had the counsels of the queen-mother to guide and
+support him, as well as those of the various lords and officers of
+the court. So well did he manage the defence that after a while Cyrus
+despaired, and as a last resource ventured on a stratagem in which it
+was clear that he must either succeed or perish.
+
+Withdrawing the greater part of his army from the vicinity of the city,
+and leaving behind him only certain corps of observation, Cyrus marched
+away up the course of the Euphrates for a certain distance, and there
+proceeded to make a vigorous use of the spade. His soldiers could
+now appreciate the value of the experience which they had gained by
+dispersing the Gyndes, and perceive that the summer and autumn of the
+preceding year had not been wasted. They dug a channel or channels from
+the Euphrates, by means of which a great portion of its water would be
+drawn off, and hoped in this way to render the natural course of the
+river fordable.
+
+When all was prepared, Cyrus determined to wait for the arrival of a
+certain festival, during which the whole population were wont to engage
+in drinking and revelling, and then silently in the dead of night to
+turn the water of the river and make his attack. It fell out as he hoped
+and wished. The festival was held with even greater pomp and splendor
+than usual; for Belshazzar, with the natural insolence of youth, to
+mark his contempt of the besieging army, abandoned himself wholly to the
+delights of the season, and himself entertained a thousand lords in his
+palace. Elsewhere the rest of the population was occupied in feasting
+and dancing. Drunken riot and mad excitement held possession of the
+town; the siege was forgotten; ordinary precautions were neglected.
+Following the example of their king, the Babylonians gave themselves
+up for the night to orgies in which religious frenzy and drunken excess
+formed a strange and revolting medley.
+
+Meanwhile, outside the city, in silence and darkness, the Persians
+watched at the two points where the Euphrates entered and left the
+walls. Anxiously they noted the gradual sinking of the water in the
+river-bed; still more anxiously they watched to see if those within
+the walls would observe the suspicious circumstance and sound an alarm
+through the town. Should such an alarm be given, all their labors would
+be lost. If, when they entered the river-bed, they found the river-walls
+manned and the river-gates fast-locked, they would be indeed “caught in
+a trap.” Enfiladed on both sides by an enemy whom they could neither
+see nor reach, they would be overwhelmed and destroyed by his missiles
+before they could succeed in making their escape. But, as they watched,
+no sounds of alarm reached them--only a confused noise of revel and
+riot, which showed that the unhappy townsmen were quite unconscious of
+the approach of danger.
+
+At last shadowy forms began to emerge from the obscurity of the deep
+river-bed, and on the landing-places opposite the river-gates scattered
+clusters of men grew into solid columns--the undefended gateways were
+seized--a war-shout was raised--the alarm was taken and spread--and
+swift runners started off to “show the King of Babylon that his city was
+taken at one end.” In the darkness and confusion of the night a terrible
+massacre ensued. The drunken revellers could make no resistance. The
+king paralyzed with fear at the awful handwriting upon the wall, which
+too late had warned him of his peril, could do nothing even to check
+the progress of the assailants, who carried all before them everywhere.
+Bursting into the palace, a band of Persians made their way to the
+presence of the monarch, and slew him on the scene of his impious
+revelry. Other bands carried fire and sword through the town. When
+morning came, Cyrus found himself undisputed master of the city, which,
+if it had not despised his efforts, might with the greatest ease have
+baffled them.
+
+The war, however, was not even yet at an end. Nabonadius still held
+Borsippa, and, if allowed to remain unmolested, might have gradually
+gathered strength and become once more a formidable foe. Cyrus,
+therefore, having first issued his orders that the outer fortifications
+of Babylon should be dismantled, proceeded to complete his conquest by
+laying siege to the town where he knew that Nabonadius had taken refuge.
+That monarch, however, perceiving that resistance would be vain, did
+not wait till Borsippa was invested, but on the approach of his enemy
+surrendered himself. Cyrus rewarded his submission by kind and liberal
+treatment. Not only did he spare his life, but (if we may trust
+Abydenus) he conferred on him the government of the important province
+of Carmania.
+
+Thus perished the Babylonian empire. If we seek the causes of its fall,
+we shall find them partly in its essential military inferiority to
+the kingdom that had recently grown up upon its borders, partly in the
+accidental circumstance that its ruler at the time of the Persian attack
+was a man of no great capacity. Had Nebuchadnezzar himself, or a prince
+of his mental calibre, been the contemporary of Cyrus, the issue of the
+contest might have been doubtful. Babylonia possessed naturally vast
+powers of resistance--powers which, had they been made use of to the
+utmost, might have tired out the patience of the Persians. That lively,
+active, but not over-persevering people would scarcely have maintained
+a siege with the pertinacity of the Babylonians themselves or of
+the Egyptians. If the stratagem of Cyrus had failed--and its success
+depended wholly on the Babylonians exercising no vigilance--the capture
+of the town would have been almost impossible. Babylon was too large to
+be blockaded; its walls were too lofty to be scaled, and too massive to
+be battered down by the means possessed by the ancients. Mining in the
+soft alluvial soil would have been dangerous work, especially as the
+town ditch was deep and supplied with abundant water from the Euphrates.
+Cyrus, had he failed in his night attack, would probably have at once
+raised the siege; and Babylonian independence might perhaps in that case
+have been maintained down to the time of Alexander.
+
+Even thus, however, the “Empire” would not have been continued. So soon
+as it became evident that the Babylonians were no match for the Persians
+in the field, their authority over the subject nations was at an end.
+The Susianians, the tribes of the middle Euphrates, the Syrians, the
+Phoenicians, the Jews, the Idumseans, the Ammonites and Moabites, would
+have gravitated to the stronger power, even if the attack of Cyrus on
+Babylon itself had been repulsed. For the conquests of Cyrus in Asia
+Minor, the Oxus region, and Afghanistan, had completely destroyed the
+balance of power in Western Asia, and given to Persia a preponderance
+both in men and in resources against which the cleverest and most
+energetic of Babylonian princes would have struggled in vain. Persia
+must in any case have absorbed all the tract between Mount Zagros and
+the Mediterranean, except Babylonia Proper; and thus the successful
+defence of Babylon would merely have deprived the Persian Empire of a
+province.
+
+In its general character the Babylonian Empire was little more than
+a reproduction of the Assyrian. The same loose organization of the
+provinces under native kings rather than satraps almost universally
+prevailed, with the same duties on the part of suzerain and subjects and
+the same results of ever-recurring revolt and re-conquest. Similar
+means were employed under both empires to check and discourage
+rebellion--mutilations and executions of chiefs, pillage of the
+rebellious region, and wholesale deportation of its population. Babylon,
+equally with Assyria, failed to win the affections of the subject
+nations, and, as a natural result, received no help from them in her
+hour of need. Her system was to exhaust and oppress the conquered
+races for the supposed benefit of the conquerors, and to impoverish the
+provinces for the adornment and enrichment of the capital. The wisest of
+her monarch’s thought it enough to construct works of public utility
+in Babylonia Proper, leaving the dependent countries to themselves, and
+doing nothing to develop their resources. This selfish system was, like
+most selfishness, short-sighted; it alienated those whom it would have
+been true policy to conciliate and win. When the time of peril came, the
+subject nations were no source of strength to the menaced empire, On
+the contrary, it would seem that some even turned against her and made
+common cause with the assailants.
+
+Babylonian civilization differed in many respects from Assyrian, to
+which however it approached more nearly than to any other known type.
+Its advantages over Assyrian were in its greater originality, its
+superior literary character, and its comparative width and flexibility.
+Babylonia seems to have been the source from which Assyria drew her
+learning, such as it was, her architecture, the main ideas of her
+mimetic art, her religious notions, her legal forms, and a vast number
+of her customs and usages. But Babylonia herself, so far as we know,
+drew her stores from no foreign country. Hers was apparently the genius
+which excogitated an alphabet--worked out the simpler problems
+of arithmetic--invented implements for measuring the lapse of
+time--conceived the idea of raising enormous structures with the poorest
+of all materials, clay--discovered the art of polishing, boring, and
+engraving gems--reproduced with truthfulness the outlines of human and
+animal forms--attained to high perfection in textile fabrics--studied
+with success the motions of the heavenly bodies--conceived of grammar
+as a science--elaborated a system of law--saw the value of an exact
+chronology--in almost every branch of science made a beginning, thus
+rendering it comparatively easy for other nations to proceed with the
+superstructure. To Babylonia, far more than to Egypt, we owe the art
+and learning of the Greeks. It was from the East, not from Egypt,
+that Greece derived her architecture, her sculpture, her science, her
+philosophy, her mathematical knowledge--in a word, her intellectual
+life. And Babylon was the source to which the entire stream of Eastern
+civilization may be traced. It is scarcely too much to say that, but
+for Babylon, real civilization might not even yet have dawned upon the
+earth. Mankind might never have advanced beyond that spurious and
+false form of it which in Egypt, India, China, Japan, Mexico, and Peru,
+contented the aspirations of the species.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+
+
+
+A. STANDARD INSCRIPTION OF NEBUCHADNEZZAR.
+
+
+The Inscription begins with the various titles of Nebuchadnezzar. It
+then contains prayers and invocations to the Gods, Merodach and Nebo.
+The extent of N.’s power is spoken of--it reaches from one sea to the
+other.
+
+An account is then given of the wonders of Babylon, viz.:
+
+1. The great temple of Merodach. (The mound of Babil is the tower or
+ziggurat of this.)
+
+2. The Borsippa temple (or Birs).
+
+3. Various other temples in Babylon and Borsippa.
+
+The subjoined description of the city follows: “The double inclosure
+which Nabopolassar my father had made but not completed, I finished.
+Nabopolassar made its ditch. With two long embankments of brick and
+mortar he bound its bed. He made the embankment of the Arahha. He lined
+the other side of the Euphrates with brick. He made a bridge (?) over
+the Euphrates, but did not finish its buttresses (?). From... (the name
+of a place) he made with bricks burnt as hard as stones, by the help
+of the great Lord Merodach, a way (for) a branch of the Shimat to the
+waters of the Yapur-Shapu, the great reservoir of Babylon, opposite to
+the gate of Nin.
+
+“The _Ingur-Bel_ and the _Nimiti-Bel_--the great double wall of
+Babylon--I finished. With two long embankments of brick and mortar I
+built the sides of its ditch. I joined it on with that which my father
+had made. I strengthened the city. Across the river to the west I
+built the wall of Babylon with brick. The Yapur-Shapu-the reservoir of
+Babylon--by the grace of Merodach I filled completely full of water.
+With bricks burnt as hard as stones, and with bricks in huge masses like
+mountains (?), the Yapur-Shapu, from the gate of Mula as far as Nana,
+who is the protectress of her votaries, by the grace of his godship
+(i.e. Merodach) I strengthened. With that which my father had made I
+joined it. I made the way of Nana, the protectress of her votaries.
+The great gates of the Ingur-Bel and the Nimiti-Bel-the reservoir of
+Babylon, at the time of the flood (lit. of fulness), inundated them.
+These gates I raised. Against the waters their foundations with brick
+and mortar I built. [Here follows a description of the gates, with
+various architectural details, an account of the decorations, hangings,
+etc.] For the delight of mankind I filled the reservoir. Behold! besides
+the Ingur-Bel, the impregnable fortification of Babylon. I constructed
+inside Babylon on the eastern side of the river a fortification such
+as no king had ever made before me, viz., a long rampart, 4000 ammas
+square, as an extra defence. I excavated the ditch: with brick and
+mortar I bound its bed; a long rampart at its head (?) I strongly built.
+I adorned its gates. The folding doors and the pillars I plated with
+copper. Against presumptuous enemies, who were hostile to the men of
+Babylon, great waters, like the waters of the ocean, I made use of
+abundantly. Their depths were like the depths of the vast ocean. I did
+not allow the waters to overflow, but the fulness of their floods I
+caused to flow on, restraining them with a brick embankment.... Thus I
+completely made strong the defences of Babylon. May it last forever!”
+
+[Here follows a similar account of works at Borsippa.] “In Babylon--the
+city which is the delight of my eyes, and which I have glorified--when
+the waters were in flood, they inundated the foundations of the great
+palace called Taprati-nisi, or ‘the Wonder of Mankind;’ (a palace) with
+many chambers and lofty towers; the high-place of Royalty; (situated) in
+the land of Babylon, and in the middle of Babylon; stretching from the
+Ingur-Bel to the bed of the Shebil, the eastern canal, (and) from
+the bank of the Sippara river, to the water of the Yapur-Shapu;
+which Nabopolassar my father built with brick and raised up; when the
+reservoir of Babylon was full, the gates of this palace were flooded.
+I raised the mound of brick on which it was built, and made smooth its
+platform. I cut off the floods of the water, and the foundations (of
+the palace) I protected against the water with bricks and mortar: and I
+finished it completely. Long beams I set up to support it: with pillars
+and beams plated with copper and strengthened with iron I built up its
+gates. Silver and gold, and precious stones whose names were almost
+unknown [here follow several unknown names of objects, treasures of the
+palace], I stored up inside, and placed there the treasure-house of
+my kingdom. Four years (?), the seat of my kingdom in the city...,
+which....did not rejoice (my) heart. In all my dominions I did not build
+a high-place of power; the precious treasures of my kingdom I did not
+lay up. In Babylon, buildings for myself and the honor of my kingdom I
+did not lay out. In the worship of Merodach my lord, the joy of my heart
+(?), in Babylon, the city of his sovereignty and the seat of my empire,
+I did not sing his praises (?), and I did not furnish his altars (i.e.
+with victims), nor did I clear out the canals.” [Here follow further
+negative clauses.]
+
+“As a further defence in war, at the Ingur-Bel, the impregnable outer
+wall, the rampart of the Babylonians--with two strong lines of brick and
+mortar I made a strong fort, 400 ammas square inside the Nimiti-Bel,
+the inner defence of the Babylonians. Masonry of brick within them (the
+lines) I constructed. With the palace of my father I connected it. In a
+happy month and on an auspicious day its foundations I laid in the earth
+like.... I completely finished its top. In fifteen days I completed it,
+and made it the high-place of my kingdom. [Here follows a description of
+the ornamentation of the palace.] A strong fort of brick and mortar in
+strength I constructed. Inside the brick fortification another great
+fortification of long stones, of the size of great mountains, I made.
+Like Shedim I raised up its head. And this building I raised for a
+wonder; for the defence of the people I constructed it.”
+
+
+
+
+B. ON THE MEANINGS OF BABYLONIAN NAMES.
+
+The names of the Babylonians, like those of the Assyrians, were
+significant. Generally, if not always, they were composed of at least
+two elements. These might be a noun in the nominative case with a verb
+following it, a noun in the nominative with a participle in apposition,
+or a word meaning “servant” followed by the name of a god. Under the
+first class came such names as “Bel-ipni”--“Bel has made (me)”--from Bel,
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 263]
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 264]
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 265]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Seven Great Monarchies Of The
+Ancient Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon, by George Rawlinson
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient
+Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon, by George Rawlinson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon
+ The History, Geography, And Antiquities Of Chaldaea,
+ Assyria, Babylon, Media, Persia, Parthia, And Sassanian
+ or New Persian Empire; With Maps and Illustrations.
+
+Author: George Rawlinson
+
+Illustrator: George Rawlinson
+
+Release Date: July 1, 2005 [EBook #16164]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SEVEN GREAT MONARCHIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SEVEN GREAT MONARCHIES
+
+OF THE
+
+ANCIENT EASTERN WORLD;
+
+
+OR,
+
+
+THE HISTORY, GEOGRAPHY, AND ANTIQUITIES OF CHALDAEA, ASSYRIA
+
+BABYLON, MEDIA, PERSIA, PARTHIA, AND SASSANIAN,
+
+OR NEW PERSIAN EMPIRE.
+
+
+BY
+
+GEORGE RAWLINSON, M.A.,
+
+CAMDEN PROFESSOR OF ANCIENT HISTORY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
+
+
+
+IN THREE VOLUMES.
+
+
+
+VOLUME II.
+
+
+
+WITH MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+
+
+THE FOURTH MONARCHY
+
+
+
+BABYLONIA.
+
+
+[Illustration: MAP]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. EXTENT OF THE EMPIRE.
+
+
+"Behold, a tree in the midst of the earth, and the height thereof was
+great; the tree grew and was strong: and the height thereof reached unto
+heaven, and the sight thereof to the end of all the earth."--Dan. iy.
+10, 11.
+
+
+The limits of Babylonia Proper, the tract in which the dominant power
+of the Fourth Monarchy had its abode, being almost identical with those
+which have been already described under the head of Chaldaea, will not
+require in this place to be treated afresh, at any length. It needs
+only to remind the reader that Babylonia Proper is that alluvial tract
+towards the mouth of the two great rivers of Western Asia--the Tigris
+and the Euphrates--which intervenes between the Arabian Desert on the
+one side, and the more eastern of the two streams on the other. Across
+the Tigris the country is no longer Babylonia, but Cissia, or Susiana--a
+distinct region, known to the Jews as Elam--the habitat of a distinct
+people. Babylonia lies westward of the Tigris, and consists of two vast
+plains or flats, one situated between the two rivers, and thus forming
+the lower portion of the "Mesopotamia" of the Greeks and Romans--the
+other interposed between the Euphrates and Arabia, a long but narrow
+strip along the right bank of that abounding river. The former of these
+two districts is shaped like an ancient amphora, the mouth extending
+from Hit to Samarah, the neck lying between Baghdad and Ctesiphon on the
+Tigris, Mohammed and Mosaib on the Euphrates, the full expansion of
+the body occurring between Serut and El Khithr, and the pointed base
+reaching down to Kornah at the junction of the two streams. This tract,
+the main region of the ancient Babylonia, is about 320 miles long, and
+from 20 to 100 broad. It may be estimated to contain about 18,000 square
+miles. The tract west of the Euphrates is smaller than this. Its length,
+in the time of the Babylonian Empire, may be regarded as about 350
+miles, its average width is from 25 to 30 miles, which would give an
+area of about 9000 square miles. Thus the Babylonia of Nabopolassar
+and Nebuchadnezzar may be regarded as covering a space of 27,000 square
+miles--a space a little exceeding the area of the Low countries.
+
+The small province included within these limits--smaller than Scotland
+or Ireland, or Portugal or Bavaria--became suddenly, in the latter half
+of the seventh century B.C., the mistress of an extensive empire. On the
+fall of Assyria, about B.C. 625, or a little later, Media and Babylonia,
+as already observed, divided between them her extensive territory. It
+is with the acquisitions thus made that we have now to deal. We have to
+inquire what portion exactly of the previous dominions of Assyria fell
+to the lot of the adventurous Nabopolassar, when Nineveh ceased to
+be--what was the extent of the territory which was ruled from Babylon in
+the latter portion of the seventh and the earlier portion of the sixth
+century before our era?
+
+Now the evidence which we possess on this point is threefold. It
+consists of certain notices in the Hebrew Scriptures, contemporary
+records of first-rate historical value; of an account which strangely
+mingles truth with fable in one of the books of the Apocrypha; and of a
+passage of Berosus preserved by Josephus in his work against Apion.
+The Scriptural notices are contained in Jeremiah, in Daniel, and in
+the books of Kings and Chronicles. From these sources we learn that the
+Babylonian Empire of this time embraced on the one hand the important
+country of Susiana or Elymais (Elam), while on the other it ran up the
+Euphrates at least as high as Carchemish, from thence extending westward
+to the Mediterranean, and southward to, or rather perhaps into, Egypt.
+The Apocryphal book of Judith enlarges these limits in every direction.
+That the Nabuchodonosor of that work is a reminiscence of the real
+Nebuchadnezzar there can be no doubt. The territories of that monarch
+are made to extend eastward, beyond Susiana, into Persia; northward to
+Nineveh; westward to Cilicia in Asia Minor; and southward to the very
+borders of Ethiopia. Among the countries under his sway are enumerated
+Elam, Persia, Assyria, Cilicia, Coele-Syria, Syria of Damascus,
+Phoenicia, Galilee, Gilead, Bashan, Judsea, Philistia, Goshen, and Egypt
+generally. The passage of Berosus is of a more partial character. It
+has no bearing on the general question of the extent of the Babylonian
+Empire, but, incidentally, it confirms the statements of our other
+authorities as to the influence of Babylon in the West. It tells us that
+Coele-Syria, Phoenicia, and Egypt, were subject to Nabopolassar, and
+that Nebuchadnezzar ruled, not only over these countries, but also over
+some portion of Arabia.
+
+From these statements, which, on the whole, are tolerably accordant, we
+may gather that the great Babylonian Empire of the seventh century
+B.C. inherited from Assyria all the southern and western portion of her
+territory, while the more northern and eastern provinces fell to the
+share of Media. Setting aside the statement of the book of Judith
+(wholly unconfirmed as it is by any other authority), that Persia was at
+this time subject to Babylon, we may regard as the most eastern portion
+of the Empire the district of Susiana, which corresponded nearly with
+the modern Khuzistan and Luristan. This acquisition advanced the eastern
+frontier of the Empire from the Tigris to the Bakhtiyari Mountains, a
+distance of 100 or 120 miles. It gave to Babylon an extensive tract
+of very productive territory, and an excellent strategic boundary.
+Khuzistan is one of the most valuable provinces of modern Persia. It
+consists of a broad tract of fertile alluvium, intervening between the
+Tigris and the mountains, well watered by numerous large streams, which
+are capable of giving an abundant irrigation to the whole of the low
+region. Above this is Luristan, a still more pleasant district, composed
+of alternate mountain, valley, and upland plain, abounding in beautiful
+glens, richly wooded, and full of gushing brooks and clear rapid rivers.
+Much of this region is of course uncultivable mountain, range succeeding
+range, in six or eight parallel lines, as the traveller advances to the
+north-east; and most of the ranges exhibiting vast tracts of bare
+and often precipitous rock, in the clefts of which snow rests till
+midsummer. Still the lower flanks of the mountains are in general
+cultivable, while the valleys teem with orchards and gardens, and the
+plains furnish excellent pasture. The region closely resembles Zagros,
+of which it is a continuation. As we follow it, however, towards the
+south-east into the Bakhtiyari country, where it adjoins upon the
+ancient Persia, it deteriorates in character; the mountains becoming
+barer and more arid, and the valleys narrower and less fertile.
+
+All the other acquisitions of Babylonia at this period lay towards the
+west. They consisted of the Euphrates valley, above Hit; of Mesopotamia
+Proper, or the country about the two streams of the Bilik and the
+Khabour; of Syria, Phoenicia, Palestine, Idumasa, Northern Arabia, and
+part of Egypt. The Euphrates valley from Hit to Balis is a tract of no
+great value, except as a line of communication. The Mesopotamian Desert
+presses it closely upon the one side, and the Arabian upon the other.
+The river flows mostly in a deep bed between cliffs of marl, gypsum, and
+limestone, or else between bare hills producing only a few dry sapless
+shrubs and a coarse grass; and there are but rare places where, except
+by great efforts, the water can be raised so as to irrigate, to any
+extent, the land along either bank. The course of the stream is fringed
+by date-palms as high as Anah, and above is dotted occasionally with
+willows, poplars, sumacs, and the unfruitful palm-tree. Cultivation
+is possible in places along both banks, and the undulating country on
+either side affords patches of good pasture. The land improves as we
+ascend. Above the junction of the Khabour with the main stream, the left
+bank is mostly cultivable. Much of the land is flat and well-wooded,
+while often there are broad stretches of open ground, well adapted for
+pasturage. A considerable population seems in ancient times to have
+peopled the valley, which did not depend wholly or even mainly on its
+own products, but was enriched by the important traffic which was always
+passing up and down the great river.
+
+Mesopotamia Proper, or the tract extending from the head streams of the
+Khabour about Mardin and Nisibin to the Euphrates at Bir, and thence
+southwards to Karkesiyeh or Circesium, is not certainly known to have
+belonged to the kingdom of Babylon, but may be assigned to it on grounds
+of probability. Divided by a desert or by high mountains from the valley
+of the Tigris, and attached by means of its streams to that of the
+Euphrates, it almost necessarily falls to that power which holds the
+Euphrates under its dominion. The tract is one of considerable extent
+and importance. Bounded on the north by the range of hills which Strabo
+calls Mons Masius, and on the east by the waterless upland which lies
+directly west of the middle Tigris, it comprises within it all the
+numerous affluents of the Khabour and Bilik, and is thus better supplied
+with water than almost any country in these regions. The borders of the
+streams afford the richest pasture, and the whole tract along the flank
+of Masius is fairly fertile. Towards the west, the tract between the
+Khabour and the Bilik, which is diversified by the Abd-el-Aziz hills,
+is a land of fountains. "Such," says Ibn Haukal, "are not to be found
+elsewhere in all the land of the Moslems, for there are more than three
+hundred pure running brooks." Irrigation is quite possible in this
+region; and many remains of ancient watercourses show that large tracts,
+at some distance from the main streams, were formerly brought under
+cultivation.
+
+Opposite to Mesopotamia Proper, on the west or right bank of the
+Euphrates, lay Northern Syria, with its important fortress of
+Carchemish, which was undoubtedly included in the Empire. This tract is
+not one of much value. Towards the north it is mountainous, consisting
+of spurs from Amanus and Taurus, which gradually subside into the desert
+a little to the south of Aleppo. The bare, round-backed, chalky or rocky
+ranges, which here continually succeed one another, are divided only by
+narrow tortuous valleys, which run chiefly towards the Euphrates or
+the lake of Antioch. This mountain tract is succeeded by a region of
+extensive plains, separated from each other by low hills, both equally
+desolate. The soil is shallow and stony; the streams are few and of
+little volume; irrigation is thus difficult, and, except where it can be
+applied, the crops are scanty. The pistachio-nut grows wild in places;
+Vines and olives are cultivated with some success; and some grain is
+raised by the inhabitants; but the country has few natural advantages,
+and it has always depended more upon its possession of a carrying trade
+than on its home products for prosperity.
+
+West and south-west of this region, between it and the Mediterranean,
+and extending southwards from Mount Amanus to the latitude of Tyre, lies
+Syria Proper, the Coele-Syria of many writers, a long but comparatively
+narrow tract of great fertility and value. Here two parallel ranges of
+mountains intervene between the coast and the desert, prolific parents
+of a numerous progeny of small streams. First, along the line of the
+coast, is the range known as Libanusin the south, from lat. 33 20' to
+lat. 34 40', and as Bargylus in the north, from lat. 34 45' to the
+Orontes at Antioch, a range of great beauty, richly wooded in places,
+and abounding in deep glens, foaming brooks, and precipices of a
+fantastic form. [PLATE VII., Fig 2.] More inland is Antilibanus,
+culminating towards the south in Hermon, and prolonged northward in the
+Jebel Shashabu, Jebel Biha, and Jebel-el-Ala, which extends from near
+Hems to the latitude of Aleppo. More striking than even Lebanon at its
+lower extremity, where Hermon lifts a snowy peak into the air during
+most of the year, it is on the whole inferior in beauty to the coast
+range, being bleaker, more stony, and less broken up by dells and
+valleys towards the south, and tamer, barer, and less well supplied with
+streams in its more northern portion. Between the two parallel ranges
+lies the "Hollow Syria," a long and broadish valley, watered by the
+two streams of the Orontes and the "Litany" which, rising at no great
+distance from one another, flow in opposite directions, one hurrying
+northwards nearly to the flanks of Amanus, the other southwards to the
+hills of Galilee. Few places in the world are more, remarkable, or have
+a more stirring history, than this wonderful vale. Extending for above
+two hundred miles from north to south, almost in a direct line, and
+without further break than an occasional screen of low hills, it
+furnishes the most convenient line of passage between Asia and Africa,
+alike for the journeys of merchants and for the march of armies. Along
+this line passed Thothines and Barneses, Sargon, and Sennacherib,
+Neco and Nebuchadnezzar, Alexander and his warlike successors, Pompey,
+Antony, Kaled, Godfrey of Bouillon; along this must pass every great
+army which, starting from the general seats of power in Western Asia,
+seeks conquests in Africa, or which, proceeding from Africa, aims at the
+acquisition of an Asiatic dominion. Few richer tracts are to be found
+even in these most favored portions of the earth's surface. Towards the
+south the famous El-Bukaa is a land of cornfields and vineyards, watered
+by numerous small streams which fall into the Litany. Towards the
+north El-Ghab is even more splendidly fertile, with a dark rich soil,
+luxuriant vegetation, and water in the utmost abundance, though at
+present it is cultivated only in patches immediately about the towns,
+from fear of the Nusairiyeh and the Bedouins.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VII.]
+
+
+Parallel with the southern part of the Coele-Syrian valley, to the west
+and to the east, were two small but important tracts, usually regarded
+as distinct states. Westward, between the heights of Lebanon and the
+sea, and extending somewhat beyond Lebanon, both up and down the coast,
+was Phoenicia, a narrow strip of territory lying along the shore, in
+length from 150 to 180 miles, and in breadth varying from one mile to
+twenty. This tract consisted of a mere belt of sandy land along the sea,
+where the smiling palm-groves grew from which the country derived its
+name, of a broader upland region along the flank of the hills, which
+was cultivated in grain, and of the higher slopes of the mountains
+which furnished excellent timber. Small harbors, sheltered by rocky
+projections, were frequent along the coast. Wood cut in Lebanon was
+readily floated down the many streams to the shore, and then conveyed
+by sea to the ports. A narrow and scanty land made commerce almost a
+necessity. Here accordingly the first great maritime nation of antiquity
+grew up. The Phoenician fleets explored the Mediterranean at a time
+anterior to Homer, and conveyed to the Greeks and the other inhabitants
+of Europe, and of Northern and Western Africa, the wares of Assyria,
+Babylon, and Egypt. Industry and enterprise reaped their usual harvest
+of success; the Phoenicians grew in wealth, and their towns became great
+and magnificent cities. In the time when the Babylonian Empire came
+into being, the narrow tract of Phoenicia--smaller than many an
+English county--was among the most valuable countries of Asia; and its
+possession was far more to be coveted than that of many a land whose
+area was ten or twenty times as great.
+
+Eastward of Antilibanus, in the tract between that range and the great
+Syrian desert, was another very important district--the district which
+the Jews called "Aram-Dammesek," and which now forms the chief part of
+the Pashalik of Damascus. From the eastern flanks of the Antilibanus two
+great and numerous smaller streams flow down into the Damascene plain,
+and, carrying with them that strange fertilizing power which water
+always has in hot climates, convert the arid sterility of the desert
+into a garden of the most wonderful beauty. The Barada and Awaaj,
+bursting by narrow gorges from the mountain chain, scatter themselves in
+numerous channels over the great flat, intermingling their waters, and
+spreading them out so widely that for a circle of thirty miles the
+deep verdure of Oriental vegetation replaces the red hue of the Hauran.
+Walnuts, planes, poplars, cypresses, apricots, orange-trees, citrons,
+pomegranates, olives, wave above; corn and grass of the most luxuriant
+growth, below. In the midst of this great mass of foliage the city of
+Damascus "strikes out the white arms of its streets hither and thither"
+among the trees, now hid among them, now overtopping them with its domes
+and minarets, the most beautiful of all those beautiful towns which
+delight the eye of the artist in the East. In the south-west towers
+the snow-clad peak of Hermon, visible from every part of the Damascene
+plain. West, north-west, and north, stretches the long Antilibanus
+range, bare, gray, and flat-topped, except where about midway in its
+course, the rounded summit of Jebel Tiniyen breaks the uniformity of the
+line. Outside the circle of deep verdure, known to the Orientals as El
+Merj ("the Meadow"), is a setting or framework of partially cultivable
+land, dotted with clumps of trees and groves, which extend for many
+miles over the plain. To the Damascus country must also be reckoned
+those many charming valleys of Hermon and Antilibanus which open out
+into it, sending their waters to increase its beauty and luxuriance,
+the most remarkable of which are the long ravine of the Barada, and the
+romantic Wady Halbon, whose vines produced the famous beverage which
+Damascus anciently supplied at once to the Tyrian merchant-princes and
+to the voluptuous Persian kings.
+
+Below the Coelo-Syrian valley, towards the south, came Palestine, the
+Land of Lands to the Christian, the country which even the philosopher
+must acknowledge to have had a greater influence on the world's
+history than any other tract which can be brought under a single
+ethnic designation. Palestine--etymologically the country of the
+Philistines--was somewhat unfortunately named. Philistine influence may
+possibly have extended at a very remote period over the whole of it; but
+in historical times that warlike people did but possess a corner of
+the tract, less than one tenth of the whole--the low coast region
+from Jamnia to Gaza. Palestine contained, besides this, the regions of
+Galilee, Samaria, and Judaea, to the west of the Jordan, and those of
+Ituraea, Trachonitis, Bashan, and Gilead, east of that river. It was a
+tract 140 miles long, by from 70 to 100 broad, containing probably about
+11,000 square miles. It was thus about equal in size to Belgium, while
+it was less than Holland or Hanover, and not much larger than the
+principality of Wales, with which it has been compared by a recent
+writer.
+
+The great natural division of the country is the Jordan valley. This
+remarkable depression, commencing on the west flank of Hermon, runs with
+a course which is almost due south from lat. 33 25' to lat. 31 47',
+where it is merged in the Dead Sea, which may be viewed, however, as a
+continuation of the valley, prolonging it to lat. 31 8'. This valley is
+quite unlike any other in the whole world. It is a volcanic rent in
+the earth's surface, a broad chasm which has gaped and never closed
+up. Naturally, it should terminate at Merom, where the level of the
+Mediterranean is nearly reached. By some wonderful convulsion, or at any
+rate by some unusual freak of Nature, there is a channel opened out from
+Merom, which rapidly sinks below the sea level, and allows the stream to
+flow hastily, down and still down, from Merom to Gennesareth, and from
+Gennesareth to the Dead Sea, where the depression reaches its lowest
+point, and the land, rising into a ridge, separates the Jordan valley
+from the upper end of the Gulf of Akabah. The Jordan valley divides
+Palestine, strongly and sharply, into two regions. Its depth, its
+inaccessibility (for it can only be entered from the highlands on either
+side down a few steep watercourses), and the difficulty of passing
+across it (for the Jordan has but few fords), give it a separating power
+almost equal to that of an arm of the sea. In length above a hundred
+miles, in width varying from one mile to ten, and averaging some five
+miles, or perhaps six, it must have been valuable as a territory,
+possessing, as it does, a rich soil, abundant water, and in its lower
+portion a tropical climate.
+
+On either side of the deep Jordan cleft lies a highland of moderate
+elevation, on the right that of Galilee, Samaria, and Judsea, on the
+left that of Ituraea, Bashan, and Gilead. The right or western highland
+consists of a mass of undulating hills, with rounded tops, composed of
+coarse gray stone, covered, or scarcely covered, with a scanty soil, but
+capable of cultivation in corn, olives, and figs. This region is
+most productive towards the north, barer and more arid as we proceed
+southwards towards the desert. The lowest portion, Judaea, is
+unpicturesque, ill-watered, and almost treeless; the central, Samaria,
+has numerous springs, some rich plains, many wooded heights, and in
+places quite a sylvan appearance; the highest, Galilee, is a land of
+water-brooks, abounding in timber, fertile and beautiful. The average
+height of the whole district is from 1500 to 1800 feet above the
+Mediterranean. Main elevations within it vary from 2500 to 4000 feet.
+The axis of the range is towards the East, nearer, that is, to the
+Jordan valley than to the sea. It is a peculiarity of the highland that
+there is one important break in it. As the Lowland mountains of Scotland
+are wholly separated from the mountains of the Highlands by the low
+tract which stretches across from the Frith of Forth to the Frith of
+Clyde, or as the ranges of St. Gall and Appenzell are divided off from
+the rest of the Swiss mountains by the flat which extends from the Rhine
+at Eagatz to the same river at Waldshut, so the western highland of
+Palestine is broken in twain by the famous "plain of Esdraelon,"
+which runs from the Bay of Acre to the Jordan valley at Beth-Shean or
+Scythopolis.
+
+East of the Jordan no such depression occurs, the highland there being
+continuous. It differs from the western highland chiefly in this--that
+its surface, instead of being broken up into a confused mass of rounded
+hills, is a table-land, consisting of a long succession of slightly
+undulating plains. Except in Trachonitis and southern Ituraea, where the
+basaltic rock everywhere crops out, the soil is rich and productive, the
+country in places wooded with fine trees, and the herbage luxuriant. On
+the west the mountains rise almost precipitously from the Jordan valley,
+above which they tower to the height of 3000 or 4000 feet. The outline
+is singularly uniform; and the effect is that of a huge wall guarding
+Palestine on this side from the wild tribes of the desert. Eastward the
+tableland slopes gradually, and melts into the sands of Arabia. Here
+water and wood are scarce; but the soil is still good, and bears the
+most abundant crops.
+
+Finally, Palestine contains the tract from which it derives its
+name, the low country of the Philistines, which the Jews called the
+_Shephelah_, together with a continuation of this tract northwards to
+the roots of Carmol, the district known to the Jews as "Sharon," or "the
+smooth place." From Carmol to the Wady Sheriah, where the Philistine
+country ended, is a distance of about one hundred miles, which gives the
+length of the region in question. Its breadth between the shore and the
+highland varies from about twenty-five miles, in the south, between Gaza
+and the hills of Dan, to three miles, or less, in the north, between
+Dor and the border of Manasseh. Its area is probably from 1400 to 1500
+square miles, This low strip is along its whole course divided into two
+parallel belts or bands-the first a flat sandy tract along the shore,
+the Ramleh of the modern Arabs; the second, more undulating, a region
+of broad rolling plains rich in corn, and anciently clothed in part with
+thick woods, watered by reedy streams, which flow down from the great
+highland. A valuable tract is this entire plain, but greatly exposed to
+ravage. Even the sandy belt will grow fruit-trees; and the towns which
+stand on it, as Gaza, Jaffa, and Ashdod, are surrounded with huge groves
+of olives, sycamores, and palms, or buried in orchards and gardens,
+bright with pomegranates and orange-trees. The more inland region is
+of marvellous fertility. Its soil is a rich loam, containing scarcely a
+pebble, which yields year after year prodigious crops of grain--chiefly
+wheat--without manure or irrigation, or other cultivation than a light
+ploughing. Philistia was the granary of Syria, and was important doubly,
+first, as yielding inexhaustible supplies to its conqueror, and secondly
+as affording the readiest passage to the great armies which contended in
+these regions for the mastery of the Eastern World.
+
+South of the region to which we have given the name of Palestine,
+intervening between it and Egypt, lay a tract, to which it is difficult
+to assign any political designation. Herodotus regarded it as a portion
+of Arabia, which he carried across the valley of the Arabah and
+made abut on the Mediterranean. To the Jews it was "the land of the
+south"--the special country of the Amalekites. By Strabo's time it had
+come to be known as Idumsea, or the Edomite country; and under this
+appellation it will perhaps be most convenient to describe it here.
+Idumasa, then, was the tract south and south-west of Palestine from
+about lat. 31 10'. It reached westward to the borders of Egypt, which
+were at this time marked by the Wady-el-Arish, southward to the range of
+Sinai and the Elanitic Gulf, and eastward to the Great Desert. Its
+chief town was Petra, in the mountains east of the Arabah valley. The
+character of the tract is for the most part a hard gravelly and rocky
+desert; but occasionally there is good herbage, and soil that admits of
+cultivation; brilliant flowers and luxuriantly growing shrubs bedeck the
+glens and terraces of the Petra range; and most of the tract produces
+plants and bushes on which camels, goats, and even sheep will browse,
+while occasional palm groves furnish a grateful shade and an important
+fruit. The tract divides itself into four regions--first, a region of
+sand, low and flat, along the Mediterranean, the Shephelah without
+its fertility; next, a region of hard gravelly plain intersected by
+limestone ridges, and raised considerably above the sea level, the
+Desert of El-Tin, or of "the Wanderings;" then the long, broad, low
+valley of the Arabah, which rises gradually from the Dead Sea to an
+imperceptible watershed, and then falls gently to the head of the
+Gulf of Akabah, a region of hard sand thickly dotted with bushes, and
+intersected by numerous torrent courses; finally a long narrow region
+of mountains and hills parallel with the Arabah, constituting Idumsea
+Proper, or the original Edom, which, though rocky and rugged, is full
+of fertile glens, ornamented with trees and shrubs, and in places
+cultivated in terraces. In shape the tract was a rude square or oblong,
+with its sides nearly facing the four cardinal points, its length from
+the Mediterranean to the Gulf of Akabah being 130 miles, and its width
+from the Wady-el-Arish to the eastern side of the Petra mountains 120
+miles. The area is thus about 1560 square miles.
+
+Beyond the Wady-el-Arish was Egypt, stretching from the Mediterranean
+southwards a distance of nearly eight degrees, or more than 550 miles.
+As this country was not, however, so much a part of the Babylonian
+Empire as a dependency lying upon its borders, it will not be necessary
+to describe it in this place.
+
+One region, however, remains still unnoticed which seems to have been
+an integral portion of the Empire. This is Palmyrene, or the Syrian
+Desert--the tract lying between Coelo-Syria on the one hand and the
+valley of the middle Euphrates on the other, and abutting towards the
+south on the great Arabian Desert, to which it is sometimes regarded
+as belonging. It is for the most part a hard sandy or gravelly plain,
+intersected by low rocky ranges, and either barren or productive only
+of some sapless shrubs and of a low thin grass. Occasionally, however,
+there are oases, where the fertility is considerable. Such an oasis is
+the region about Palmyra itself, which derived its name from the palm
+groves in the vicinity; here the soil is good, and a large tract is
+even now under cultivation. Another oasis is that of Karyatein, which
+is watered by an abundant stream, and is well wooded, and productive of
+grain. The Palmyrene, however, as a whole possesses but little value,
+except as a passage country. Though large armies can never have
+traversed the desert even in this upper region, where it is
+comparatively narrow, trade in ancient times found it expedient to
+avoid the long detour by the Orontes Valley, Aleppo, and Bambuk, and
+to proceed directly from Damascus by way of Palymra to Thapsaeus on the
+Euphrates. Small bands of light troops also occasionally took the same
+course; and the great saving of distance thus effected made it important
+to the Babylonians to possess an authority over the region in question.
+
+Such, then, in its geographical extent, was the great Babylonian Empire.
+Reaching from Luristan on the one side to the borders of Egypt on the
+other, its direct length from east to west was nearly sixteen degrees,
+or about 980 miles, while its length for all practical purposes, owing
+to the interposition of the desert between its western and its eastern
+provinces, was perhaps not less than 1400 miles. Its width was very
+disproportionate to this. Between Zagros and the Arabian Desert, where
+the width was the greatest, it amounted to about 280 miles; between
+Amanus and Palmyra it was 250; between the Mons Masius and the middle
+Euphrates it may have been 200; in Syria and Idumsea it cannot have been
+more than 100 or 160. The entire area of the Empire was probably from
+240,000 to 250,000 square miles--which is about the present size of
+Austria. Its shape may be compared roughly to a gnomon, with one longer
+and one shorter arm.
+
+It added to the inconvenience of this long straggling form, which made
+a rapid concentration of the forces of the Empire impossible, that the
+capital, instead of occupying a central position, was placed somewhat
+low in the longer of the two arms of the gnomon, and was thus nearly
+1000 miles removed from the frontier province of the west. Though in
+direct distance, as the crow flies, Babylon is not more than 450 miles
+from Damascus, or more than 520 from Jerusalem, yet the necessary detour
+by Aleppo is so great that it lengthens the distance, in the one case
+by 250, in the other by 380 miles. From so remote a centre it was
+impossible for the life-blood to circulate very vigorously to the
+extremities.
+
+The Empire was on the whole fertile and well-watered. The two great
+streams of Western Asia--the Tigris and the Euphrates--which afforded
+an abundant supply of the invaluable fluid to the most important of
+the provinces, those of the south-east, have already been described at
+length; as have also the chief streams of the Mesopotamian district, the
+Belik and the Khabour. But as yet in this work no account has been given
+of a number of important rivers in the extreme east and the extreme
+west, on which the fertility, and so the prosperity, of the Empire very
+greatly depended. It is proposed in the present place to supply this
+deficiency.
+
+The principle rivers of the extreme east were the Choaspes, or modern
+Kerkhah, the Pasitigris or Eulseus, now the Kuran, the Hedyphon or
+Hedypnus, now the Jerahi, and the Oroatis, at present the Tab or
+Hindyan. Of these, the Oroatis, which is the most eastern, belongs
+perhaps more to Persia than to Babylon; but its lower course probably
+fell within the Susianian territory. It rises in the mountains between
+Shiraz and Persepolis, about lat. 29 45', long. 52 35' E.; and flows
+towards the Persian Gulf with a course which is north-west to Failiyun,
+then nearly W. to Zehitun, after which it becomes somewhat south of west
+to Hindyan, and then S.W. by S. to the sea. The length of the stream,
+without counting lesser windings, is 200 miles; its width at Hindyan,
+sixteen miles above its mouth, is eighty yards, and to this distance it
+is navigable for boats of twenty tons burthen. At first its waters are
+pure and sweet, but they gradually become corrupted, and at Hindyan they
+are so brackish as not to be fit for use. The Jerahi rises from several
+sources in the Kuh Margun, a lofty and precipitous range, forming the
+continuation of the chain of Zagros. about long. 50 to 51, and lat.
+31 30'. These head-streams have a general direction from N.E. to S.W.
+The principal of them is the Kurdistan river, which rises about fifty
+miles to the north-east of Babahan and flowing south-west to that point,
+then bends round to the north, and runs north-west nearly to the fort
+of Mungasht, where it resumes its original direction, and receiving from
+the north-east the Abi Zard, or "Yellow River"--a delightful stream of
+the coldest and purest water possible--becomes known as the Jerahi, and
+carries a large body of water as far as Fellahiyeh or Dorak. Near Dorak
+the waters of the Jerahi are drawn off into a number of canals, and the
+river is thus greatly diminished; but still the stream struggles on, and
+proceeds by a southerly course towards the Persian Gulf, which it enters
+near Gadi in long. 48 52'. The course of the Jerahi, exclusively of
+the smaller windings, is about equal in length to that of the Tab or
+Hindyan. In volume, before its dispersion, it is considerably greater
+than that river. It has a breadth of about a hundred yards before it
+reaches Babahan, and is navigable for boats almost from its junction
+with the Abi Zard. Its size is, however, greatly reduced in its lower
+course, and travellers who skirt the coast regard the Tab as the more
+important river.
+
+The Kuran is a river very much exceeding in size both the Tab and the
+Jerahi. It is formed by the junction of two large streams--the Dizful
+river and the Kuran proper, or river of Shuster. Of these the Shuster
+stream is the more eastern. It rises in the Zarduh Kuh, or "Yellow
+Mountain," in lat. 32, long. 51, almost opposite to the river Isfahan.
+From its source it is a large stream. Its direction is at first to the
+southeast, but after a while it sweeps round and runs considerably north
+of west; and this course it pursues through the mountains, receiving
+tributaries of importance from both sides, till, near Akhili, it turns
+round to the south, and, cutting at a right angle the outermost of the
+Zagros ranges, flows down with a course S.W. by S. nearly to Sinister,
+where, in consequence of a bund or dam thrown across it, it bifurcates,
+and passes in two streams to the right and to the left of the town.
+The right branch, which earned commonly about two thirds of the water,
+proceeds by a tortuous course of nearly forty miles, in a direction a
+very little west of south, to its junction with the Dizful stream, which
+takes place about two miles north of the little town of Bandi-kir. Just
+below that town the left branch, called at present Abi-Gargar, which
+has made a considerable bend to the east, rejoins the main stream, which
+thenceforth flows in a single channel. The course of the Kuran from its
+source to its junction with the Dizful branch, including main windings,
+is about 210 miles. The Dizful. branch rises from two sources, nearly a
+degree apart, in lat. 33 30'. These streams run respectively south-east
+and south-west, a distance of forty miles, to their junction near
+Bahrein, whence their united waters flow in a tortuous course, with
+a general direction of south, for above a hundred miles to the outer
+barrier of Zagros, which they penetrate near the Diz fort, through a
+succession of chasms and gorges. The course of the stream from this
+point is south-west through the hills and across the plain, past Dizful,
+to the place where it receives the Beladrud from the west, when it
+changes and becomes first south and then southeast to its junction with
+the Shuster river near Bandi-kir. The entire course of the Dizful stream
+to this point is probably not less than 380 miles. Below Bandi-kir,
+the Kuran, now become "a noble river, exceeding in size the Tigris and
+Euphrates," meanders across the plain in a general direction of S.S.
+W., past the towns of Uris, Ahwaz, and Ismaili, to Sablah, when it
+turns more to the west, and passing Mohammerah, empties itself into the
+Shat-el-Arab, about 22 miles below Busra. The entire course of the Kuran
+from its most remote source, exclusive of the lesser windings, is not
+less than 430 miles.
+
+The Kerkhah (anciently the Choaspes) is formed by three streams of
+almost equal magnitude, all of them rising in the most eastern portion
+of the Zagros range. The central of the three flows from the southern
+flank of Mount Elwand (Orontes), the mountain behind Hamadan (Ecbatana),
+and receives on the right, after a course of about thirty miles, the
+northern or Singur branch, and ten miles further on the southern or
+Guran branch, which is known by the name of the Gamas-ab. The river
+thus formed flows westward to Behistun, after which it bonds to the
+south-west, and then to the south, receiving tributaries on both hands,
+and winding among the mountains as far as the ruined city of Rudbar.
+Here it bursts through the outer barrier of the great range, and,
+receiving the large stream of the Kirrind from the north-west, flows
+S.S.E. and S.E. along the foot of the range, between it and the Kebir
+Kuh, till it meets the stream of the Abi-Zal, when it finally leaves the
+hills and flows through the plain, pursuing a S.S.E. direction to the
+ruins of Susa, which lie upon its left bank, and then turning to the
+S. S. W., and running in that direction to the Shat-el-Arab, which it
+reaches about five miles below Kurnur. Its length is estimated at above
+500 miles; its width, at some distance above its junction with the
+Abi-Zal, is from eighty to a hundred yards.
+
+The course of the Kerkhah was not always exactly such as is here
+described. Anciently it appears to have bifurcated at Pai Pul, 18 or 20
+miles N.W. of Susa, and to have sent a branch east of the Susa ruins,
+which absorbed the Shapur, a small tributary of the Dizful stream, and
+ran into the Kuran a little above Ahwaz. The remains of the old channel
+are still to be traced; and its existence explains the confusion,
+observable in ancient times, between the Kerkhah and the Kuran, to each
+of which streams, in certain parts of their course, we find the name
+Eulseus applied. The proper Eulseus was the eastern branch of the
+Kerkhah (Choaspes) from Pai Pul to Ahwaz; but the name was naturally
+extended both northwards to the Choaspes above Pai Pul and southwards to
+the Kuran below Ahwaz. The latter stream was, however, known also, both
+in its upper and its lower course, as the Pasitigris.
+
+On the opposite side of the Empire the rivers were less considerable.
+Among the most important may be mentioned the Sajur, a tributary of
+the Euphrates, the Koweik, or river of Aleppo, the Orontes, or river of
+Antioch, the Litany, or river of Tyre, the Barada, or river of Damascus,
+and the Jordan, with its tributaries, the Jabbok and the Hieromax.
+
+The Sajur rises from two principle sources on the southern flanks of
+Amanus, which, after running a short distance, unite a little to the
+east of Ain-Tab. The course of the stream from the point of junction is
+south-east. In this direction it flows in a somewhat tortuous channel
+between two ranges of hills for a distance of about 30 miles to Tel
+Khalid, a remarkable conical hill crowned by ruins. Here it receives an
+important affluent--the Keraskat--from the west, and becomes suitable
+for boat navigation. At the same time its course changes, and runs
+eastward for about 12 miles; after which the stream again inclines to
+the south, and keeping an E.S.E. direction for 14 or 15 miles, enters
+the Euphrates by five mouths in about lat. 36 37'. The course of the
+river measures probably about 65 miles.
+
+The Koweik, or river of Aleppo (the Chalus of Xenophon), rises in the
+hills south of Ain-Tab. Springing from two sources, one of which is
+known as the Baloklu-Su, or "Fish River," it flows at first eastward,
+as if intending to join the Euphrates. On reaching the plain of Aleppo,
+however, near Sayyadok-Koi, it receives a tributary from the north,
+which gives its course a southern inclination; and from this point it
+proceeds in a south and south-westerly direction, winding along the
+shallow bed which it has scooped in the Aloppo plain, a distance of 60
+miles, past Aleppo to Kinnisrin, near the foot of the Jebel-el-Sis. Here
+its further progress southward is barred, and it is forced to turn to
+the east along the foot of the mountain, which it skirts for eight or
+ten miles, finally entering the small lake or marsh of El Melak, in
+which it loses itself after a source of about 80 miles.
+
+The Orontes, the great river of Assyria, rises in the Buka'a--the deep
+valley known to the ancients as Coele-Syria Proper--springing from
+a number of small brooks, which flow down from the Antilibanus range
+between lat. 34 5' and lat. 34 12'. Its most remote source is near
+Yunin, about seven mites N.N.E. of Baalbek. The stream flows at first
+N.W. by W. into the plain, on reaching which it turns at a right-angle
+to the northeast, and skirts the foot of the Antilibanus range as far as
+Lebweh, where, being joined by a larger stream from the southeast,130 it
+takes its direction and flows N.W. and then N. across the plain to the
+foot of Lebanon. Here it receives the waters of a much more abundant
+fountain, which wells out from the roots of that range, and is regarded
+by the Orientals as the true "head of the stream." Thus increased the
+river flows northwards for a short space, after which it turns to the
+northeast, and runs in a deep cleft along the base of Lebanon, pursuing
+this direction for 15 or 16 miles to a point beyond Ribleh, nearly
+in lat. 34 30'. Here the course of the river again changes, becoming
+slightly west of north to the Lake of Hems (Buheiret-Hems), which is
+nine or ten miles below Ribleh. Issuing from the Lake of Hems about lat.
+34 43', the Orontes once more flows to the north east, and in five or
+six miles reaches Hems itself, which it leaves on its right bank.
+It then flows for twenty miles nearly due north, after which, on
+approaching Hama (Hamath), it makes a slight bend to the east round
+the foot of Jebel Erbayn, and then entering the rich pasture country of
+El-Ghab' runs north-west and north to the "Iron Bridge" (Jisr Hadid),
+in lat. 36 11'. Its course thus far has been nearly parallel with
+the coast of the Mediterranean, and has lain between two ranges of
+mountains, the more western of which has shut it out from the sea.
+At Jisr Hadid the western mountains come to an end, and the Orontes,
+sweeping round their base, runs first west and then south-west down the
+broad valley of Antioch, in the midst of the most lovely scenery, to the
+coast, which it reaches a little above the 36th parallel, in long. 35
+55'. The course of the Orontes, exclusive of lesser windings, is about
+200 miles. It is a considerable stream almost from its source. At Hamah,
+more than a hundred miles from its mouth, it is crossed by a bridge
+of thirteen arches. At Antioch it is fifty yards in width, and runs
+rapidly. The natives now call it the Nahr-el-Asy, or "Rebel River,"
+either from its running in an opposite direction to all other streams of
+the country, or (more probably) from its violence and impetuosity.
+
+There is one tributary of the Orontes which deserves a cursory mention.
+This is the Kara Su, or "Black River," which reaches it from the Aga
+Denghis, or Bahr-el-Abiyad, about five miles below Jisr Hadid and four
+or five above Antioch. This stream brings into the Orontes the greater
+part of the water that is drained from the southern side of Amanus. It
+is formed by a union of two rivers, the upper Kara Su and the Afrin,
+which flow into the Aga Denghis (White Sea), or Lake of Antioch, from
+the north-west, the one entering it at its northern, the other at its
+eastern extremity. Both are considerable streams; and the Kara Su on
+issuing from the lake carries a greater body of water than the Orontes
+itself, and thus adds largely to the volume of that stream in its lower
+course from the point of junction to the Mediterranean.
+
+The Litany, or river of Tyre, rises from a source at no great distance
+from the head springs of the Orontes. The almost imperceptible watershed
+of the Buka'a runs between Yunin and Baalbek, a few miles north of
+the latter; and when it is once passed, the drainage of the water is
+southwards. The highest permanent fountain of the southern stream seems
+to be a small lake near Tel Hushben, which lies about six miles to the
+south-west of the Baalbek ruins. Springing from this source the Litany
+flows along the lower Buka'a in a direction which is generally a little
+west of south, receiving on either side a number of streamlets and
+rills from Libanus and Anti-libanus, and giving out in its turn numerous
+canals for irrigation, which fertilize the thirsty soil. As the stream
+descends with numerous windings, but still with the same general course,
+the valley of the Buka'a contracts more and more, till finally it
+terminates in a gorge, down which thunders the Litany--a gorge a
+thousand feet or more in depth, and so narrow that in one place it
+is actually bridged over by masses of rock which have fallen from the
+jagged sides. Narrower and deeper grows the gorge, and the river chafes
+and foams through it, gradually working itself round to the west, and so
+clearing a way through the very roots of Lebanon to the low coast tract,
+across which it meanders slowly, as if wearied with its long struggle,
+before finally emptying itself into the sea. The course of the Litany
+may be roughly estimated at from 70 to 75 miles.
+
+The Barada, or river of Damascus, rises in the plain of Zebdany--the
+very centre of the Antilibanus. It has its real permanent source in a
+small nameless lake in the lower part of the plain, about lat. 33
+41'; but in winter it is fed by streams flowing from the valley above,
+especially by one which rises in lat. 33 46', near the small hamlet
+of Ain Hawar. The course of the Barada from the small lake is at first
+towards the east; but it soon sweeps round and flows-southward for about
+four miles to the lower end of the plain, after which it again turns to
+the east and enters a romantic glen, running between high cliffs, and
+cutting through the main ridge of the Antilibanus between the Zebdany
+plain and Suk, the Abila of the ancients. From Suk the river flows
+through a narrow but lovely valley, in a course which has a general
+direction of south-east, past Ain Fijoh (where its waters are greatly
+increased), through a series of gorges and glens, to the point where the
+roots of the Antilibanus sink down upon the plain, when it bursts forth
+from the mountains and scatters. Channels are drawn from it on either
+side, and its waters are spread far and wide over the Merj, which it
+covers with fine trees and splendid herbage.
+
+One branch passes right through the city, cutting it in half. Others
+irrigate the gardens and orchards both to the north and to the south.
+Beyond the town the tendency to division still continues. The river,
+weakened greatly through the irrigation, separates into three main
+channels, which flow with divergent courses towards the east, and
+terminate in two large swamps or lakes, the Bahret-esh-Shurkiyeh and the
+Bahret-el-Kibli-yeh, at a distance of sixteen or seventeen miles from
+the city. The Barada is a short stream, its entire course from the plain
+of Zebdany not much exceeding forty miles.
+
+The Jordan is commonly regarded as flowing from two sources in the
+Huleh or plain immediately above Lake Merom, one at Banias (the ancient
+Paneas), the other at Tel-el-Kady, which marks the site of Laish or
+Dan. But the true highest present source of the river is the spring near
+Hasbeiya, called Nebaes-Hasbany, or Eas-en-Neba. This spring rises in
+the torrent-course known as the Wady-el-Teim, which descends from the
+north-western flank of Hermon, and runs nearly parallel with the great
+gorge of the Litany, having a direction from north-east to south-west.
+The water wells forth in abundance from the foot of a volcanic
+bluff, called Eas-el-Anjah, lying directly north of Hasbeiya, and is
+immediately used to turn a mill. The course of the streamlet is very
+slightly west of south down the Wady to the Huleh plain, where it
+is joined, and multiplied sevenfold, by the streams from Banais and
+Tel-el-Kady, becoming at once worthy of the name of river. Hence it
+runs almost due south to the Merom lake, which it enters in lat. 33
+7', through a reedy and marshy tract which it is difficult to penetrate.
+Issuing from Merom in lat. 33 3', the Jordan flows at first sluggishly
+southward to "Jacob's Bridge," passing which, it proceeds in the same
+direction, with a much swifter current down the depressed and narrow
+cleft between Merom and Tiberias, descending at the rate of fifty
+feet in a mile, and becoming (as has been said) a sort of "continuous
+waterfall." Before reaching Tiberias its course bends slightly to the
+west of south for about two miles, and it pours itself into that "sea"
+in about lat. 32 53'. Quitting the sea in lat. 32 42', it finally
+enters the track called the Ghor, the still lower chasm or cleft which
+intervenes between Tiberias and the upper end of the Dead Sea. Here the
+descent of the stream becomes comparatively gentle, not much exceeding
+three feet per mile; for though the direct distance between the two
+lakes is less than seventy miles, and the entire fall above 600 feet,
+which would seem to give a descent of nine or ten feet a mile, yet, as
+the course of the river throughout this part of its career is tortuous
+in the extreme, the fall is really not greater than above indicated.
+Still it is sufficient to produce as many as twenty-seven rapids, or
+at the rate of one to every seven miles. In this part of its course
+the Jordan receives two important tributaries, each of which seems to
+deserve a few words.
+
+The Jarmuk, or Sheriat-el-Mandhur, anciently the Hiero-max, drains the
+water, not only from Gaulonitis or Jaulan, the country immediately east
+and south-east of the sea of Tiberias, but also from almost the whole
+of the Hauran. At its mouth it is 130 feet wide, and in the winter it
+brings down a great body of water into the Jordan. In summer, however,
+it shrinks up into an inconsiderable brook, having no more remote
+sources than the perennial springs at Mazarib, Dilly, and one or
+two other places on the plateau of Jaulan. It runs through a fertile
+country, and has generally a deep course far below the surface of the
+plain; ere falling into the Jordan it makes its way through a wild
+ravine, between rugged cliffs of basalt, which are in places upwards of
+a hundred feet in height.
+
+The Zurka, or Jabbok, is a stream of the same character with the
+Hieromax, but of inferior dimensions and importance. It drains a
+considerable portion of the land of Gilead, but has no very remote
+sources, and in summer only carries water through a few miles of its
+lower course. In winter, on the contrary, it is a roaring stream with a
+strong current, and sometimes cannot be forded. The ravine through which
+it flows is narrow, deep, and in some places wild. Throughout nearly
+its whole course it is fringed by thickets of cane and oleander, while
+above, its banks are clothed with forests of oak.
+
+The Jordan receives the Hieromax about four or five miles below the
+point where it issues from the Sea of Tiberias, and the Jabbok about
+half-way between that lake and the Dead Sea. Augmented by these streams,
+and others of less importance from the mountains on either side, it
+becomes a river of considerable size, being opposite Beth-shan (Beisan)
+140 feet wide, and three feet deep, and averaging, in its lower course,
+a width of ninety with a depth of eight or nine feet. Its entire course,
+from the fountain near Hasbeiya to the Dead Sea, including the passage
+of the two lakes through which it flows, is, if we exclude meanders,
+about 130, if we include them, 360 miles. It is calculated to pour into
+the Dead Sea 6,090,000 tons of water daily.
+
+Besides these rivers the Babylonian territory comprised a number of
+important lakes. Of these some of the more eastern have been described
+in a former volume: as the Bahr-i-Nedjif in Lower Chaldsea, and the Lake
+of Khatouniyeh in the tract between the Sinjar and the Khabour. It was
+chiefly, however, towards the west that sheets of water abounded: the
+principal of these were the Sabakhah, the Bahr-el-Melak, and the Lake
+of Antioch in Upper Syria; the Bahr-el-Kades, or Lake of Hems, in the
+central region; and the Damascus lakes, the Lake of Merom, the Sea of
+Galilee or Tiberias, and the Dead Sea, in the regions lying furthest to
+the south. Of these the greater number were salt, and of little value,
+except as furnishing the salt of commerce; but four--the Lake of
+Antioch, the Bahr-el-Kades, the Lake Merom, and the Sea of Galilee-were
+fresh-water basins lying upon the courses of streams which ran through
+them; and these not only diversified the scenery by their clear bright
+aspect, but were of considerable value to the inhabitants, as furnishing
+them with many excellent sorts of fish.
+
+Of the salt lakes the most eastern was the Sabakhah. This is a basin of
+long and narrow form, lying on and just below the 36th parallel. It
+is situated on the southern route from Balis to Aleppo, and is nearly
+equally distant between the two places. Its length is from twelve to
+thirteen miles; and its width, where it is broadest, is about five
+miles. It receives from the north the waters of the Nahr-el-Dhahab, or
+"Golden River" (which has by some been identified with the Daradax of
+Xenophon), and from the west two or three insignificant streams, which
+empty themselves into its western extremity. The lake produces a large
+quantity of salt, especially after wet seasons, which is collected and
+sold by the inhabitants of the surrounding country.
+
+The Bahr-el-Molak, the lake which absorbs the Koweik, or river of
+Aleppo, is less than twenty miles distant from Lake Sabakhah, which it
+very much resembles in its general character. Its ordinary length is
+about nine miles, and its width three or four; but in winter it is
+greatly swollen by the rains, and at that time it spreads out so widely
+that its circumference sometimes exceeds fifty miles. Much salt is
+drawn from its bed in the dry season, and a large part of Syria is hence
+supplied with the commodity. The lake is covered with small islands, and
+greatly frequented by aquatic birds-geese, ducks, flamingoes, and the
+like.
+
+The lakes in the neighborhood of Damascus are three in number, and are
+all of a very similar type. They are indeterminate in size and shape,
+changing with the wetness or dryness of the season; and it is possible
+that sometimes they may be all united in one. The most northern, which
+is called the Bahret-esh-Shurkiyeh, receives about half the surplus
+water of the Barada, together with some streamlets from the outlying
+ranges of Antilibanus towards the north. The central one, called the
+Bahret-el-Kibliyeh, receives the rest of the Barada water, which enters
+it by three or four branches on its northern and western sides. The most
+southern, known as Bahret-Hijaneh, is the receptacle for the stream
+of the Awaaj, and takes also the water from the northern parts of the
+Ledjah, or region of Argob. The three lakes are in the same line--a line
+which runs from N.N.E. to S.S.W. They are, or at least were recently,
+separated by tracts of dry land from two to four miles broad. Dense
+thickets of tall reeds surround them, and in summer almost cover their
+surface. Like the Bahr-el-Melak, they are a home for water-fowl, which
+flock to them in enormous numbers.
+
+By far the largest and most important of the salt lakes is the Great
+Lake of the South--the Bahr Lut ("Sea of Lot"), or Dead Sea. This sheet
+of water, which has always attracted the special notice and observation
+of travellers, has of late years been scientifically surveyed by
+officers of the American navy; and its shape, its size, and even its
+depth, are thus known with accuracy. The Dead Sea is of an oblong form,
+and would be of a very regular contour, were it not for a remarkable
+projection from its eastern shore near its southern extremity. In this
+place, a long and low peninsula, shaped like a human foot, projects
+into the lake, filling up two thirds of its width, and thus dividing the
+expanse of water into two portions, which are connected by a long and
+somewhat narrow passage. The entire length of the sea, from north to
+south, is 46 miles: its greatest width, between its eastern and its
+western shores, is 101 miles. The whole area is estimated at 250
+geographical square miles. Of this space 174 square miles belong to the
+northern portion of the lake (the true "Sea"), 29 to the narrow channel,
+and 46 to the southern portion, which has been called "the back-water,"
+or "the lagoon."
+
+The most remarkable difference between the two portions of the lake is
+the contrast they present as to depth. While the depth of the northern
+portion is from 600 feet, at a short distance from the mouth of the
+Jordan, to 800, 1000, 1200, and even 1300 feet, further down, the depth
+of the lagoon is nowhere more than 12 or 13 feet; and in places it is
+so shallow that it has been found possible, in some seasons, to ford the
+whole way across from one side to the other. The peculiarities of the
+Dead Sea, as compared with other lakes, are its depression below the
+sea-level, its buoyancy, and its extreme saltness. The degree of the
+depression is not yet certainly known; but there is reason to believe
+that it is at least as much at 1300 feet, whereas no other lake is known
+to be depressed more than 570 feet. The buoyancy and the saltness are
+not so wholly unparalleled. The waters of Lake Urumiyeh are probably
+as salt and as buoyant; those of Lake Elton in the steppe east of the
+Wolga, and of certain other Russian lakes, appear to be even salter. But
+with these few exceptions (if they are exceptions), the Dead Sea water
+must be pronounced to be the heaviest and saltest water known to us.
+More than one fourth of its weight is solid matter held in solution. Of
+this solid matter nearly one third is common salt, which is more than
+twice as much as is contained in the waters of the ocean.
+
+Of the fresh-water lakes the largest and most important is the Sea of
+Tiberias. This sheet of water is of an oval shape, with an axis, like
+that of the Dead Sea, very nearly due north and south. Its greatest
+length is about thirteen and its greatest width about six miles. Its
+extreme depth, so far as has been ascertained, is 27 fathoms, or 165
+feet. The Jordan flows into its upper end turbid and muddy, and issues
+forth at its southern extremity clear and pellucid. It receives also the
+waters of a considerable number of small streams and springs, some of
+which are warm and brackish; yet its own water is always sweet, cool,
+and transparent, and, having everywhere a shelving pebbly beach, has
+a bright sparkling appearance. The banks are lofty, and in general
+destitute of verdure. What exactly is the amount of depression below the
+level of the Mediterranean remains still, to some extent, uncertain; but
+it is probably not much less than 700 feet. Now, as formerly, the lake
+produces an abundance of fish, which are pronounced, by those who have
+partaken of them, to be "delicious."
+
+Nine miles above the Sea of Tiberias, on the course of the same stream,
+is the far smaller basin known now as the Bahr-el Huleh, and anciently
+(perhaps) as Merom. This is a mountain tarn, varying in size as the
+season is wet or dry, but never apparently more than about seven miles
+long, by five or six broad. It is situated at the lower extremity of
+the plain called Huleh, and is almost entirely surrounded by flat marshy
+ground, thickly set with reeds and canes, which make the lake itself
+almost unapproachable. The depth of the Huleh is not known. It is a
+favorite resort of aquatic birds, and is said to contain an abundant
+supply of fish.
+
+The Bahr-el-Kades, or Lake of Hems, lies on the course of the Orontes,
+about 139 miles N.N.E. of Merom, and nearly the same distance south of
+the Lake of Antioch. It is a small sheet of water, not more than six
+or eight miles long, and only two or three wide, running in the same
+direction with the course of the river, which here turns from north to
+north-east. According to Abulfeda and some other writers, it is mainly,
+if not wholly, artificial, owing its origin to a dam or embankment
+across the stream, which is from four to five hundred yards in
+length, and about twelve or fourteen feet high. In Abulfeda's time the
+construction of the embankment was ascribed to Alexander the Great, and
+the lake consequently was not regarded as having had any existence in
+Babylonian times; but traditions of this kind are little to be trusted,
+and it is quite possible that the work above mentioned, constructed
+apparently with a view to irrigation, may really belong to a very much
+earlier age.
+
+Finally, in Northern Syria, 115 miles north of the Bahr-el-Kades, and
+about 60 miles N.W.W. of the Bahr-el-Melak, is the Bahr-el-Abyad (White
+Lake), or Sea of Antioch. [PLATE. VIII., Fig. 1.] This sheet of water
+is a parallelogram, the angles of which face the cardinal points: in its
+greater diameter it extends somewhat more than ten miles, while it
+is about seven miles across. Its depth on the western side, where it
+approaches the mountains, is six or eight feet; but elsewhere it is
+generally more shallow, not exceeding three or four feet. It lies in a
+marshy plain called El-Umk, and is thickly fringed with reeds round the
+whole of its circumference. From the silence of antiquity, some
+writers have imagined that it did not exist in ancient times; but the
+observations of scientific travellers are opposed to this theory. The
+lake abounds with fish of several kinds, and the fishery attracts and
+employs a considerable number of the natives who dwell near it.
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VIII.]
+
+Besides these lakes, there were contained within the limits of
+the Empire a number of petty tarns, which do not merit particular
+description. Such were the Bahr-el-Taka, and other small lakes on the
+right bank of the middle Orontes, the Birket-el-Limum in the
+Lebanon, and the Birket-er-Eam on the southern flank of Hermon. It is
+unnecessary, however, to pursue this subject any further. But a few
+words must be added on the chief cities of the Empire, before this
+chapter is brought to a conclusion.
+
+The cities of the Empire may be divided into those of the dominant
+country and those of the provinces. Those of the dominant country
+were, for the most part, identical with the towns already described
+as belonging to the ancient Chaldaea, Besides Babylon itself, there
+flourished in the Babylonian period the cities of Borsippa, Duraba,
+Sippara or Sepharvaim, Opis, Psittace, Cutha, Orchoe or Erech, and
+Diridotis or Teredon. The sites of most of those have been described in
+the first volume; but it remains to state briefly the positions of some
+few which were either new creations or comparatively undistinguished in
+the earlier times.
+
+Opis, a town of sufficient magnitude to attract the attention of
+Herodotus, was situated on the left or east bank of the Tigris, near the
+point where the Diyaleh or Gyndes joined the main river. Its position
+was south of the Gyndes embouchure, and it might be reckoned as lying
+upon either river. The true name of the place--that which it bears in
+the cuneiform inscriptions--was Hupiya; and its site is probably marked
+by the ruins at Khafaji, near Baghdad, which place is thought to retain,
+in a corrupted form, the original appellation. Psittace or Sitace,
+the town which gave name to the province of Sittacene, was in the near
+neighborhood of Opis, lying on the same side of the Tigris, but lower
+down, at least as low as the modern fort of the Zobeid chief. Its exact
+site has not been as yet discovered. Teredon, or Diriaotis, appears to
+have been first founded by Nebuchadnezzar. It lay on the coast of the
+Persian Gulf, a little west of the mouth of the Euphrates, and protected
+by a quay, or a breakwater, from the high tides that rolled in from the
+Indian Ocean. There is great difficulty in identifying its site, owing
+to the extreme uncertainty as to the exact position of the coast-line,
+and the course of the river, in the time of Nebuchadnezzar. Probably it
+should be sought about Zobair, or a little further inland.. The chief
+provincial cities were Susa and Badaca in Susiana; Anat, Sirki, and
+Carchemish, on the Middle Euphrates; Sidikan on the Khabour; Harran on
+the Bilik; Hamath, Damascus, and Jerusalem, in Inner Syria; Tyre,
+Sidon, Ashdod, Ascalon, and Gaza, upon the coast. Of these, Susa was
+undoubtedly the most important; indeed, it deserves to be regarded
+as the second city of the Empire. Here, between the two arms of the
+Choaspes, on a noble and well-watered plain, backed at the distance
+of twenty-five miles by a lofty mountain range, the fresh breezes from
+which tempered the summer heats, was the ancient palace of the Kissian
+kings, proudly placed upon a lofty platform or mound, and commanding
+a wide prospect of the rich pastures at its base, which extended
+northwards to the roots of the hills, and in every other direction as
+far as the eye could reach. Clustered at the foot of the palace
+mound, more especially on its eastern side, lay the ancient town, the
+foundation of the traditional Memnon who led an army to the defence
+of Troy. The pure and sparkling water of the Choaspes--a drink fit for
+kings--flowed near, while around grew palms, konars, and lemon-trees,
+the plain beyond waving with green grass and golden corn. It may be
+suspected that the Babylonian kings, who certainly maintained a palace
+at this place, and sent high officers of their court to "do their
+business" there, made it their occasional residence, exchanging,
+in summer and early autumn, the heats and swamps of Babylon for the
+comparatively dry and cool region at the base of the Lurish hills. But,
+however, this may have been, at any rate Susa, long the capital of a
+kingdom little inferior to Babylon itself, must have been the first of
+the provincial cities, surpassing all the rest at once in size and in
+magnificence. Among the other cities, Carchemish on the Upper Euphrates,
+Tyre upon the Syrian coast, and Ashdod on the borders of Egypt, held
+the highest place. Carchemish, which has been wrongly identified with
+Circesium, lay certainly high up the river, and most likely occupied a
+site some distance to the north of Balis, which is in lat. 36 nearly.
+It was the key of Syria on the east, commanding the ordinary passage
+of the Euphrates, and being the only great city in this quarter. Tyre,
+which had by this time surpassed its rival, Sidon, was the chief of all
+the maritime towns; and its possession gave the mastery of the Eastern
+Mediterranean to the power which could acquire and maintain it. Ashdod
+was the key of Syria upon the south, being a place of great strength,
+and commanding the coast route between Palestine and Egypt, which was
+usually pursued by armies. It is scarcely too much to say that the
+possession of Ashdod, Tyre, and Carchemish, involved the lordship of
+Syria, which could not be permanently retained except by the occupation
+of those cities.
+
+The countries by which the Babylonian Empire was bounded were Persia on
+the east, Media and her dependencies on the north, Arabia on the south,
+and Egypt at the extreme southwest. Directly to the west she had no
+neighbor, her territory being on that side washed by the Mediterranean.
+
+Of Persia, which must be described at length in the next volume, since
+it was the seat of Empire during the Fifth Monarchy, no more need
+be said here than that it was for the most part a rugged and sterile
+country, apt to produce a brave and hardy race, but incapable of
+sustaining a large population. A strong barrier separated it from the
+great Mesopotamian lowland; and the Babylonians, by occupying a few
+easily defensible passes, could readily prevent a Persian army from
+debouching on their fertile plains. On the other hand, the natural
+strength of the region is so great that in the hands of brave and active
+men its defence is easy; and the Babylonians were not likely, if an
+aggressive spirit led to their pressing eastward, to make any serious
+impression in this quarter, or ever greatly to advance their frontier.
+
+To Media, the power which bordered her upon the north, Babylonia, on the
+contrary, lay wholly open. The Medes, possessing Assyria and Armenia,
+with the Upper Tigris valley, and probably the Mons Masius, could at any
+time, with the greatest ease, have marched armies into the low country,
+and resumed the contest in which Assyria was engaged for so many hundred
+years with the great people of the south. On this side nature had set no
+obstacles; and, if danger threatened, resistance had to be made by means
+of those artificial works which are specially suited for flat countries.
+Long lines of wall, broad dykes, huge reservoirs, by means of which
+large tracts may be laid under water, form the natural resort in such
+a case; and to such defences as these alone, in addition to her armies,
+could Babylonia look in case of a quarrel with the Medes. On this side,
+however, she for many years felt no fear. Political arrangements and
+family ties connected her with the Median reigning house, and she looked
+to her northern neighbor as an ally upon whom she might depend for aid,
+rather than as a rival whose ambitious designs were to be watched and
+baffled.
+
+Babylonia lay open also on the side of Arabia. Here, however, the nature
+of the country is such that population must be always sparse; and the
+habits of the people are opposed to that political union which can alone
+make a race really formidable to others. Once only in their history,
+under the excitement of a religious frenzy, have the Arabs issued forth
+from the great peninsula on an errand of conquest. In general they are
+content to vex and harass without seriously alarming their neighbors.
+The vast space and arid character of the peninsula are adverse to
+the collection and the movement of armies; the love of independence
+cherished by the several tribes indisposes them to union; the affection
+for the nomadic life, which is strongly felt, disinclines them to
+the occupation of conquests. Arabia, as a a conterminous power, is
+troublesome, but rarely dangerous: one section of the nation may almost
+always be played off against another: if "their hand is against every
+man," "every man's hand" is also "against them;" blood-feuds divide and
+decimate their tribes, which are ever turning their swords against each
+other; their neighbors generally wish them ill, and will fall upon them,
+if they can take them at a disadvantage; it is only under very peculiar
+circumstances, such as can very rarely exist, that they are likely even
+to attempt anything more serious than a plundering inroad. Babylonia
+consequently, though open to attack on the side of the south as well
+as on that of the north, had little to fear from either quarter. The
+friendliness of her northern neighbor, and the practical weakness of her
+southern one, were equal securities against aggression; and thus on her
+two largest and most exposed frontiers the Empire dreaded no attack.
+
+But it was otherwise in the far south-west. Here the Empire bordered
+upon Egypt, a rich and populous country, which at all times covets
+Syria, and is often strong enough to seize and hold it in possession.
+The natural frontier is moreover weak, no other barrier separating
+between Africa and Asia than a narrow desert, which has never yet proved
+a serious obstacle to an army. From the side of Egypt, if from no other
+quarter, Babylonia might expect to have trouble. Here she inherited from
+her predecessor, Assyria, an old hereditary feud, which might at any
+time break out into active hostility. Here was an ancient, powerful, and
+well-organized kingdom upon her borders, with claims upon that
+portion of her territory which it was most difficult for her to defend
+effectively. By seas and by land equally the strip of Syrian coast lay
+open to the arms of Egypt, who was free to choose her time, and pour
+her hosts into the country when the attention of Babylon was directed
+to some other quarter. The physical and political circumstances alike
+pointed to hostile transactions between Babylon and her south-western
+neighbor. Whether destruction would come from this quarter, or from some
+other, it would have been impossible to predict. Perhaps, on the
+whole, it may be said that Babylon might have been expected to contend
+successfully with Egypt--that she had little to fear from Arabia--that
+against Persia Proper it might have been anticipated that she would
+be able to defend herself--but that she lay at the mercy of Media. The
+Babylonian Empire was in truth an empire upon sufferance. From the time
+of its establishment with the consent of the Medes, the Modes might
+at any time have destroyed it. The dynastic tie alone prevented this
+result. When that tie was snapped, and when moreover, by the victories
+of Cyrus, Persian enterprise succeeded to the direction of Median
+power, the fate of Babylon was sealed. It was impossible for the
+long straggling Empire of the south, lying chiefly in low, flat, open
+regions, to resist for any considerable time the great kingdom of the
+north, of the high plateau, and of the mountain-chains.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. CLIMATE AND PRODUCTIONS.
+
+
+The Babylonian Empire, lying as it did between the thirtieth and
+thirty-seventh parallels of north latitude, and consisting mostly of
+comparatively low countries, enjoyed a climate which was, upon the
+whole, considerably warmer than that of Media, and less subject to
+extreme variations. In its more southern parts-Susiana, Chaldaea (or
+Babylonia Proper), Philistia, and Edom---the intensity of the summer
+heat must have been great; but the winters were mild and of short
+duration. In the middle regions of Central Mesopotamia, the Euphrates
+valley, the Palmyrene, Coele-Syria, Judaea, and Phoenicia, while the
+winters were somewhat colder and longer, the summer warmth was more
+tolerable. Towards the north, along the flanks of Masius, Taurus, and
+Amanus, a climate more like that of eastern Media prevailed, the summers
+being little less hot than those of the middle region, while the winters
+were of considerable severity. A variety of climate thus existed, but a
+variety within somewhat narrow limits. The region was altogether hotter
+and drier than is usual in the same latitude. The close proximity of the
+great Arabian desert, the small size of the adjoining seas, the want of
+mountains within the region having any great elevation, and the general
+absence of timber, combined to produce an amount of heat and dryness
+scarcely known elsewhere outside the tropics.
+
+Detailed accounts of the temperature, and of the climate generally, in
+the most important provinces of the Empire, Babylonia and Mesopotamia
+Proper, have been already given, and on these points the reader is
+referred to the first volume. With regard to the remaining provinces, it
+may be noticed, in the first place, that the climate of Susiana differs
+but very slightly from that of Babylonia, the region to which it is
+adjacent. The heat in summer is excessive, the thermometer, even in the
+hill country, at an elevation of 5000 feet, standing often at 107
+Fahr. in the shade. The natives construct for themselves serdaubs,
+or subterranean apartments, in which they live during the day, thus
+somewhat reducing the temperature, but probably never bringing it much
+below 100 degrees. They sleep at night in the open air on the flat roofs
+of their houses. So far as there is any difference of climate at this
+season between Susiana and Babylonia, it is in favor of the former. The
+heat, though scorching, is rarely oppressive; and not unfrequently a
+cool, invigorating breeze sets in from the mountains, which refreshes
+both mind and body. The winters are exceedingly mild, snow being unknown
+on the plains, and rare on the mountains, except at a considerable
+elevation. At this time, however--from December to the end of
+March--rain falls in tropical abundance; and occasionally there are
+violent hail-storms, which inflict serious injury on the crops. The
+spring-time in Susiana is delightful. Soft airs fan the cheek, laden
+with the scent of flowers; a carpet of verdure is spread over the
+plains; the sky is cloudless, or overspread with a thin gauzy veil; the
+heat of the sun is not too great; the rivers run with full banks and
+fill the numerous canals; the crops advance rapidly towards perfection;
+and on every side a rich luxuriant growth cheers the eye of the
+traveller.
+
+On the opposite side of the Empire, in Syria and Palestine, a moister,
+and on the whole a cooler climate prevails. In Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon
+there is a severe winter, which lasts from October to April; much snow
+falls, and the thermometer often marks twenty or thirty degrees of
+frost. On the flanks of the mountain ranges, and in the highlands of
+Upper and Coele-Syria, of Damascus, Samaria, and Judsea, the cold is
+considerably less; but there are intervals of frost; snow falls, though
+it does not often remain long upon the ground; and prolonged chilling
+rains make the winter and early spring unpleasant. In the low regions,
+on the other hand, in the _Shephelah_, the plain of Sharon, the
+Phoenician coast tract, the lower valley of the Orontes, and again in
+the plain of Esdraelon and the remarkable depression from the Merom lake
+to the Dead Sea, the winters are exceedingly mild; frost and snow are
+unknown; the lowest temperature is produced by cold rains and fogs,
+which do not bring the thermometer much below 40. During the summer
+these low regions, especially the Jordan valley or Ghor, are excessively
+hot, the heat being ordinarily of that moist kind which is intolerably
+oppressive. The upland plains and mountain flanks experience also a
+high temperature, but there the heat is of a drier character, and is
+not greatly complained of; the nights even in summer are cold, the dews
+being often heavy; cool winds blow occasionally, and though the sky is
+for months without a cloud, the prevailing heat produces no injurious
+effects on those who are exposed to it. In Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon the
+heat is of course still less; refreshing breezes blow almost constantly;
+and the numerous streams and woods give a sense of coolness beyond the
+markings of the thermometer.
+
+There is one evil, however, to which almost the whole Empire must have
+been subject. Alike in the east and in the west, in Syria and Palestine,
+no less than in Babylonia Proper and Susiana, there are times when
+a fierce and scorching wind prevails for days together--a wind whose
+breath withers the herbage and is unspeakably depressing to man. Called
+in the east the Sherghis, and in the west the Khamsin, this fiery
+sirocco comes laden with fine particles of heated sand, which at once
+raise the temperature and render the air unwholesome to breathe. In
+Syria these winds occur commonly in the spring, from February to April;
+but in Susiana and Babylonia the time for them is the height of summer.
+They blow from various quarters, according to the position, with respect
+to Arabia, occupied by the different provinces. In Palestine the worst
+are from the east, the direction in which the desert is nearest; in
+Lower Babylonia they are from the south; in Susiana from the west or the
+north-west. During their continuance the air is darkened, a lurid glow
+is cast over the earth, the animal world pines and droops, vegetation
+languishes, and, if the traveller cannot obtain shelter, and the wind
+continues, he may sink and die under its deleterious influence.
+
+The climate of the entire tract included within the limits of the Empire
+was probably much the same in ancient times as in our own days. In the
+low alluvial plains indeed near the Persian Gulf it is probable that
+vegetation was anciently more abundant, the date-palm being cultivated
+much more extensively then than at present; and so far it might appear
+reasonable to conclude that the climate of that region must have been
+moister and cooler than it now is. But if we may judge by Strabo's
+account of Susiana, where the climatic conditions were nearly the same
+as in Babylonia, no important change can have taken place, for Strabo
+not only calls the climate of Susiana "fiery and scorching," but says
+that in Susa, during the height of summer, if a lizard or a snake
+tried to cross the street about noon-day, he was baked to death before
+accomplishing half the distance. Similarly on the west, though there is
+reason to believe that Palestine is now much more denuded of timber than
+it was formerly, and its climate should therefore be both warmer and
+drier, yet it has been argued with great force from the identity of the
+modern with the ancient vegetation, that in reality there can have
+been no considerable change. If then there has been such permanency of
+climate in the two regions where the greatest alteration seems to have
+taken place in the circumstances whereby climate is usually affected,
+it can scarcely be thought that elsewhere any serious change has been
+brought about.
+
+The chief vegetable productions of Babylonia Proper in ancient times
+are thus enumerated by Berosus. "The land of the Babylonians," he
+says, "produces wheat as an indigenous plant," and has also barley,
+and lentils, and vetches, and sesame; the banks of the streams and the
+marshes supply edible roots, called gongoe, which have the taste
+of barley-cakes. Palms, too, grow in the country, and apples, and
+fruit-trees of various kinds. Wheat, it will be observed, and barley are
+placed first, since it was especially as a grain country that Babylonia
+was celebrated. The testimonies of Herodotus, Theophrastus, Strabo, and
+Pliny as to the enormous returns which the Babylonian farmers obtained
+from their corn lands have been already cited. No such fertility is
+known anywhere in modern times; and, unless the accounts are grossly
+exaggerated, we must ascribe it, in part, to the extraordinary vigor of
+a virgin soil, a deep and rich alluvium; in part, perhaps, to a peculiar
+adaptation of the soil to the wheat plant, which the providence of God
+made to grow spontaneously in this region, and nowhere else, so far as
+we know, on the whole face of the earth.
+
+Besides wheat, it appears that barley, millet, and lentils were
+cultivated for food, while vetches were grown for beasts, and sesame
+for the sake of the oil which can be expressed from its seed. All grew
+luxuriantly, and the returns of the barley in particular are stated at a
+fabulous amount. But the production of first necessity in Babylonia
+was the date-palm, which flourished in great abundance throughout the
+region, and probably furnished the chief food of the greater portion
+of the inhabitants. The various uses to which it was applied have been
+stated in the first volume, where a representation of its mode of growth
+has been also given.
+
+In the adjoining country of Susiana, or at any rate in the alluvial
+portion of it, the principal products of the earth seem to have been
+nearly the same as in Babylonia, while the fecundity of the soil was but
+little less. Wheat and barley returned to the sower a hundred or even
+two hundred fold. The date-palm grew plentifully, more especially in the
+vicinity of the towns. Other trees also were common, as probably konars,
+acacias, and poplars, which are still found scattered in tolerable
+abundance over the plain country. The neighboring mountains could
+furnish good timber of various kinds; but it appears that the palm was
+the tree chiefly used for building. If we may judge the past by
+the present, we may further suppose that Susiana produced fruits in
+abundance; for modern travellers tell us that there is not a fruit known
+in Persia which does not thrive in the province of Khuzistan.
+
+Along the Euphrates valley to a considerable distance--at least as
+far as Anah (or Hena)--the character of the country resembles that of
+Babylonia and Susiana, and the products cannot have been very different.
+About Anah the date-palm begins to fail, and the olive first makes its
+appearance. Further up a chief fruit is the mulberry. Still higher, in
+northern Mesopotamia, the mulberry is comparatively rare, but its
+place is supplied by the walnut, the vine, and the pistachio-nut.
+This district produces also good crops of grain, and grows oranges,
+pomegranates, and the commoner kinds of fruit abundantly.
+
+Across the Euphrates, in Northern Syria, the country is less suited for
+grain crops; but trees and shrubs of all kinds grow luxuriantly, the
+pasture is excellent, and much of the land is well adapted for the
+growth of cotton. The Assyrian kings cut timber frequently in this
+tract; and here are found at the present day enormous planes, thick
+forests of oak, pine, and ilex, walnuts, willows, poplars, ash-trees,
+birches, larches, and the carob or locust tree. Among wild shrubs are
+the oleander with its ruddy blossoms, the myrtle, the bay, the arbutus,
+the clematis, the juniper, and the honeysuckle; among cultivated
+fruit-trees, the orange, the pomegranate, the pistachio-nut, the
+vine, the mulberry, and the olive. The adis, an excellent pea, and the
+Lycoperdon, or wild potato, grow in the neighborhood of Aleppo. The
+castor-oil plant is cultivated in the plain of Edlib. Melons, cucumbers,
+and most of the ordinary vegetables are produced in abundance and of
+good quality everywhere.
+
+In Southern Syria and Palestine most of the same forms of vegetation
+occur, with several others of quite a new character. These are due
+either to the change of latitude, or to the tropical heat of the
+Jordan and Dead Sea valley, or finally to the high elevation of Hermon,
+Lebanon, and Anti-Lebanon. The date-palm fringes the Syrian shore as
+high as Beyrut, and formerly flourished in the Jordan valley, where,
+however, it is not now seen, except in a few dwarfed specimens near the
+Tiberias lake. The banana accompanies the date along the coast, and
+even grows as far north as Tripoli. The prickly pear, introduced from
+America, has completely neutralized itself, and is in general request
+for hedging. The fig mulberry (or true sycamore), another southern form,
+is also common, and grows to a considerable size. Other denizens of
+warm climes, unknown in Northern Syria, are the jujube, the tamarisk,
+theelasagnus or wild olive, the gum-styrax plant (_Styrax officinalis_),
+the egg-plant, the Egyptian papyrus, the sugar-cane, the scarlet
+misletoe, the solanum that produces the "Dead Sea apple" (_Solanum
+Sodomceum_), the yellow-flowered acacia, and the liquorice plant. Among
+the forms due to high elevation are the famous Lebanon cedar, several
+oaks and juniper, the maple, berberry, jessamine, ivy, butcher's broom,
+a rhododendron, and the gum-tragacanth plant. The fruits additional to
+those of the north are dates, lemons, almonds, shaddocks, and limes.
+
+The chief mineral products of the Empire seem to have been bitumen, with
+its concomitants, naphtha and petroleum, salt, sulphur, nitre, copper,
+iron, perhaps silver, and several sorts of precious stones. Bitumen was
+furnished in great abundance by the springs at Hit or Is, which were
+celebrated in the days of Herodotus; it was also procured from Ardericca
+(Kir-Ab), and probably from Earn Ormuz, in Susiana, and likewise from
+the Dead Sea. Salt was obtainable from the various lakes which had no
+outlet, as especially from the Sabakhab, the Bahr-el-Melak, the Dead
+Sea, and a small lake near Tadmor or Palmyra. The Dead Sea gave also
+most probably both sulphur and nitre, but the latter only in small
+quantities. Copper and iron seem to have been yielded by the hills of
+Palestine. Silver was perhaps a product of the Anti-Lebanon.
+
+It may be doubted whether any gems were really found in Babylonia
+itself, which, being purely alluvial, possesses no stone of any kind.
+Most likely the sorts known as Babylonian came from the neighboring
+Susiana, whose unexplored mountains may possess many rich treasures.
+According to Dionysius, the bed of the Choaspes produced numerous
+agates, and it may well be that from the same quarter came that "beryl
+more precious than gold," and those "highly reputed sard," which Babylon
+seems to have exported to other countries. The western provinces may,
+however, very probably have furnished the gems which are ascribed
+to them, as amethysts, which are said to have been found in the
+neighborhood of Petra, alabaster, which came from near Damascus, and the
+cyanus, a kind of lapis-lazuli, which was a production of Phoenicia. No
+doubt the Babylonian love of gems caused the provinces to be carefully
+searched for stones; and it is not improbable that they yielded besides
+the varieties already named, and the other unknown kinds mentioned by
+Pliny, many, if not most, of the materials which we find to have
+been used for seals by the ancient people. These are, cornelian,
+rock-crystal, chalcedony, onyx, jasper, quartz, serpentine, sienite,
+haematite, green felspar, pyrites, loadstone, and amazon-stone.
+
+Stone for building was absent from Babylonia Proper and the alluvial
+tracts of Susiana, but in the other provinces it abounded. The Euphrates
+valley could furnish stone at almost any point above Hit; the mountain
+regions of Susiana could supply it in whatever quantity might be
+required; and in the western provinces it was only too plentiful. Near
+to Babylonia the most common kind was limestone; but about Had-disah on
+the Euphrates there was also a gritty, silicious rock alternating with
+iron-stone, and in the Arabian Desert were sandstone and granite. Such
+stone as was used in Babylon itself, and in the other cities of the
+low country, probably either came down the Euphrates, or was brought
+by canals from the adjacent part of Arabia. The quantity, however, thus
+consumed was small, the Babylonians being content for most uses with
+the brick, of which their own territory gave them a supply practically
+inexhaustible.
+
+The principal wild animals known to have inhabited the Empire in ancient
+times are the following: the lion, the panther or large leopard, the
+hunting leopard, the bear, the hyena, the wild ox, the buffalo (?), the
+wild ass, the stag, the antelope, the ibex or wild goat, the wild sheep,
+the wild boar, the wolf, the jackal, the fox, the hare, and the rabbit.
+Of these, the lion, leopard, bear, stag, wolf, jackal, and fox seem to
+have been very widely diffused, while the remainder were rarer, and,
+generally speaking, confined to certain localities. The wild ass was
+met with only in the dry parts of Mesopotamia, and perhaps of Syria, the
+buffalo and wild boar only in moist regions, along the banks of rivers
+or among marshes. The wild ox was altogether scarce; the wild sheep, the
+rabbit, and the hare, were probably not common.
+
+To this list may be added as present denizens of the region, and
+therefore probably belonging to it in ancient times, the lynx, the
+wildcat, the ratel, the sable, the genet, the badger, the otter, the
+beaver, the polecat, the jerboa, the rat, the mouse, the marmot,
+the porcupine, the squirrel, and perhaps the alligator. Of these the
+commonest at the present day are porcupines, badgers, otters, rats,
+mice, and jerboas. The ratel, sable, and genet belong only to the north;
+the beaver is found nowhere but in the Khabour and middle Euphrates;
+the alligator, if a denizen of the region at all exists only in the
+Euphrates.
+
+The chief birds of the region are eagles, vultures, falcons, owls,
+hawks, many kinds of crows, magpies, jackdaws, thrushes, blackbirds,
+nightingales, larks, sparrows, goldfinches, swallows, doves of fourteen
+kinds, francolins, rock partridges, gray partridges, black partridges,
+quails, pheasants, capercailzies, bustards, flamingoes, pelicans,
+cormorants, storks, herons, cranes, wild-geese, ducks, teal,
+kingfishers, snipes, woodcocks, the sand-grouse, the hoopoe, the green
+parrot, the becafico, the locust-bird, the humming-bird (?), and
+the bee-eater. The eagle, pheasant, capercailzie, quail, parrot,
+locust-bird, becafico, and humming-bird are rare; the remainder are all
+tolerably common. Besides these, we know that in ancient times ostriches
+wore found within the limits of the Empire, though now they have
+retreated further south into the Great Desert of Arabia. Perhaps
+bitterns may also formerly have frequented some of the countries
+belonging to it, though they are not mentioned among the birds of the
+region by modern writers.
+
+There is a bird of the heron species, or rather of a species between
+the heron and the stork, which seems to deserve a few words of special
+description. It is found chiefly in Northern Syria, in the plain of
+Aleppo and the districts watered by the Koweik and Sajur rivers. The
+Arabs call it Tair-el-Raouf, or "the magnificent." This bird is of a
+grayish-white, the breast white, the joints of the wings tipped with
+scarlet, and the under part of the beak scarlet, the upper part being of
+a blackish-gray. The beak is nearly five inches long, and two thirds of
+an inch thick. The circumference of the eye is red; the feet are of a
+deep yellow; and the bird in its general form strongly resembles the
+stork; but its color is darker. It is four feet high, and covers a
+breadth of nine feet when the wings are spread. The birds of this
+species are wont to collect in large flocks on the North Syrian rivers,
+and to arrange themselves in several rows across the streams where they
+are shallowest. Here they squat side by side, as close to one another as
+possible, and spread out their tails against the current, thus forming a
+temporary dam. The water drains off below them, and when it has reached
+its lowest point, at a signal from one of their number who from the bank
+watches the proceedings, they rise and swoop upon the fish, frogs, etc.,
+which the lowering of the water has exposed to view.
+
+Fish are abundant in the Chaldaean marshes, and in almost all the
+fresh-water lakes and rivers. [PLATE. VIII., Fig.] The Tigris and
+Euphrates yield chiefly barbel and carp; but the former stream has also
+eels, trout, chub, shad-fish, siluruses, and many kinds which have
+no English names. The Koweik contains the Aleppo eel (_Ophidium
+masbacambahis_), a very rare variety; and in other streams of
+Northern Syria are found lampreys, bream, dace, and the black-fish
+(_Macroptero-notus niger_), besides carp, trout, chub, and barbel. Chub,
+bream, and the silurus are taken in the Sea of Galilee. The black-fish
+is extremely abundant in the Bahr-el-Taka and the Lake of Antioch.
+
+Among reptiles may be noticed, besides snakes, lizards, and frogs, which
+are numerous, the following less common species--iguanoes, tortoises of
+two kinds, chameleons, and monitors. Bats also were common in Babylonia
+Proper, where they grew to a great size. Of insects the most remarkable
+are scorpions, tarantulas, and locusts. These last come suddenly in
+countless myriads with the wind, and, settling on the crops, rapidly
+destroy all the hopes of the husbandman, after which they strip
+the shrubs and trees of their leaves, reducing rich districts in an
+incredibly short space of time to the condition of howling wildernesses.
+[PLATE. VIII., Fig. 3.] If it were not for the locust-bird, which is
+constantly keeping down their numbers, these destructive insects would
+probably increase so as to ruin utterly the various regions exposed to
+their ravages.
+
+The domestic animals employed in the countries which composed the Empire
+were, camels, horses, mules, asses, buffaloes, cows and oxen, goats,
+sheep, and dogs. Mules as well as horses seem to have been anciently
+used in war by the people of the more southern regions-by the Susianians
+at any rate, if not also by the Babylonians. Sometimes they were ridden;
+sometimes they were employed to draw carts or chariots. They were
+spirited and active animals, evidently of a fine breed, such as that for
+which Khuzistan is famous at the present day. [PLATE. VIII., Fig. 4.]
+The asses from which these mules were produced must also have been of
+superior quality, like the breed for which Baghdad is even now famous,
+The Babylonian horses are not likely to have been nearly so good; for
+this animal does not flourish in a climate which is at once moist and
+hot. Still, at any rate under the Persians, Babylonia seems to have been
+a great breeding-place for horses, since the stud of a single satrap
+consisted of 800 stallions and 16,000 mares. If we may judge of the
+character of Babylonian from that of Susianian steeds, we may consider
+the breed to have, been strong and large limbed, but not very handsome,
+the head being too large and the legs too short for beauty. [PLATE IX.,
+Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE IX.]
+
+
+The Babylonians were also from very early times famous for their
+breed of dogs. The tablet engraved in a former volume, which gives a
+representation of a Babylonian hound, is probably of a high antiquity,
+not later than the period or the Empire. Dogs are also not unfrequently
+represented on ancient Babylonian stones and cylinders. It would seem
+that, as in Assyria, there were two principal breeds, one somewhat
+clumsy and heavy, of a character not unlike that of our mastiff, the
+other of a much lighter make, nearly resembling our greyhound. The
+former kind is probably the breed known as Indian, which was kept up
+by continual importations from the country whence it was originally
+derived.[PLATE. IX., Fig. 2.]
+
+We have no evidence that camels were employed in the time of the
+Empire, either by the Babylonians themselves or by their neighbors, the
+Susianians; but in Upper Mesopotamia, in Syria, and in Palestine
+they had been in use from a very early date. The Amalekitos and the
+Midianites found them serviceable in war; and the latter people employed
+them also as beasts of burden in their caravan trade. The Syrians of
+Upper Mesopotamia rode upon them in their journeys. It appears that
+they were also sometimes yoked to chariots, though from their size and
+clumsiness they would be but ill fitted for beasts of draught.
+
+Buffaloes were, it is probable, domesticated by the Babylonians at an
+early date. The animal seems to have been indigenous in the country, and
+it is far better suited for the marshy regions of Lower Babylonia and
+Susiana than cattle of the ordinary kind. It is perhaps a buffalo which
+is represented on an ancient tablet already referred to, where a lion
+is disturbed in the middle of his feast off a prostrate animal by a man
+armed with a hatchet. Cows and oxen, however, of the common kind are
+occasionally represented on the cylinders [PLATE IX., Fig. 4.], where
+they seem sometimes to represent animals about to be offered to the
+gods. Goats also appear frequently in this capacity; and they were
+probably more common than sheep, at any rate in the more southern
+districts. Of Babylonian sheep we have no representations at all on the
+monuments; but it is scarcely likely that a country which used wool so
+largely was content to be without them. At any rate they abounded in the
+provinces, forming the chief wealth of the more northern nations.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTEE III. THE PEOPLE.
+
+
+"The Chaldaeans, that bitter and hasty nation."--Habak. 1. 6.
+
+
+The Babylonians, who, under Nabopolassar and Nebuchadnezzar, held the
+second place among the nations of the East, were emphatically a mixed
+race. The ancient people from whom they were in the main descended--the
+Chaldaeans of the First Empire--possessed this character to a
+considerable extent, since they united Cusbite with Turanian blood, and
+contained moreover a slight Semitic and probably a slight Arian element.
+But the Babylonians of later times--the Chaldaeans of the Hebrew
+prophets--must have been very much more a mixed race than their earlier
+namesakes--partly in consequence of the policy of colonization pursued
+systematically by the later Assyrian kings, partly from the direct
+influence exerted upon them by conquerors. Whatever may have been the
+case with the Arab dynasty, which bore sway in the country from about
+B.C. 1546 till B.C. 1300, it is certain that the Assyrians conquered
+Babylon about B.C. 1300, and almost certain that they established
+an Assyrian family upon the throne of Nimrod, which held for some
+considerable time the actual sovereignty of the country. It was natural
+that under a dynasty of Semites, Semitic blood should flow freely into
+the lower region, Semitic usages and modes of thought become prevalent,
+and the spoken language of the country pass from a Turanian or
+Turano-Cushite to a Semitic type. The previous Chaldaean race blended,
+apparently, with the new comers, and people was produced in which the
+three elements--the Semitic, the Turanian, and the Cushite--held about
+equal shares. The colonization of the Sargonid kings added probably
+other elements in small proportions, and the result was that among
+all the nations inhabiting Western Asia there can have been none so
+thoroughly deserving the title of a "mingled people" as the Babylonians
+of the later Empire.
+
+In mixtures of this kind it is almost always found that some one element
+practically preponderates, and assumes to itself the right of fashioning
+and forming the general character of the race. It is not at all
+necessary that this formative element should be larger than any other;
+on the contrary, it may be and sometimes is extremely small; for it does
+not work by its mass, but by its innate force and strong vital energy.
+In Babylonia, the element which showed itself to possess this superior
+vitality, which practically asserted its pre-eminence and proceeded to
+mold the national character, was the Semitic. There is abundant
+evidence that by the time of the later Empire the Babylonians had become
+thoroughly Semitized; so much so, that ordinary observers scarcely
+distinguished them from their purely Semitic neighbors, the Assyrians.
+No doubt there were differences which a Hippocrates or an Aristotle
+could have detected--differences resulting from mixed descent, as
+well as differences arising from climate and physical geography; but,
+speaking broadly, it must be said that the Semitic element, introduced
+into Babylonia from the north, had so prevailed by the time of the
+establishment of the Empire that the race was no longer one sui generis,
+but was a mere variety of the well-known and widely spread Semitic type.
+
+We possess but few notices, and fewer assured representations, from
+which to form an opinion of the physical characteristics of the
+Babylonians. Except upon the cylinders, there are extant only three or
+four representations of the human forms by Babylonian artists, and
+in the few cases where this form occurs we cannot always feel at all
+certain that the intention is to portray a human being. A few Assyrian
+bas-reliefs probably represent campaigns in Babylonia; but the Assyrians
+vary their human type so little that these sculptures must not be
+regarded as conveying to us very exact information. Tho cylinders are
+too rudely executed to be of much service, and they seem to preserve
+an archaic type which originated with the Proto-Chaldaeans. If we might
+trust the figures upon them as at all nearly representing the truth,
+we should have to regard the Babylonians as of much slighter and sparer
+frames than their northern neighbors, of a physique in fact approaching
+to meagreness. The Assyrian sculptures, however, are far from
+bearing out this idea; from them it would seem that the frames of
+the Babylonians were as brawny and massive as those of the Assyrians
+themselves, while in feature there was not much difference between the
+nations. [PLATE IX., Fig. 3.] Foreheads straight but not high, noses
+well formed but somewhat depressed, full lips, and a well-marked rounded
+chin, constitute the physiognomy of the Babylonians as it appears
+upon the sculptures of their neighbors. This representation is
+not contradicted by the few specimens of actual sculpture left by
+themselves. In these the type approaches nearly to the Assyrian, while
+there is still, such an amount of difference as renders it tolerably
+easy to distinguish between the productions of the two nations. The eye
+is larger, and not so decidedly almond-shaped; the nose is shorter, and
+its depression is still more marked; while the general expression of the
+countenance is altogether more commonplace.
+
+These differences may be probably referred to the influence which
+was exercised upon the physical form of the race by the primitive
+or Proto-Chaldaean element, an influence which appears to have
+been considerable. This element, as has been already observed, was
+predominantly Cushite; and there is reason to believe that the Cushite
+race was connected not very remotely with the negro. In Susiana, where
+the Cushite blood was maintained in tolerable purity--Elymseans and
+Kissians existing side by side, instead of blending together--there was,
+if we may trust the Assyrian remains, a very decided prevalency of a
+negro type of countenance, as the accompanying specimens, carefully
+copied from the sculptures, will render evident. [PLATE IX., Fig. 6.]
+The head was covered with short crisp curls; the eye was large, the nose
+and mouth nearly in the same line, the lips thick. Such a physiognomy
+as the Babylonian appears to have been would naturally arise from an
+intermixture of a race like the Assyrian with one resembling that which
+the later sculptures represent as the main race inhabiting Susiana.
+
+Herodotus remarks that the Babylonians wore their hair long; and this
+remark is confirmed to some extent by the native remains. These in
+general represent the hair as forming a single stiff and heavy curl at
+the back of the head (No. 3). Sometimes, however, they make it take the
+shape of long flowing locks, which depend over the back (No. 1), or
+over the back and shoulders (No. 4), reaching nearly to the waist.
+Occasionally, in lieu of these commoner types, wo have one which closely
+resembles the Assyrian, the hair forming a round mass behind the head
+(No. 2), on which we can sometimes trace indications of a slight wave.
+[PLATE X., Fig. 1.] The national fashion, that to which Herodotus
+alludes, seems to be represented by the three commoner modes. Where
+the round mass is worn, we have probably an Assyrian fashion, which the
+Babylonians aped during the time of that people's pre-eminence.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE X.]
+
+
+Besides their flowing hair, the Babylonians are represented frequently
+with a large beard. This is generally longer than the Assyrian,
+descending nearly to the waist. Sometimes it curls crisply upon the
+face, but below the chin depends over the breast in long, straight
+locks. At other times it droops perpendicularly from the cheeks and the
+under lip.15 Frequently, however, the beard is shaven off, and the whole
+face is smooth and hairless.
+
+The Chaldaean females, as represented by the Assyrians, are tall
+and large-limbed. Their physiognomy is Assyrian, their hair not very
+abundant. The Babylonian cylinders, on the other hand, make the hair
+long and conspicuous, while the forms are quite as spare and meagre as
+those of the men.
+
+On the whole, it is most probable that the physical type of the later
+Babylonians was nearly that of their northern neighbors. A somewhat
+sparer form, longer and more flowing hair, and features less stern
+and strong, may perhaps have characterized them. They were also, it
+is probable, of a darker complexion than the Assyrians, being to some
+extent Ethiopians by descent, and inhabiting a region which lies four
+degrees nearer to the tropics than Assyria. The Cha'ab Arabs, the
+present possessors of the more southern parts of Babylonia, are nearly
+black; and the "black Syrians," of whom Strabo speaks, seem intended to
+represent the Babylonians.
+
+Among the moral and mental characteristics of the people, the first
+place is due to their intellectual ability. Inheriting a legacy
+of scientific knowledge, astronomical and arithmetical, from the
+Proto-Chaldaeans, they seem to have not only maintained but considerably
+advanced these sciences by their own efforts. Their "wisdom and
+learning" are celebrated by the Jewish prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, and
+Daniel; the Father of History records their valuable inventions; and an
+Aristotle was not ashamed to be beholden to them for scientific data.
+They were good observers of astronomical phenomena, careful recorders of
+such observations, and mathematicians of no small repute. Unfortunately,
+they mixed with their really scientific studies those occult pursuits
+which, in ages and countries where the limits of true science are not
+known, are always apt to seduce students from the right path, having
+attractions against which few men are proof, so long as it is believed
+that they can really accomplish the end that they propose to themselves.
+The Babylonians were astrologers no less than astronomers; they
+professed to cast nativities, to expound dreams, and to foretell events
+by means of the stars; and though there were always a certain number
+who kept within the legitimate bounds of science, and repudiated the
+astrological pretensions of their brethren, yet on the whole it must
+be allowed that their astronomy was fatally tinged with a mystic and
+unscientific element.
+
+In close connection with the intellectual ability of the Babylonians
+was the spirit of enterprise which led them to engage in traffic and
+to adventure themselves upon the ocean in ships. In a future chapter
+we shall have to consider the extent and probable direction of this
+commerce. It is sufficient to observe in the present place that the same
+turn of mind which made the Phoenicians anciently the great carriers
+between the East and West, and which in modern times has rendered
+the Jews so successful in various branches of trade, seems to have
+characterized the Semitized Babylonians, whose land was emphatically "a
+land of traffic," and their chief city "a city of merchants."
+
+The trading spirit which was thus strongly developed in the Babylonian
+people led naturally to the two somewhat opposite vices of avarice and
+over-luxuriousness. Not content with honorable gains, the Babylonians
+"coveted an evil covetousness," as we learn both from Habakkuk and
+Jeremiah. The "shameful custom" mentioned by Herodotus, which required
+as a religious duty that every Babylonian woman, rich or poor, highborn
+or humble, should once in her life prostitute herself in the temple of
+Beltis, was probably based on the desire of attracting strangers to
+the capital, who would either bring with them valuable commodities
+or purchase the productions of the country. The public auction of
+marriageable virgins had most likely a similar intention. If we may
+believe Curtius, strangers might at any time purchase the gratification
+of any passion they might feel, from the avarice of parents or husbands.
+
+The luxury of the Babylonians is a constant theme with both sacred
+and profane writers. The "daughter of the Chaldaeans" was "tender and
+delicate," "given to pleasures," apt to "dwell carelessly." Her young
+men made themselves "as princes to look at--exceeding in dyed attire
+upon their heads,"--painting their faces, wearing earrings, and clothing
+themselves in robes of soft and rich material. Extensive polygamy
+prevailed. The pleasures of the table were carried to excess.
+Drunkenness was common. Rich unguents were invented. The tables groaned
+under the weight of gold and silver plate. In every possible way
+the Babylonians practised luxuriousness of living, and in respect of
+softness and self-indulgence they certainly did not fall short of any
+nation of antiquity.
+
+There was, however, a harder and sterner side to the Babylonian
+character. Despite their love of luxury, they were at all times brave
+and skilful in war; and, during the period of their greatest strength,
+they were one of the most formidable of all the nations of the East.
+Habakkuk describes them, drawing evidently from the life, as "bitter and
+hasty," and again as "terrible and dreadful--their horses' hoofs swifter
+than the leopard's, and more fierce than the evening wolves." Hence they
+"smote the people in wrath with a continual stroke"--they "made the
+earth to tremble, and did shake kingdoms"--they carried all before them
+in their great enterprises, seldom allowing themselves to be foiled by
+resistance, or turned from their course by pity. Exercised for centuries
+in long and fierce wars with the well-armed and well-disciplined
+Assyrians, they were no sooner quit of this enemy, and able to take an
+aggressive attitude, than they showed themselves no unworthy successors
+of that long-dominant nation, so far as energy, valor, and military
+skill constitute desert. They carried their victorious arms from the
+shores of the Persian Gulf to the banks of the Nile; wherever they went,
+they rapidly established their power, crushing all resistance, and fully
+meriting the remarkable title, which they seem to have received from
+those who had felt their attacks, of "the hammer of the whole earth."
+
+The military successes of the Babylonians were accompanied with needless
+violence, and with outrages not unusual in the East, which the
+historian must nevertheless regard as at once crimes and follies. The
+transplantation of conquered races--a part of the policy of Assyria
+which the Chaldaeans adopted--may perhaps have been morally defensible,
+notwithstanding the sufferings which it involved. But the mutilations of
+prisoners, the weary imprisonments, the massacre of non-combatants, the
+refinement of cruelty shown in the execution of children before the eyes
+of their fathers--these and similar atrocities, which are recorded of
+the Babylonians, are wholly without excuse, since they did not so much
+terrify as exasperate the conquered nations, and thus rather endangered
+than added strength or security to the empire. A savage and inhuman
+temper is betrayed by these harsh punishments--a temper common in
+Asiatics, but none the less reprehensible on that account--one that led
+its possessors to sacrifice interest to vengeance, and the peace of
+a kingdom to a tiger-like thirst for blood. Nor was this cruel temper
+shown only towards the subject nations and captives taken in war.
+Babylonian nobles trembled for their heads if they incurred by a slight
+fault the displeasure of the monarch; and even the most powerful class
+in the kingdom, the learned and venerable "Chaldaeans," ran on one
+occasion the risk of being exterminated, because they could not expound
+a dream which the king had forgotten. If a monarch displeased his court,
+and was regarded as having a bad disposition, it was not thought enough
+simply to make away with him, but he was put to death by torture. Among
+recognized punishments were cutting to pieces and casting into a
+heated furnace. The houses of offenders were pulled down and made into
+dunghills. These practices imply a "violence" and cruelty beyond the
+ordinary Oriental limit; and we cannot be surprised that when final
+judgment was denounced against Babylon, it was declared to be sent, in
+a great measure, "because of men's blood, and for the violence of the
+land-of the city, and all that dwelt therein."
+
+It is scarcely necessary to add that the Babylonians were a proud
+people. Pride is unfortunately the invariable accompaniment of success,
+in the nation, if not in the individual; and the sudden elevation of
+Babylon from a subject to a dominant power must have been peculiarly
+trying, more especially to the Oriental temperament. The spirit which
+culminated in Nebuchadnezzar, when, walking in the palace of his
+kingdom, and surveying the magnificent buildings which he had raided on
+every side from the plunder of the conquered nations, and by the labor
+of their captive bands, he exclaimed, "Is not the great Babylon which
+I have built by the might of my power and for the honor of my
+majesty?"--was rife in the people generally, who, naturally enough,
+believed themselves superior to every other nation upon the earth.
+"I am, and there is none else beside me," was the thought, if not
+the speech, of the people, whose arrogancy was perhaps somewhat less
+offensive than that of the Assyrians, but was quite as intense and as
+deep-seated.
+
+The Babylonians, notwithstanding their pride, their cruelty, their
+covetousness, and their love of luxury, must be pronounced to have been,
+according to their lights, a religious people. The temple in
+Babylonia is not a mere adjunct of the palace, but has almost the same
+pre-eminence over other buildings which it claims in Egypt. The vast
+mass of the Birs-i-Nimrud is sufficient to show that an enormous amount
+of labor was expended in the erection of sacred edifices; and the costly
+ornamentation lavished on such buildings is, as we shall hereafter find,
+even more remarkable than their size. Vast sums wore also expended on
+images of the gods, necessary adjuncts of the religion; and the whole
+paraphernalia of worship exhibited a rare splendor and magnificence. The
+monarchs were devout worshippers of the various deities, and gave much
+of their attention to the building and repair of temples, the erection
+of images, and the like. They bestowed on their children names
+indicative of religious feeling, and implying real faith in the power
+of the gods to protect their votaries. The people generally affected
+similar names--names containing, in almost every case, a god's name
+as one of their elements. The seals or signets which formed almost a
+necessary part of each man's costume were, except in rare instances, of
+a religious character. Even in banquets, where we might have expected
+that thoughts of religion would be laid aside, it seems to have been the
+practice during the drinking to rehearse the praises of the deities.
+
+We are told by Nicolas of Damascus that the Babylonians cultivated two
+virtues especially, honesty and calmness. Honesty is the natural, almost
+the necessary virtue of traders, who soon find that it is the best
+policy to be fair and just in their dealings. We may well believe that
+this intelligent people had the wisdom to see their true interests,
+and to understand that trade can never prosper unless conducted with
+integrity and straightforwardness. The very fact that their trade did
+prosper, that their goods were everywhere in request, is sufficient
+proof of their commercial honesty, and of their superiority to those
+tricks which speedily ruin a commerce.
+
+Calmness is not a common Oriental virtue. It is not even in general
+very highly appreciated, being apt to strike the lively, sensitive, and
+passionate Eastern as mere dulness and apathy. In China, however, it
+is a point of honor that the outward demeanor should be calm and placid
+under any amount of provocation; and indignation, fierceness, even
+haste, are regarded as signs of incomplete civilization, which the
+disciples of Confucius love to note in their would-be rivals of the
+West.
+
+We may conceive that some similar notion was entertained by the proud
+Babylonians, who no doubt regarded themselves as infinitely superior
+in manners and culture, no less than in scientific attainments, to the
+"barbarians" of Persia and Greece. While rage boiled in their hearts,
+and commands to torture and destroy fell from their tongues, etiquette
+may have required that the countenance should be unmoved, the eye
+serene, the voice low and gentle. Such contrasts are not uncommonly
+seen in the polite Mandarin, whose apparent calmness drives his European
+antagonist to despair; and it may well be that the Babylonians of the
+sixth and seventh centuries before our era had attained to an equal
+power of restraining the expression of feeling. But real gentleness,
+meekness, and placability were certainly not the attributes of a people
+who were so fierce in their wars and so cruel in their punishments.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTEE IV. THE CAPITAL.
+
+
+Babylon, the capital of the Fourth Monarchy, was probably the largest
+and most magnificent city of the ancient world. A dim tradition current
+in the East gave, it is true, a greater extent, if not a greater
+splendor, to the metropolis of Assyria; but this tradition first appears
+in ages subsequent to the complete destruction of the more northern
+city; and it is contradicted by the testimony of facts. The walls of
+Nineveh have been completely traced, and indicate a city three miles in
+length, by less than a mile and a half in breadth, containing an area of
+about 1800 English acres. Of this area less than one tenth is occupied
+by ruins of any pretension. On the admitted site of Babylon striking
+masses of ruin cover a space considerably larger than that which at
+Nineveh constitutes the whole area of the town. Beyond this space
+in every direction, north, east, south and west, are detached mounds
+indicating the former existence of edifices of some size, while the
+intermediate ground between these mounds and the main ruins shows
+distinct traces of its having been built upon in former days.
+
+Of the actual size of the town, modern research gives us no clear and
+definite notion. One explorer only has come away from the country with
+an idea that the general position of the detached mounds, by which the
+plain around Hillah is dotted, enables him to draw the lines of the
+ancient walls, and mark out the exact position of the city. But the very
+maps and plans which are put forward in support of this view show that
+it rests mainly on hypothesis; nor is complete confidence placed in the
+surveys on which the maps and plans have been constructed. The English
+surveys, which have been unfortunately lost, are said not to have placed
+the detached mounds in any such decided lines as M. Oppert believes them
+to occupy, and the general impression of the British officers who were
+employed on the service is that "no vestige of the walls of Babylon has
+been as yet discovered." [PLATE XI.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XI.]
+
+
+For the size and plan of the city we are thus of necessity thrown back
+upon the reports of ancient authors. It is not pretended that such
+reports are in this, or in any other case, deserving of implicit
+credence. The ancient historians, even the more trustworthy of them, are
+in the habit of exaggerating in their numbers; and on such subjects as
+measurements they were apt to take on trust the declarations of their
+native guides, who would be sure to make over-statements. Still in
+this instance we have so many distinct authorities--eyewitnesses of the
+facts--and some of them belonging to times when scientific accuracy had
+begun to be appreciated, that we must be very in credulous if we do not
+accept their witness, so far as it is consentient, and not intrinsically
+very improbable.
+
+According to Herodotus, an eye-witness, and the earliest authority on
+the subject the _enceinte_ of Babylon was a square, 120 stades (about 14
+miles) each way--the entire circuit of the wall being thus 56 miles, and
+the area enclosed within them falling little short of 200 square miles.
+Ctesias, also an eyewitness, and the next writer on the subject, reduced
+the circuit of the walls to 360 stades, or 41 miles, and made the area
+consequently little more than 100 square miles. These two estimates are
+respectively the greatest and the least that have come down to us. The
+historians of Alexander, while conforming nearly to the statements of
+Ctesias, a little enlarge his dimensions, making the circuit 365, 368,
+or 385 stades. The differences here are inconsiderable; and it seems to
+be established, on a weight of testimony which we rarely possess in such
+a matter, that the walls of this great town were about forty miles in
+circumference, and enclosed an area as large as that of the Landgraviat
+of Hesse-Homburg.
+
+It is difficult to suppose that the real city--the streets and
+squares--can at any time have occupied one half of this enormous area,
+A clear space, we are told, was left for a considerable distance inside
+the wall--like the _pomaerium_ of the Romans--upon which no houses
+were allowed to be built. When houses began, they were far from being
+continuous; gardens, orchards, even fields, were interspersed among
+the buildings; and it was supposed that the inhabitants, when besieged,
+could grow sufficient corn for their own consumption within the walls.
+Still the whole area was laid out with straight streets, or perhaps one
+should say with roads (for the houses cannot have been continuous
+along them), which cut one another everywhere at right angles, like the
+streets of some German towns. The wall of the town was pierced with a
+hundred gates, twenty-five (we may suppose) in each face, and the roads
+led straight to these portals, the whole area being thus cut up into
+square blocks. The houses were in general lofty, being three or even
+four stories high. They are said to have had vaulted roofs, which were
+not protected externally with any tiling, since the climate was so dry
+as to render such a protection unnecessary. The beams used in the houses
+were of palm-wood, all other timber being scarce in the country; and
+such pillars as the houses could boast were of the same material. The
+construction of these last was very rude. Around posts of palm-wood
+were twisted wisps of rushes, which were covered with plaster, and then
+colored according the taste of the owner.
+
+The Euphrates ran through the town, dividing it nearly in half. Its
+banks were lined throughout with quays of brick laid in bitumen, and
+were further guarded by two walls of brick, which skirted them along
+their whole length. In each of these walls were twenty-five gates,
+corresponding to the number of the streets which gave upon the river;
+and outside each gate was a sloped landing place, by which you could
+descend to the water's edge, if you had occasion to cross the river.
+Boats were kept ready at these landing-places to convey passengers from
+side to side; while for those who disliked this method of conveyance
+a bridge was provided of a somewhat peculiar construction. A number
+of stone piers were erected in the bed of the stream, firmly clamped
+together with fastenings of iron and lead; wooden drawbridges connected
+pier with pier during the day, and on these passengers passed over; but
+at night they were withdrawn, in order that the bridge might not be used
+during the dark. Diodorus declares that besides this bridge, to which he
+assigns a length of five stades (about 1000 yards) and a breadth of 30
+feet, the two sides of the river were joined together by a tunnel, which
+was fifteen feet wide and twelve high to the spring of its arched roof.
+
+The most remarkable buildings which the city contained were the two
+palaces, one on either side of the river, and the great temple of
+Belus. Herodotus describes the great temple as contained within a square
+enclosure, two stades (nearly a quarter of a mile) both in length and
+breadth. Its chief feature was the _ziggurat_ or tower, a huge solid
+mass of brick-work, built (like all Babylonian temple-towers) in stages,
+square being emplaced on square, and a sort of rude pyramid being thus
+formed, at the top of which was the main shrine of the god. The basement
+platform of the Belus tower was, Herodotus tells us, a stade, or rather
+more than 200 yards, each way. The number of stages was eight. The
+ascent to the highest stage, which contained the shrine of the god, was
+on the outside, and consisted either of steps, or of an inclined plane,
+carried round the four sides of the building, and in this way conducting
+to the top. According to Strabo the tower was a stado (606 feet 9
+inches) in height; but this estimate, if it is anything more than a
+conjecture, must represent rather the length of the winding ascent than
+the real altitude of the building. The great pyramid itself was only 480
+feet high; and it is very questionable whether any Babylonian building
+ever equalled it. About half-way up the ascent was a resting-place with
+seats, where persons commonly sat a while on their way to the summit.
+The shrine which crowned the edifice was large and rich. In the time
+of Herodotus it contained no image; but only a golden table and a large
+couch, covered with a handsome drapery. This, however, was after the
+Persian conquest and the plunder of its principal treasures. Previously,
+if we may believe Diodorus, the shrine was occupied by three colossal
+images of gold--one of Bel, one of Beltis, and the third of Rhea or
+Ishtar. Before the image of Beltis were two golden lions, and near them
+two enormous serpents of silver, each thirty talents in weight. The
+golden table--forty feet long and fifteen broad--was in front of these
+statues, and upon it stood two huge drinking-cups, of the same weight as
+the serpents. The shrine also contained two enormous censers and three
+golden bowls, one for each of the three deities.
+
+At the base of the tower was a second shrine or chapel, which in the
+time of Herodotus contained a sitting image of Bel, made of gold, with
+a golden table in front of it, and a stand for the image, of the same
+precious metal. Here, too, Persian avarice had been busy; for anciently
+this shrine had possessed a second statue, which was a human figure
+twelve cubits high, made of solid gold. The shrine was also rich
+in private offerings. Outside the building, but within the sacred
+enclosure, were two altars, a smaller one of gold, on which it was
+customary to offer sucklings, and a larger one, probably of stone, where
+the worshippers sacrificed full-grown victims.
+
+The great palace was a building of still larger dimensions than the
+great temple. According to Diodorus, it was situated within a triple
+enclosure, the innermost wall being twenty stades, the second forty
+stades, and the outermost sixty stades (nearly seven miles), in
+circumference. The outer wall was built entirely of plain baked brick.
+The middle and inner walls were of the same material, fronted with
+enamelled bricks representing hunting scenes. The figures, according to
+this author, were larger than the life, and consisted chiefly of a great
+variety of animal forms. There were not wanting, however, a certain
+number of human forms to enliven the scene; and among these were two--a
+man thrusting his spear through a lion, and a woman on horseback aiming
+at a leopard with her javelin--which the later Greeks believed to
+represent the mythic Ninus and Semiramis. Of the character of the
+apartments we hear nothing; but we are told that the palace had three
+gates, two of which were of bronze, and that these had to be opened and
+shut by a machine.
+
+But the main glory of the palace was its pleasure-ground--the "Hanging
+Gardens," which the Greeks regarded as one of the seven wonders of the
+world. This extraordinary construction, which owed its erection to the
+whim of a woman, was a square, each side of which measured 400 Greek
+feet. It was supported upon several tiers of open arches, built one over
+the other, like the walls of a classic theatre, and sustaining at each
+stage, or story, a solid platform, from which the piers of the next tier
+of arches rose. The building towered into the air to the height of at
+least seventy-five feet, and was covered at the top with a great mass of
+earth, in which there grew not merely flowers and shrubs, but tress
+also of the largest size. Water was supplied from the Euphrates through
+pipes, and was raised (it is said) by a screw, working on the principal
+of Archimedes. To prevent the moisture from penetrating into the
+brick-work and gradually destroying the building, there were interposed
+between the bricks and the mass of soil, first a layer of reeds mixed
+with bitumen, then a double layer of burnt brick cemented with gypsum,
+and thirdly a coating of sheet lead. The ascent to the garden was by
+steps. On the way up, among the arches which sustained the building,
+were stately apartments, which, must have been pleasant from their
+coolness. There was also a chamber within the structure containing the
+machinery by which the water was raised.
+
+Of the smaller palace, which was opposite to the larger one, on the
+other side the river, but few details have come down to us. Like the
+larger palace, it was guarded by a triple enclosure, the entire circuit
+of which measured (it is said) thirty stades. It contained a number of
+bronze statues, which the Greeks believed to represent the god Belus,
+and the sovereigns Ninus and Semiramis, together with their officers.
+The walls were covered with battle scenes and hunting scenes, vividly
+represented by means of bricks painted and enamelled.
+
+Such was the general character of the town and its chief edifices, if we
+may believe the descriptions of eye-witnesses. The walls which enclosed
+and guarded the whole--or which, perhaps one should rather say,
+guarded the district within which Babylon was placed--have been already
+mentioned as remarkable for their great extent, but cannot be dismissed
+without a more special and minute description. Like the "Hanging
+Gardens," they were included among the "world's seven wonders,"
+and, according to every account given of them, their magnitude and
+construction were remarkable.
+
+It has been already noticed that, according to the lowest of the ancient
+estimates, the entire length of the walls was 360 stades, or more than
+forty-one miles. With respect to the width we have two very different
+statements, one by Herodotus and the other by Clitarchus and Strabo.
+Herodotus makes the width 50 royal cubits, or about 85 English feet,
+Strabo and Q. Curtius reduced the estimate to 32 feet. There is still
+greater discrepancy with respect to the height of the walls. Herodotus
+says that the height was 200 royal cubits, or 300 royal feet (about 335
+English feet); Ctesias made it 50 fathoms, or 300 ordinary Greek feet;
+Pliny and Solinus, substituting feet for the royal cubits of Herodotus,
+made the altitude 235 feet; Philostratus and Q. Curtius, following
+perhaps some one of Alexander's historians, gave for the height 150
+feet; finally Clitarchus, as reported by Diodorus Siculus, and Strabo,
+who probably followed him, have left us the very moderate estimate of 75
+feet. It is impossible to reconcile these numbers. The supposition that
+some of them belong properly to the outer, and others to the inner wall,
+will not explain the discrepancies--for the measurements cannot by any
+ingenuity be reduced to two sets of dimensions. The only conclusion
+which it seems possible to draw from the conflicting testimony is that
+the numbers were either rough guesses made by very unskilful travellers,
+or else were (in most cases) intentional exaggerations palmed upon them
+by the native ciceroni. Still the broad facts remain--first, that the
+walls enclosed an enormous space, which was very partially occupied by
+buildings; secondly, that they were of great and unusual thickness;
+and thirdly, that they were of a vast height--seventy or eighty feet at
+least in the time of Alexander, after the wear and tear of centuries and
+the violence of at least three conquerors.
+
+The general character of the construction is open to but little doubt.
+The wall was made of bricks, either baked in kilns, or (more probably)
+dried in the sun, and laid in a cement of bitumen, with occasional
+layers of reeds between the courses. Externally it was protected by a
+wide and deep moat. On the summit were low towers, rising above the
+wall to the height of some ten or fifteen feet, and probably serving as
+guardrooms for the defenders. These towers are said to have been 250 in
+number; they were least numerous on the western face of the city, where
+the wall ran along the marshes. They were probably angular, not round;
+and instead of extending through the whole thickness of the wall, they
+were placed along its outer and inner edge, tower facing tower, with
+a wide space between them--"enough," Herodotus says, "for a four-horse
+chariot to turn in." The wall did not depend on them for its strength,
+but on its own height and thickness, which were such as to render
+scaling and mining equally hopeless.
+
+Such was Babylon, according to the descriptions of the ancients--a
+great city, built on a very regular plan, surrounded by populous suburbs
+interspersed among fields and gardens, the whole being included within a
+large square strongly fortified enceinte. When we turn from this picture
+of the past to contemplate the present condition of the localities, we
+are at first struck with astonishment at the small traces which remain
+of so vast and wonderful a metropolis. "The broad walls of Babylon"
+are "utterly broken" down, and her "high gates burned with fire."
+"The golden city hath ceased." God has "swept it with the bosom of
+destruction." "The glory of the kingdoms, the beauty of the Chaldees'
+excellency," is become "as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrha." The
+traveller who passes through the land is at first inclined to say that
+there are no ruins, no remains, of the mighty city which once lorded it
+over the earth. By and by, however, he begins to see that though ruins,
+in the common acceptation of the term, scarcely exist--though there are
+no arches, no pillars, but one or two appearances of masonry even yet
+the whole country is covered with traces of exactly that kind which it
+was prophesied Babylon should leave. Vast "heaps" or mounds, shapeless
+and unsightly, are scattered at intervals over the entire region where
+it is certain that Babylon anciently stood, and between the "heaps" the
+soil is in many places composed of fragments of pottery and bricks, and
+deeply impregnated with nitre, infallible indications of its having once
+been covered with buildings. As the traveller descends southward from
+Baghdad he finds these indications increase, until, on nearing the
+Euphrates, a few miles beyond Mohawil, he notes that they have become
+continuous, and finds himself in a region of mounds, some of which are
+of enormous size.
+
+These mounds begin about five miles above Hillah, and extend for a
+distance of about three miles from north to south along the course of
+the river, lying principally on its left or eastern bank. The ruins on
+this side consist chiefly of three great masses of building. The most
+northern, to which the Arabs of the present day apply the name of
+BABIL--the true native appellation of the ancient citys--is a vast pile
+of brick-work of an irregular quadrilateral shape, with precipitous
+sides furrowed by ravines, and with a flat top. [PLATE X., Fig.,3.] Of
+the four faces of the ruin the southern seems to be the most perfect.
+It extends a distance of about 200 yards, or almost exactly a stade,
+and runs nearly in a straight line from west to east. At its eastern
+extremity it forms a right angle with the east face, which runs nearly
+due north for about 180 yards, also almost in a straight line. The
+western and northern faces are apparently much worn away. Here are
+the chief ravines, and here is the greatest seeming deviation from the
+original lines of the building. The greatest height of the Babil mound
+is 130 or 140 feet. It is mainly composed of sun-dried brick, but shows
+signs of having been faced with fire-burnt brick, carefully cemented
+with an excellent white mortar. The bricks of this outer facing bear the
+name and titles of Nebuchadnezzar. A very small portion of the original
+structure has been laid bare enough however to show that the lines
+of the building did not slope like those of a pyramid, but were
+perpendicular, and that the side walls had, at intervals, the support of
+buttresses.
+
+This vast building, whatever it was, stood within a square enclosure,
+two sides of which, the northern and eastern, are still very distinctly
+marked. A long low line of rampart runs for 400 yards parallel to the
+east face of the building, at a distance of 120 or 130 yards, and a
+similar but somewhat longer line of mound runs parallel to the north
+face at rather a greater distance from it. On the west a third line
+could be traced in the early part of the present century; but it appears
+to be now obliterated. Here and on the south are the remains of
+an ancient canal, the construction of which may have caused the
+disappearance of the southern, and of the lower part of the western
+line. [PLATE XII., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XII.]
+
+
+Below the Babil mound, which stands isolated from the rest of the ruins,
+are two principal masses--the more northern known to the Arabs as EL
+KASR, "the Palace," and the more southern as "the mound of Amran," from
+the tomb of a reputed prophet Amran-ibn-Ali, which crowns its summit.
+The Kasr mound is an oblong square, about 700 yards long by 600 broad,
+with the sides facing the cardinal points. [PLATE XII., Fig. 2.] Its
+height above the plain is 70 feet. Its longer direction is from north
+to south. As far as it has been penetrated, it consists mainly of
+rubbish-loose bricks, tiles, and fragments of stone. In a few places
+only are there undisturbed remains of building. One such relic is a
+subterranean passage, seven feet in height, floored and walled with
+baked brick, and covered in at the top with great blocks of sandstone,
+which may either have been a secret exit or more probably an enormous
+drain. Another is the Kasr, or "palace" proper, whence the mound has
+its name. This is a fragment of excellent brick masonry in a wonderful
+state of preservation, consisting of walls, piers, and buttresses, and
+in places ornamented with pilasters, but of too fragmentary a character
+to furnish the modern inquirer with any clue to the original plan of the
+building. The bricks are of a pale yellow color and of the best possible
+quality, nearly resembling our fire-bricks. They are stamped, one and
+all, with the name and titles of Nebuchadnezzar. The mortar in which
+they are laid is a fine lime cement, which adheres so closely to the
+bricks that it is difficult to obtain a specimen entire. In the dust
+at the foot of the walls are numerous fragments of brick, painted, and
+covered with a thick enamel or glaze. Here, too, have been found a few
+fragments of sculptured stone, and slabs containing an account of the
+erection of a palatial edifice by Nebuchadnezzar. Near the northern edge
+of the mound, and about midway in its breadth, is a colossal figure of a
+lion, rudely carved in black basalt, standing over the prostrate figure
+of a man with arms outstretched. A single tree grows on the huge ruin,
+which the Arabs declare to be of a species not known elsewhere, and
+regard as a remnant of the hanging garden of Bokht-i-nazar. It is a
+tamarisk of no rare kind, but of very great ago, in consequence of
+which, and of its exposed position, the growth and foliage are somewhat
+peculiar.
+
+South of the Kasr mound, at the distance of about 800 yards, is the
+remaining great mass of ruins, the mound of Jumjuma, or of Amran. [PLATE
+XII., Fig. 3.] The general shape of this mound is triangular,107 but it
+is very irregular and ill-defined, so as scarcely to admit of accurate
+description. Its three sides face respectively a little east of north,
+a little south of east, and a little south of west. The south-western
+side, which runs nearly parallel with the Euphrates, and seems to have
+been once washed by the river, is longer than either of the others,
+extending a distance of above a thousand yards, while the south-eastern
+may be 800 yards, and the north-eastern 700. Innumerable ravines
+traverse the mound on every side, penetrating it nearly to its centre.
+The surface is a series of undulations. Neither masonry nor sculpture is
+anywhere apparent.
+
+All that meets the eye is a mass of debris; and the researches hitherto
+made have failed to bring to light any distinct traces of building.
+Occasionally bricks are found, generally of poor material, and bearing
+the names and titles of some of the earlier Babylonian monarchs; but the
+trenches opened in the pile have in no case laid bare even the smallest
+fragment of a wall.
+
+Besides the remains which have been already described, the most
+remarkable are certain long lines of rampart on both sides of the river,
+which lie outside of the other ruins, enclosing them all, except the
+mound of Babil. On the left bank of the stream there is to be traced,
+in the first place, a double line of wall or rampart, having a direction
+nearly due north and south, which lies east of the Kasr and Amran
+mounds, at the distance from them of about 1000 yards. Beyond this is a
+single line of rampart to the north-east, traceable for about two miles,
+the direction of which is nearly from north-west to south-east, and a
+double line of rampart to the south-east, traceable for a mile and a
+half, with a direction from northeast to south-west. The two lines in
+this last case are from 600 to 700 yards apart, and diverge from one
+another as they run out to the north-east. The inner of the two meets
+the north-eastern rampart nearly at a right angle, and is clearly a
+part of the same work. It is questioned, however, whether this line of
+fortification is ancient, and not rather a construction belonging to
+Parthian times.
+
+A low line of mounds is traceable between the western face of the Amran
+and Kasr hills, and the present eastern bank of the river, bounding a
+sort of narrow valley, in which either the main stream of the Euphrates,
+or at any rate a branch from it, seems anciently to have flowed.
+
+On the right bank of the stream the chief remains are of the same kind.
+West of the river, a rampart, twenty feet high, runs for nearly a mile
+parallel with the general line of the Amran mound, at the distance of
+about 1000 yards from the old course of the stream. At either extremity
+the line of the rampart turns at a right angle, running down towards the
+river, and being traceable towards the north for 400 yards and towards
+the south for fifty or sixty. It is evident that there was once, before
+the stream flowed in its present channel, a rectangular enclosure, a
+mile long and 1000 yards broad, opposite to the Amran mound; and there
+are indications that within this _enceinte_ was at least one important
+building, which was situated near the south-east angle of the enclosure,
+on the banks of the old course of the river. The bricks found at this
+point bear the name of Neriglissar.
+
+There are also, besides the ramparts and the great masses of ruin above
+described, a vast number of scattered and irregular heaps of hillocks
+on both sides of the river, chiefly, however, upon the eastern bank.
+Of these one only seems to deserve distinct mention. This is the mound
+called El Homeira, "the Red," which lies due east of the Kasr, distant
+from it about 800 yards--a mound said to be 300 yards long by 100 wide,
+and to attain an elevation of 60 or 70 feet. It is composed of baked
+brick of a bright red color, and must have been a building of a very
+considerable height resting upon a somewhat confined base. Its bricks
+are inscribed along their edges, not (as is the usual practice) on their
+lower face.
+
+The only other ancient work of any importance of which some remains are
+still to be traced is a brick embankment on the left bank of the stream
+between the Kasr and the Babil mounds, extending for a distance of
+a thousand yards in a line which has a slight curve and a general
+direction of S.S.W. The bricks of this embankment are of a bright red
+color, and of great hardness. They are laid wholly in bitumen. The
+legend which they bear shows that the quay was constructed by Nabonidus.
+[PLATE XIII.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XIII.]
+
+
+Such then are the ruins of Babylon--the whole that can now with
+certainty be assigned to the "beauty of the Chaldees' excellency"--the
+"great Babylon" of Nebuchadnezzar. Within a space little more than three
+miles long and a mile and three quarters broad are contained all the
+undoubted remains of the greatest city of the old world. These remains,
+however, do not serve in any way to define the ancient limits of the
+place. They are surrounded on every side by nitrous soil, and by low
+heaps which it has not been thought worth while to excavate, but which
+the best judges assign to the same era as the great mounds, and believe
+to mark the sites of the lesser temples and the other public buildings
+of the ancient city. Masses of this kind are most frequent to the north
+and east. Sometimes they are almost continuous for miles; and if we take
+the Kasr mound as a centre, and mark about it an area extending five
+miles in each direction (which would give a city of the size described
+by Ctesias and the historians of Alexander), we shall scarcely find a
+single square mile of the hundred without some indications of ancient
+buildings upon its surface. The case is not like that of Nineveh, where
+outside the walls the country is for a considerable distance singularly
+bare of ruins. The mass of Babylonian remains extending from Babil to
+Amran does not correspond to the whole _enceinte_ of Nineveh, but to the
+mound of Koyunjik. It has every appearance of being, not the city, but
+"the heart of the city"--the "Royal quarter" outside of which were the
+streets and squares, and still further off, the vanished walls. It may
+seem strange that the southern capital should have so greatly exceeded
+the dimensions of the northern one. But, if we follow the indications
+presented by the respective sites, we are obliged to conclude that there
+was really this remarkable difference.
+
+It has to be considered in conclusion how far we can identify the
+various ruins above described with the known buildings of the ancient
+capital, and to what extent it is possible to reconstruct upon the
+existing remains the true plan of the city. Fancy, if it discards the
+guidance of fact, may of course with the greatest ease compose plans
+of a charming completeness. A rigid adherence to existing data will
+produce, it is to be feared, a somewhat meagre and fragmentary result;
+but most persons will feel that this is one of the cases where the maxim
+of Hesiod applies--"the half is preferable to the whole."
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 182]
+
+The one identification which may be made upon certain and indeed
+indisputable evidence is that of the Kasr mound with the palace built
+by Nebuchadnezzar. The tradition which has attached the name of Kasr or
+"Palace" to this heap is confirmed by inscriptions upon slabs found on
+the spot, wherein Nebuchadnezzar declares the building to be his "Grand
+Palace." The bricks of that part of the ruin which remains uncovered
+bear, one and all, the name of this king; and it is thus clear that
+here stood in ancient times the great work of which Berosus speaks as
+remarkable for its height and splendor. If a confirmation of the fact
+were needed after evidence of so decisive a character, it would be found
+in the correspondence between the remains found on the mound and the
+description left us of the "greater palace" by Diodorus. Diodorus
+relates that the walls of this edifice were adorned with colored
+representations of hunting scenes; and modern explorers find that the
+whole soil of the mound, and especially the part on which the fragment
+of ruin stands, is full of broken pieces of enamelled brick, varied in
+hue, and evidently containing portions of human and animal forms.
+
+But if the Kasr represents the palace built by Nebuchadnezzar, as is
+generally allowed by those who have devoted their attention to the
+subject, it seems to follow almost as a certainty that the Amran mound
+is the site of that old palatial edifice to which the erection
+of Nebuchadnezzar was an addition. Berosus expressly states that
+Nebuchadnezzar's building "adjoined upon" the former palace, a
+description which is fairly applicable to the Amran mound by means of a
+certain latitude of interpretation, but which is wholly inapplicable to
+any of the other ruins. This argument would be conclusive, even if it
+stood alone. It has, however, received an important corroboration in the
+course of recent researches. From the Amran mound, and from this part
+of Babylon only, have monuments been recovered of an earlier date than
+Nebuchadnezzar. Here and here alone did the early kings leave memorials
+of their presence in Babylon; and here consequently, we may presume,
+stood the ancient royal residence.
+
+If, then, all the principal ruins on the east bank of the river, with
+the exception of the Babil mound and the long lines marking walls
+or embankments, be accepted as representing the "great palace" or
+"citadel" of the classical writers we must recognize in the remains west
+of the ancient course of the river-the oblong square enclosure and
+the important building at its south-east angle--the second or "smaller
+palace" of Ctesias, which was joined to the larger one, according to
+that writer, by a bridge and a tunnel. This edifice, built or at any
+rate repaired by Neriglissar, lay directly opposite the more ancient
+part of the eastern palace, being separated from it by the river, which
+anciently flowed along the western face of the Kasr and Amran mounds.
+The exact position of the bridge cannot be fixed. With regard to the
+tunnel, it is extremely unlikely that any such construction was ever
+made. The "Father of History" is wholly silent on the subject, while
+he carefully describes the bridge, a work far less extraordinary.
+The tunnel rests on the authority of two writers only--Diodorus and
+Philostratus--who both wrote after Babylon was completely ruined. It
+was probably one of the imaginations of the inventive Ctesias, from whom
+Diodorus evidently derived all the main points of his description.
+
+Thus far there is no great difficulty in identifying the existing
+remains with buildings mentioned by ancient authors; but, at the point
+to which we are now come, the subject grows exceedingly obscure, and it
+is impossible to offer more than reasonable conjectures upon the true
+character of the remaining ruins. The descriptions of ancient writers
+would lead us to expect that we should find among the ruins unmistakable
+traces of the great temple of Belus, and at least some indication of the
+position occupied by the Hanging Gardens. These two famous constructions
+can scarcely, one would think, have wholly perished. More especially,
+the Belus temple, which was a stade square, and (according to some) a
+stade in height, must almost of necessity have a representative among
+the existing remains. This, indeed, is admitted on all hands; and the
+controversy is thereby narrowed to the question, which of two
+great ruins--the only two entitled by their size and situation to
+attention--has the better right to be regarded as the great and
+celebrated sanctuary of the ancient Babylon.
+
+That the mound of Babil is the _ziggurat_ or tower of a Babylonian
+temple scarcely admits of a doubt. Its square shape, its solid
+construction, its isolated grandeur, its careful emplacement with the
+sides facing the cardinal points, and its close resemblance to other
+known Babylonian temple-towers, sufficiently mark it for a building
+of this character, or at any rate raise a presumption which it would
+require very strong reasons indeed to overcome. Its size moreover
+corresponds well with the accounts which have come down to us of the
+dimensions of the Belus temple, and its name and proximity to the other
+main ruins show that it belonged certainly to the ancient capital.
+Against its claim to be regarded as the remains of the temple of
+Bolus two objections only can be argued: these are the absence of any
+appearance of stages, or even of a pyramidical shape, from the present
+ruin, and its position on the same side of the Euphrates with the
+palace. Herodotus expressly declares that the temple of Belus and
+the royal palace were upon opposite sides of the river, and states,
+moreover, that the temple was built in stages, which rose one above the
+other to the number of eight. Now these two circumstances, which do not
+belong at present to the Babil mound, attach to a ruin distant from it
+about eleven or twelve miles--a ruin which is certainly one of the most
+remarkable in the whole country, and which, if Babylon had really been
+of the size asserted by Herodotus, might possibly have been included
+within the walls. The Birs-i-Nimrud had certainly seven, probably eight
+stages, and it is the only ruin on the present western bank of
+the Euphrates which is at once sufficiently grand to answer to the
+descriptions of the Belus temple, and sufficiently near to the other
+ruin to make its original inclusion within the walls not absolutely
+impossible. Hence, ever since the attention of scholars was first
+directed to the subject of Babylonian topography, opinion has been
+divided on the question before us, and there have not been wanting
+persons to maintain that the Birs-i-Nimrud is the true temple of
+Belus, if not also the actual tower of Babel, whose erection led to the
+confusion of tongues and general dispersion of the sons of Adam.
+
+With this latter identification we are not in the present place
+concerned. With respect to the view that the Birs is the sanctury
+of Belus, it may be observed in the first place that the size of the
+building is very much smaller than that ascribed to the Belus temple;
+secondly, that it was dedicated to Kebo, who cannot be identified with
+Bel; and thirdly, that it is not really any part of the remains of the
+ancient capital, but belongs to an entirely distinct town. The cylinders
+found in the ruin by Sir Henry Eawlinson declare the building to have
+been "the wonder of Borsippa;" and Borsippa, according to all the
+ancient authorities, was a town by itself--an entirely distinct place
+from Babylon. To include Borsippa within the outer wall of Babylon is to
+run counter to all the authorities on the subject, the inscriptions, the
+native writer, Berosus, and the classical geographers generally. Nor
+is the position thus assigned to the Belus temple in harmony with the
+statement of Herodotus, which alone causes explorers to seek for the
+temple on the west side of the river. For, though the expression which
+this writer uses does not necessarily mean that the temple was in the
+exact centre of one of the two divisions of the town, it certainly
+implies that it lay towards the middle of one division--well within
+it--and not upon its outskirts. It is indeed inconceivable that the
+main sanctuary of the place, where the kings constantly offered their
+worship, should have been nine or ten miles from the palace! The
+distance between the Amran mound and Babil, which is about two miles, is
+quite as great as probability will allow us to believe existed between
+the old residence of the kings and the sacred shrine to which they were
+in the constant habit of resorting.
+
+Still there remain as objections to the identification of the great
+temple with the Babil mound the two arguments already noticed. The Babil
+mound has no appearance of stages such as the Birs presents, nor has it
+even a pyramidical shape. It is a huge platform with a nearly level
+top, and sinks, rather than rises, in the centre. What has become, it is
+asked, of the seven upper stages of the great Belus tower, if this ruin
+represents it? Whither have they vanished? How is it that in crumbling
+down they have not left something like a heap towards the middle? To
+this it may be replied that the destruction of the Belus tower has not
+been the mere work of the elements--it was violently broken down either
+by Xerxes, or by some later king, who may have completely removed all
+the upper stages. Again, it has served as a quarry to the hunters after
+bricks for more than twenty centuries; so that it is only surprising
+that it still retains so much of its original shape. Further, when
+Alexander entered Babylon more than 2000 years ago 10,000 men were
+employed for several weeks in clearing away the rubbish and laying bare
+the foundations of the building. It is quite possible that a conical
+mass of crumbled brick may have been removed from the top of the mound
+at this time.
+
+The difficulty remains that the Babil mound is on the same side of the
+Euphrates with the ruins of the Great Palace, whereas Herodotus makes
+the two buildings balance each other, one on the right and the other
+on the left bank of the stream. Now here it is in the first place to
+be observed that Herodotus is the only writer who does this. No other
+ancient author tells us anything of the relative situation of the two
+buildings. We have thus nothing to explain but the bald statement of a
+single writer--a writer no doubt of great authority, but still one not
+wholly infallible. We might say, then, that Herodotus probably made a
+mistake--that his memory failed him in this instance, or that he mistook
+his notes on the subject. Or we may explain his error by supposing that
+he confounded a canal from the Euphrates, which seems to have
+anciently passed between the Babil mound and the Kasr (called Shebil by
+Nebuchadnezzar) with the main stream. Or, finally, we may conceive
+that at the time of his visit the old palace lay in ruins, and that the
+palace of Nerig-lissar on the west bank of the stream was that of which
+he spoke. It is at any rate remarkable, considering how his authority is
+quoted as fixing the site of the Belus tower to the west bank, that, in
+the only place where he gives us any intimation of the side of the river
+on which he would have placed the tower, it is the east and not the west
+bank to which his words point. He makes those who saw the treachery of
+Zopyrus at the Belian and Kissian gates, which must have been to the
+east of the city, at once take refuge in the famous sanctuary, which he
+implies was in the vicinity.
+
+On the whole, therefore, it seems best to regard the Babil mound as the
+ziggurat of the great temple of Bel (called by some "the tomb of Belus")
+which the Persians destroyed and which Alexander intended to restore.
+With regard to the "hanging gardens," as they were an erection of less
+than half the size of the tower, it is not so necessary to suppose that
+distinct traces must remain of them. Their debris may be confused with
+those of the Kasr mound, on which one writer places them. Or they may
+have stood between the Kasr and Amran ruins, where are now some mounds
+of no great height. Or, possibly, their true site is in the modern El
+Homeira, the remarkable red mound which lies east of the Kasr at the
+distance of about 800 yards, and attains an elevation of sixty-five
+feet. Though this building is not situated upon the banks of the
+Euphrates, where Strabo and Diodorus place the gardens, it abuts upon
+a long low valley into which the Euphrates water seems formerly to have
+been introduced, and which may therefore have been given the name of
+the river. This identification is, however, it must be allowed, very
+doubtful.
+
+The two lines of mounds which enclose the long low valley above
+mentioned are probably the remains of an embankment which here confined
+the waters of a great reservoir. Nebuchadnezzar relates that he
+constructed a large reservoir, which he calls the Yapur-Shapu, in
+Babylon, and led water into it by means of an "eastern canal"--the
+Shebil. The Shebil canal, it is probable, left the Euphrates at some
+point between Babil and the Kasr, and ran across with a course nearly
+from west to east to the top of the Yapur-Shapu. This reservoir seems to
+have been a long and somewhat narrow parallelogram, running nearly from
+north to south, which shut in the great palace on the east and protected
+it like a huge moat. Most likely it communicated with the Euphrates
+towards the south by a second canal, the exact line of which cannot be
+determined. Thus the palatial residence of the Babylonian kings looked
+in both directions upon broad sheets of water, an agreeable prospect in
+so hot a climate; while, at the same time, by the assignment of a double
+channel to the Euphrates, its floods were the more readily controlled,
+and the city was preserved from those terrible inundations which in
+modern times have often threatened the existence of Baghdad.
+
+The other lines of mound upon the east side of the river may either be
+Parthian works, or (possibly) they may be the remains of some of those
+lofty walls whereby, according to Diodorus, the greater palace was
+surrounded and defended. The fragments of them which remain are so
+placed that if the lines were produced they would include all the
+principal ruins on the left bank except the Babil tower. They may
+therefore be the old defences of the Eastern palace; though, if so,
+it is strange that they run in lines which are neither straight nor
+parallel to those of the buildings enclosed by them. The irregularity
+of these ramparts is certainly a very strong argument in favor of
+their having been the work of a people considerably more barbarous and
+ignorant than the Babylonians. [PLATE XIV.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XIV.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. ARTS AND SCIENCES.
+
+
+That the Babylonians were among the most ingenious of all the nations of
+antiquity, and had made considerable progress in the arts and sciences
+before their conquest by the Persians, is generally admitted. The
+classical writers commonly parallel them with the Egyptians; and though,
+from their habit of confusing Babylon with Assyria, it is not always
+quite certain that the inhabitants of the more southern country--the
+real Babylonians--are meant, still there is sufficient reason to believe
+that, in the estimation of the Greeks and Romans, the people of
+the lower Euphrates were regarded as at least equally advanced in
+civilization with those of the Nile valley and the Delta. The branches
+of knowledge wherein by general consent the Babylonians principally
+excelled were architecture and astronomy. Of their architectural works
+two at least were reckoned among the "Seven Wonders," while others, not
+elevated to this exalted rank, were yet considered to be among the most
+curious and admirable of Oriental constructions. In astronomical science
+they were thought to have far excelled all other nations, and the first
+Greeks who made much progress in the subject confessed themselves the
+humble disciples of Babylonian teachers.
+
+In the account, which it is proposed to give, in this place, of
+Babylonian art and science, so far as they are respectively known to us,
+the priority will be assigned to art, which is an earlier product of
+the human mind than science; and among the arts the first place will be
+given to architecture, as at once the most fundamental of all the fine
+arts, and the one in which the Babylonians attained their greatest
+excellence. It is as builders that the primitive Chaldaean people, the
+progenitors of the Babylonians, first appear before us in history;
+and it was on his buildings that the great king of the later Empire,
+Nebuchadnezzar, specially prided himself. When Herodotus visited Babylon
+he was struck chiefly by its extraordinary edifices; and it is the
+account which the Greek writers gave of these erections that has, more
+than anything else, procured for the Babylonians the fame that they
+possess and the position that they hold among the six or seven leading
+nations of the old world.
+
+The architecture of the Babylonians seems to have culminated in the
+Temple. While their palaces, their bridges, their walls, even their
+private houses were remarkable, their grandest works, their most
+elaborate efforts, were dedicated to the honor and service, not of man,
+but of God. The Temple takes in Babylonia the same sort of rank which it
+has in Egypt and in Greece. It is not, as in Assyria, a mere adjunct
+of the palace. It stands by itself, in proud independence, as the
+great building of a city, or a part of a city; it is, if not absolutely
+larger, at any rate loftier and more conspicuous than any other edifice:
+it often boasts a magnificent adornment: the value of the offerings
+which are deposited in it is enormous: in every respect it rivals the
+palace, while in some it has a decided preeminence. It draws all eyes
+by its superior height and sometimes by its costly ornamentation; it
+inspires awe by the religious associations which belong to it; finally,
+it is a stronghold as well as a place of worship, and may furnish a
+refuge to thousands in the time of danger.
+
+A Babylonian temple seems to have stood commonly within a walled
+enclosure. In the case of the great temple of Belus at Babylon, the
+enclosure is said to have been a square of two stades each way, or,
+in other words, to have contained an area of thirty acres. The temple
+itself ordinarily consisted of two parts. Its most essential feature
+was a _ziggurat_, or tower, which was either square, or at any rate
+rectangular, and built in stages, the smallest number of such stages
+being two, and the largest known number seven. At the summit of the
+tower was probably in every case a shrine, or chapel, of greater or
+less size, containing altars and images. The ascent to this was on the
+outside of the towers, which were entirely solid; and it generally wound
+round the different faces of the towers, ascending them either by means
+of steps or by an inclined plane. Special care was taken with regard to
+the emplacement of the tower, either its sides or its angles being
+made exactly to confront the cardinal points. It is said that the
+temple-towers were used not merely for religious purposes but also as
+observatories, a use with a view to which this arrangement of their
+position would have been serviceable.
+
+Besides the shrine at the summit of the temple-tower or ziggurat, there
+was commonly at the base of the tower, or at any rate somewhere
+within the enclosure, a second shrine or chapel, in which the ordinary
+worshipper, who wished to spare himself the long ascent, made his
+offerings. Here again the ornamentation was most costly, lavish use
+being made of the precious metals for images and other furniture. Altars
+of different sizes were placed in the open air in the vicinity of this
+lower shrine, on which were sacrificed different classes of victims,
+gold being used occasionally as the material of the altar.
+
+The general appearance of a Babylonian temple, or at any rate of its
+chief feature, the tower or _ziggurat_, will be best gathered from a
+more particular description of a single building of the kind; and the
+building which it will be most convenient to take for that purpose is
+that remarkable edifice which strikes moderns with more admiration than
+any other now existing in the country, and which has also been more
+completely and more carefully examined than any other Babylonian
+ruins--the Birs-i-Nimrud, or ancient temple of Nebo at Borsippa. The
+plan of this tower has been almost completely made out from data still
+existing on the spot; and a restoration of the original building may be
+given with a near approach to certainty. [PLATE XV., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XV.]
+
+
+Upon a platform of crude brick, raised a few feet above the level of
+the alluvial plain, was built the first or basement stage of the great
+edifice, an exact square, 272 feet each way, and and probably twenty-six
+feet in perpendicular height. On this was erected a second stage of
+exactly the same height, but a square of only 230 feet; which however
+was not placed exactly in the middle of the first, but further from its
+northeastern than its south-western edge, twelve feet only from the one
+and thirty feet from the other. The third stage, which was imposed in
+the same way upon the second, was also twenty-six feet high, and was a
+square of 188 feet. Thus far the plan had been uniform and without any
+variety; but at this point an alteration took place. The height of the
+fourth stage, instead of being twenty-six, was only fifteen feet. In
+other respects however the old numbers were maintained; the fourth stage
+was diminished equally with the others, and was consequently a square of
+146 feet. It was emplaced upon the stage below it exactly as the former
+stages had been. The remaining stages probably followed the same rule
+of diminution--the fifth being a square of 104, the sixth one of 24, and
+the seventh one of 20 feet. Each of these stages had a height of
+fifteen feet. Upon the seventh or final stage was erected the shrine
+or tabernacle, which was probably also fifteen feet high, and about
+the same length and breadth. Thus the entire height of the building,
+allowing three feet for the crude brick platform, was 150 feet.
+
+The ornamentation of the edifice was chiefly by means of color. The
+seven stages represented the Seven Spheres, in which moved (according
+to ancient Chaldaean astronomy) the seven planets. To each planet fancy,
+partly grounding itself upon fact, had from of old assigned a peculiar
+tint or hue. The Sun was golden, the Moon silver; the distant Saturn,
+almost beyond the region of light, was black; Jupiter was orange the
+fiery Mars was red; Venus was a pale Naples yellow; Mercury a deep blue.
+The seven stages of the tower, like the seven walls of Ecbatana, gave
+a visible embodiment to these fancies. The basement stage, assigned to
+Saturn, was blackened by means of a coating of bitumen spread over the
+face of the masonry; the second stage, assigned to Jupiter, obtained the
+appropriate orange color by means of a facing of burnt bricks of that
+hue; the third stage, that of Mars, was made blood-red by the use
+of half-burnt bricks formed of a bright red clay; the fourth stage,
+assigned to the Sun, appears to have been actually covered with thin
+plates of gold; the fifth, the stage of Venus, received a pale yellow
+tint from the employment of bricks of that hue; the sixth, the sphere of
+Mercury, was given an azure tint by vitrifaction, the whole stage having
+been subjected to an intense heat after it was erected, whereby the
+bricks composing it were converted into a mass of blue slag; the seventh
+stage, that of the Moon, was probably, like the fourth, coated with
+actual plates of metal. Thus the building rose up in stripes of varied
+color, arranged almost as nature's cunning arranges hues in the rainbow,
+tones of red coming first, succeeded by a broad stripe of yellow, the
+yellow being followed by blue. Above this the glowing silvery summit
+melted into the bright sheen of the sky. [PLATE XVI.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XVI.]
+
+
+The faces of the various stages were, as a general rule, flat and
+unbroken, unless it were by a stair or ascent, of which however there
+has been found no trace. But there were two exceptions to this general
+plainness. The basement stage was indented with a number of shallow
+squared recesses, which seem to have been intended for a decoration. The
+face of the third stage was weak on account of its material, which was
+brick but half-burnt. Here then the builders, not for ornament's sake,
+but to strengthen their work, gave to the wall the support of a number
+of shallow buttresses. They also departed from their usual practice,
+by substituting for the rigid perpendicular of the other faces a slight
+slope outwards for some distance from the base. These arrangements,
+which are apparently part of the original work, and not remedies applied
+subsequently, imply considerable knowledge of architectural principles
+on the part of the builders, and no little ingenuity in turning
+architectural resources to account.
+
+With respect to the shrine which was emplaced upon the topmost, or
+silver stage, little is definitely known. It appears to have been of
+brick; and we may perhaps conclude from the analogy of the old Chaldaean
+shrines at the summits of towers, as well as from that of the Belus
+shrine at Babylon, that it was richly ornamented both within and
+without; but it is impossible to state anything as to the exact
+character of the ornamentation.
+
+The tower is to be regarded as fronting to the north-east, the coolest
+side and that least exposed to the sun's rays from the time that they
+become oppressive in Babylonia. On this side was the ascent, which
+consisted probably of abroad staircase extending along the whole front
+of the building. The side platforms (those towards the south-east and
+north-west)--at any rate of the first and second stages, probably
+of all--were occupied by a series of chambers abutting upon the
+perpendicular wall, as the priests' chambers of Solomon's temple abutted
+upon the side walls of that building. In these were doubtless lodged the
+priests and other attendants upon the temple service. The side chambers
+seem sometimes to have communicated with vaulted apartments within
+the solid mass of the structure, like those of which we hear in the
+structure supporting the "hanging gardens." It is possible that there
+may have been internal stair-cases, connecting the vaulted apartments
+of one stage with those of another; but the ruin has not yet been
+sufficiently explored for us to determine whether or not there was such
+communication.
+
+The great Tower is thought to have been approached through a vestibule
+of considerable size. Towards the north-east the existing ruin
+is prolonged in an irregular manner and it is imagined that this
+prolongation marks the site of a vestibule or propylaeum, originally
+distinct from the tower, but now, through the crumbling down of both
+buildings, confused with its ruins. As no scientific examination has
+been made of this part of the mound, the above supposition can only be
+regarded as a conjecture. Possibly the excrescence does not so much mark
+a vestibule as a second shrine, like that which is said to have existed
+at the foot of the Belus Tower at Babylon. Till, however, additional
+researches have been made, it is in vain to think of restoring the plan
+or elevation of this part of the temple.
+
+From the temples of the Babylonians we may now pass to their
+palaces--constructions inferior in height and grandeur, but covering a
+greater space, involving a larger amount of labor, and admitting of more
+architectural variety. Unfortunately the palaces have suffered from the
+ravages of time even more than the temples, and in considering their
+plan and character we obtain little help from the existing remains.
+Still, something may be learnt of them from this source, and where
+it fails we may perhaps be allowed to eke out the scantiness of our
+materials by drawing from the elaborate descriptions of Diodorus such
+points as have probability in their favor.
+
+The Babylonian palace, like the Assyrian, and the Susianian, stood upon
+a lofty mound or platform. This arrangement provided at once for safety,
+for enjoyment, and for health. It secured a pure air, freedom from the
+molestation of insects, and a position only assailable at a few points.
+The ordinary shape of the palace mound appears to have been square;
+its elevation was probably not less than fifty or sixty feet. It was
+composed mainly of sun-dried bricks, which however were almost certainly
+enclosed externally by a facing of burnt brick, and may have been
+further strengthened within by walls of the same material, which perhaps
+traversed the whole mound. The entire mass seems to have been carefully
+drained, and the collected waters were conveyed through subterranean
+channels to the level of the plain at the mound's base. The summit
+of the platform was no doubt paved, either with stone or burnt
+brick--mainly, it is probable, with the latter; since the former
+material was scarce, and though a certain number of stone pavement slabs
+have been found, they are too rare and scattered to imply anything like
+the general use of stone paving. Upon the platform, most likely towards
+the centre, rose the actual palace, not built (like the Assyrian
+palaces) of crude brick faced with a better material, but constructed
+wholly of the finest and hardest burnt brick laid in a mortar of extreme
+tenacity, with walls of enormous thickness, parallel to the sides of the
+mound, and meeting each other at right angles. Neither the ground-plan
+nor the elevation of a Babylonian palace can be given; nor can even
+a conjectural restoration of such a building be made, since the small
+fragment of Nebuchadnezzar's palace which remains has defied all
+attempts to reduce it to system. We can only say that the lines of
+the building were straight; that the walls rose, at any rate to a
+considerable height, without windows; and that the flatness of the
+straight line was broken by numerous buttressses and pilasters. We
+have also evidence that occasionally there was an ornamentation of the
+building, either within or without, by means of sculptured stone slabs,
+on which were represented figures of a small size, carefully wrought.
+The general ornamentation, however, external as well as internal, we
+may well believe to have been such as Diodorus states, colored
+representations on brick of war-scenes, and hunting-scenes, the
+counterparts in a certain sense of those magnificent bas-reliefs which
+everywhere clothed the walls of palaces in Assyria. It has been already
+noticed that abundant remains of such representations have been found
+upon the Kasr mound. [PLATE XV., Fig. 2.] They seem to have alternated
+with cuneiform inscriptions, in white on a blue ground, or else with a
+patterning of rosettes in the same colors.
+
+Of the general arrangement of the royal palaces, of their height, their
+number of stories, their roofing, and their lighting, we know absolutely
+nothing. The statement made by Herodotus, that many of the private
+houses in the town had three or four stories, would naturally lead us
+to suppose that the palaces were built similarly; but no ancient author
+tells us that this was so. The fact that the walls which exist, though
+of considerable height, show no traces of windows, would seem to imply
+that the lighting, as in Assyria, was from the top of the apartment,
+either from the ceiling, or from apertures in the part of the walls
+adjoining the ceiling. Altogether, such evidence as exists favors
+the notion that the Babylonian palace, in its character and general
+arrangements, resembled the Assyrian, with only the two differences,
+that Babylonian was wholly constructed of burnt brick, while in the
+Assyrian the sun-dried material was employed to a large extent; and,
+further, that in Babylonia the decoration of the walls was made, not
+by slabs of alabaster, which did not exist in the country, but
+mainly--almost entirely--by colored representations upon the
+brickwork.
+
+Among the adjuncts of the principal palace at Babylon was the remarkable
+construction known to the Greeks and Romans as "the Hanging Garden." The
+accounts which, Diodorus, Strabo, and Q. Curtius give of this structure
+are not perhaps altogether trustworthy; still, it is probable that they
+are in the main at least founded on fact. We may safely believe that a
+lofty structure was raised at Babylon on several tiers of arches, which
+supported at the top a mass of earth, wherein grew, not merely flowers
+and shrubs, but trees of a considerable size. The Assyrians had been in
+the habit of erecting structures of a somewhat similar kind, artificial
+elevations to support a growth of trees and shrubs; but they were
+content to place their garden at the summit of a single row of pillars
+or arches, and thus to give it a very moderate height. At Babylon the
+object was to produce an artificial imitation of a mountain. For this
+purpose several tiers of arches were necessary; and these appear to have
+been constructed in the manner of a Roman amphitheatre, one directly
+over another so that the outer wall formed from summit to base a single
+perpendicular line. Of the height of the structure various accounts are
+given, while no writer reports the number of the tiers of arches. Hence
+there are no sufficient data for a reconstruction of the edifice.
+
+Of the walls and bridge of Babylon, and of the ordinary houses of the
+people, little more is known than has been already reported in the
+general description of the capital. It does not appear that they
+possessed any very great architectural merit. Some skill was shown in
+constructing the piers of the bridge, which presented an angle to the
+current and then a curved line, along which the water slid gently.
+[PLATE XV., Fig. 3.] The loftiness of the houses, which were of three or
+four stories, is certainly surprising, since Oriental houses have very
+rarely more than two stories. Their construction, however, seems to have
+been rude; and the pillars especially--posts of palm, surrounded
+with wisps of rushes, and then plastered and painted--indicate a low
+condition of taste and a poor and coarse style of domestic architecture.
+
+The material used by the Babylonians in their constructions seems
+to have been almost entirely brick. Like the early Chaldaeans, they
+employed bricks of two kinds, both the ruder sun-dried sort, and the
+very superior kiln-baked article. The former, however, was only applied
+to platforms, and to the interior of palace mounds and of very thick
+walls, and was never made by the later people the sole material of a
+building. In every case there was at least a revetement of kiln-dried
+brick, while the grander buildings were wholly constructed of it. The
+baked bricks used were of several different qualities, and (within
+rather narrow limits) of different sizes. The finest quality of brick
+was yellow, approaching to our Stourbridge or fire-brick; another very
+hard kind was blue, approaching to black; the commoner and coarser
+sorts were pink or red, and these were sometimes, though rarely, but
+half-baked, in which case they were weak and friable. The shape was
+always square; and the dimensions varied between twelve and fourteen
+inches for the length and breadth, and between three and four inches
+for the thickness. [PLATE XVII., Fig. 1.] At the corners of buildings,
+half-bricks were used in the alternate rows, since otherwise the
+joinings must have been all one exactly over another. The bricks were
+always made with a mold, and were commonly stamped on one face with
+an inscription. They were, of course, ordinarily laid horizontally.
+Sometimes, however, there was a departure from this practice. Rows of
+bricks were placed vertically, separated from one another by single
+horizontal layers. This arrangement seems to have been regarded as
+conducing to strength, since it occurs only where there is an evident
+intention of supporting a weak construction by the use of special
+architectural expedients.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XVII.]
+
+
+The Babylonian builders made use of three different kinds of cement. The
+most indifferent was crude clay, or mud, which was mixed with chopped
+straw, to give it greater tenacity, and was applied in layers of
+extraordinary thickness. This was (it is probable) employed only where
+it was requisite that the face of the building should have a certain
+color. A cement superior to clay, but not of any very high value, unless
+as a preventive against damp, was bitumen, which was very generally used
+in basements and in other structures exposed to the action of water.
+Mortar, however, or lime cement was far more commonly employed than
+either of the others, and was of very excellent quality, equal indeed to
+the best Roman material.
+
+There can be no doubt that the general effect of the more ambitious
+efforts of the Babylonian architects was grand and imposing. Even now,
+in their desolation and ruin, their great size renders them impressive;
+and there are times and states of atmosphere under which they fill
+the beholder with a sort of admiring awe, akin to the feeling which is
+called forth by the contemplation of the great works of nature. Rude
+and inartificial in their idea and general construction, without
+architectural embellishment, without variety, without any beauty
+of form, they yet affect men by their mere mass, producing a direct
+impression of sublimity, and at the same time arousing a sentiment
+of wonder at the indomitable perseverance which from materials so
+unpromising could produce such gigantic results. In their original
+condition, when they were adorned with color, with a lavish display of
+the precious metals, with pictured representations of human life, and
+perhaps with statuary of a rough kind, they must have added to
+the impression produced by size a sense of richness and barbaric
+magnificence. The African spirit, which loves gaudy hues and costly
+ornament, was still strong among the Babylonians, even after they had
+been Semitized; and by the side of Assyria, her colder and more
+correct northern sister, Babylonia showed herself a true child of the
+south--rich, glowing, careless of the laws of taste, bent on provoking
+admiration by the dazzling brilliancy of her appearance.
+
+It is difficult to form a decided opinion as to the character of
+Babylonian mimetic art. The specimens discovered are so few, so
+fragmentary, and in some instances so worn by time and exposure, that
+we have scarcely the means of doing justice to the people in respect of
+this portion of their civilization. Setting aside the intaglios on
+seals and gems, which have such a general character of quaintness and
+grotesqueness, or at any rate of formality, that we can scarcely look
+upon many of them as the serious efforts of artists doing their best, we
+possess not half a dozen specimens of the mimetic art of the people in
+question. We have one sculpture in the round, one or two modelled clay
+figures, a few bas-reliefs, one figure of a king engraved on stone,
+and a few animal forms represented the same material. Nothing more has
+reached us but fragments of pictorial representations too small for
+criticism to pronounce upon, and descriptions of ancient writers too
+incomplete to be of any great value.
+
+The single Babylonian sculpture in the round which has come down to our
+times is the colossal lion standing over the prostrate figure of a
+man, which is still to be seen on the Kasr mound, as has been already
+mentioned. The accounts of travellers uniformly state that it is a work
+of no merit--either barbarously executed, or left unfinished by the
+sculptor--and probably much worn by exposure to the weather. A sketch
+made by a recent visitor and kindly communicated to the author, seems to
+show that, while the general form of the animal was tolerably well hit
+off, the proportions were in some respects misconceived, and the details
+not only rudely but incorrectly rendered. The extreme shortness of
+the legs and the extreme thickness of the tail are the most prominent
+errors; there is also great awkwardness in the whole representation of
+the beast's shoulder. The head is so mutilated that it is impossible
+to do more than conjecture its contour. Still the whole figure is not
+without a certain air of grandeur and majesty. [PLATE XVII., Fig. 3.]
+
+The human appears to be inferior to the animal form. The prostrate man
+is altogether shapeless, and can never, it would seem, have been very
+much better than it is at the present time.
+
+Modelled figures in clay are of rare occurrence. The best is one figured
+by Ker Porter, which represents a mother with a child in her arms. The
+mother is seated in a natural and not ungraceful attitude on a rough
+square pedestal. She is naked except for a hood, or mantilla, which
+covers the head, shoulders, and back, and a narrow apron which hangs
+down in front. She wears earrings and a bracelet. The child, which
+sleeps on her left shoulder, wears a shirt open in front, and a short
+but full tunic, which is gathered into plaits. Both figures are in
+simple and natural taste, but the limbs of the infant are somewhat too
+thin and delicate. The statuette is about three inches and a half high,
+and shows signs of having been covered with a tinted glaze. [PLATE
+XVII., Fig. 2.]
+
+The single figure of a king which we possess is clumsy and ungraceful.
+It is chiefly remarkable for the elaborate ornamentation of the
+head-dress and the robes, which have a finish equal to that of the best
+Assyrian specimens. The general proportions are not bad; but the form is
+stiff, and the drawing of the right hand is peculiarly faulty, since it
+would be scarcely possible to hold arrows in the manner represented.
+[PLATE XVIII., Fig. 2.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VXIII.]
+
+
+The engraved animal forms have a certain amount of merit. The figure
+of a dog sitting, which is common on the "black stones," is drawn with
+spirit; [PLATE XVIII., Fig. 1.] and a bird, sometimes regarded as a
+cock, but more resembling a bustard, is touched with a delicate hand,
+and may be pronounced superior to any Assyrian representation of the
+feathered tribe. [PLATE XVIII., Fig. 3.] The hound on a bas-relief,
+given in the first volume of this work, is also good; and the cylinders
+exhibit figures of goats, cows, deer, and even monkeys, which are
+truthful and meritorious. [PLATE XIX., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XIX.]
+
+
+It has been observed that the main characteristic of the engravings
+on gems and cylinders, considered as works of mimetic art, is their
+quaintness and grotesqueness. A few specimens, taken almost at random
+from the admirable collection of M. Felix Lajard, will sufficiently
+illustrate this feature. In one the central position is occupied by
+a human figure whose left arm has two elbow-joints, while towards the
+right two sitting figures threaten one another with their fists, in the
+upper quarter, and in the lower two nondescript animals do the same with
+their jaws. [PLATE XVIII., Fig. 4.] The entire drawing of this design
+seems to be intentionally rude. The faces of the main figures are
+evidently intended to be ridiculous; and the heads of the two animals
+are extravagantly grotesque. On another cylinder three nondescript
+animals play the principal part. One of them is on the point of taking
+into his mouth the head of a man who vainly tries to escape by flight.
+Another, with the head of a pike, tries to devour the third, which has
+the head of a bird and the body of a goat. This kind intention seems to
+be disputed by a naked man with a long beard, who seizes the fish-headed
+monster with his right hand, and at the same time administers from
+behind a severe kick with his right foot. The heads of the three main
+monsters, the tail and trousers of the principal one, and the whole of
+the small figure in front of the flying man, are exceedingly quaint, and
+remind one of the pencil of Fuseli. [PLATE XIX., Fig. 3.] The third of
+the designs approaches nearly to the modern caricature. It is a drawing
+in two portions. The upper line of figures represents a procession of
+worshippers who bear in solemn state their offerings to a god. In the
+lower line this occupation is turned to a jest. Nondescript animals
+bring with a serio-comic air offerings which consist chiefly of game,
+while a man in a mask seeks to steal away the sacred tree from the
+temple wherein the scene is enacted. [PLATE XIX., Fig. 4.]
+
+It is probable that the most elaborate and most artistic of the
+Babylonian works of art were of a kind which has almost wholly perished.
+What bas-relief was to the Assyrian, what painting is to moderns, that
+enamelling upon brick appears to have been to the people of Babylon. The
+mimetic power, which delights in representing to itself the forms and
+actions of men, found a vent in this curious byway of the graphic
+art; and the images of the Chaldaeans, portrayed upon the wall, with
+vermilion, and other hues, formed the favorite adornment of palaces and
+public buildings, at once employing the artist, gratifying the taste of
+the native connoisseur, and attracting the admiration of the foreigner.
+
+The artistic merit of these works can only be conjectured. The
+admiration of the Jews, or even that of Diodorus, who must be viewed
+here as the echo of Ctesias, is no sure test; for the Jews were a people
+very devoid of true artistic appreciation; and Ctesias was bent on
+exaggerating the wonders of foreign countries to the Greeks. The fact of
+the excellence of Assyrian art at a somewhat earlier date lends however
+support to the view that the wall-painting of the Babylonians had some
+real artistic excellence. We can scarcely suppose that there was any
+very material difference, in respect of taste and aesthetic power,
+between the two cognate nations, or that the Babylonians under
+Nebuchadnezzar fell very greatly short of the Assyrians under
+Asshur-bani-pal. It is evident that the same subjects--war scenes and
+hunting scenes--approved themselves to both people; and it is likely
+that their treatment was not very different. Even in the matter
+of color, the contrast was not sharp nor strong; for the Assyrians
+partially colored their bas-reliefs.
+
+Tho tints chiefly employed by the Babylonians in their colored
+representations were white, blue, yellow, brown, and black. The blue was
+of different shades, sometimes bright and deep, sometimes exceedingly
+pale. The yellow was somewhat dull, resembling our yellow ochre. The
+brown was this same hue darkened. In comparatively rare instances the
+Babylonians made use of a red, which they probably obtained with some
+difficulty. Objects were colored, as nearly as possible, according to
+their natural tints--water a light blue, ground yellow, the shafts of
+spears black, lions a tawny brown, etc. No attempt was made to shade
+the figures or the landscape, much less to produce any general effect
+by means of _chiaroscuro_; but the artist trusted for his effect to
+a careful delineation of forms, and a judicious arrangement of simple
+hues.
+
+Considerable metallurgic knowledge and skill were shown in the
+composition of the pigments, and the preparation and application of
+the glaze wherewith they are covered. The red used was a sub-oxide of
+copper; the yellow was sometimes oxide of iron, sometimes antimoniate of
+lead--the Naples yellow of modern artists; the blue was either cobalt or
+oxide of copper; the white was oxide of tin. Oxide of load was added in
+some cases, not as a coloring matter, but as a flux, to facilitate the
+fusion of the glaze. In other cases the pigment used was covered with a
+vitreous coat of an alkaline silicate of alumina.
+
+The pigments were not applied to an entirely flat surface. Prior to the
+reception of the coloring matter and the glaze, each brick was modelled
+by the hand, the figures being carefully traced out, and a slight
+elevation given to the more important objects. A very low bas-relief was
+thus produced, to which the colors were subsequently applied, and the
+brick was then baked in the furnace.
+
+It is conjectured that the bricks were not modelled singly and
+separately. A large mass of clay was (it is thought) taken, sufficient
+to contain a whole subject, or at any rate a considerable portion of
+a subject. On this the modeller made out his design in low relief. The
+mass of clay was then cut up into bricks, and each brick was taken and
+painted separately with the proper colors, after which they were all
+placed in the furnace and baked. When baked, they were restored to their
+original places in the design, a thin layer of the finest mortar serving
+to keep them in place.
+
+From the mimetic art of the Babylonians, and the branches of knowledge
+connected with it, we may now pass to the purely mechanical arts--as the
+art by which hard stones were cut, and those of agriculture, metallurgy,
+pottery, weaving, carpet-making, embroidery, and the like.
+
+The stones shaped, bored, and engraved by Babylonian artisans were
+not merely the softer and more easily worked kinds, as alabaster,
+serpentine, and lapis-lazuli, but also the harder sorts-cornelian,
+agate, quartz, jasper, sienite, loadstone, and green felspar or
+amazon-stone. These can certainly not have been cut without emery, and
+scarcely without such devices as rapidly revolving points, or discs, of
+the kind used by modern lapidaries. Though the devices are in general
+rude, the work is sometimes exceedingly delicate, and implies a complete
+mastery over tools and materials, as well as a good deal of artistic
+power. As far as the mechanical part of the art goes, the Babylonians
+may challenge comparison with the most advanced of the nations of
+antiquity; they decidedly excel the Egyptians, and fall little, if at
+all, short of the Greeks and Romans.
+
+The extreme minuteness of the work in some of the Babylonian seals and
+gems raises a suspicion that they must have been engraved by the help of
+a powerful magnifying-glass. A lens has been found in Assyria; and there
+is much reason to believe that the convenience was at least as well
+known in the lower country. Glass was certainly in use, and was cut into
+such shapes as were required. It is at any rate exceedingly likely that
+magnifying-glasses, which were undoubtedly known to the Greeks in the
+time of Aristophanes, were employed by the artisans of Babylon during
+the most flourishing period of the Empire.
+
+Of Babylonian metal-work we have scarcely any direct means of judging.
+The accounts of ancient authors imply that the Babylonians dealt freely
+with the material, using gold and silver for statues, furniture, and
+utensils, bronze for gates and images, and iron sometimes for the
+latter. We may assume that they likewise employed bronze and iron for
+tools and weapons, since those metals were certainly so used by the
+Assyrians. Lead was made of service in building; where iron was also
+employed, if great strength was needed. The golden images are said to
+have been sometimes solid, in which case we must suppose them to have
+been cast in a mold; but undoubtedly in most cases the gold was a mere
+external covering, and was applied in plates, which were hammered into
+shape upon some cheaper substance below. Silver was no doubt used
+also in plates, more especially when applied externally to walls, or
+internally to the woodwork of palaces; but the silver images, ornamental
+figures, and utensils of which we hear, were most probably solid. The
+bronze works must have been remarkable. We are told that both the town
+and the palace gates were of this material, and it is implied that the
+latter were too heavy to be opened in the ordinary manner. Castings
+on an enormous scale would be requisite for such purposes; and the
+Babylonians must thus have possessed the art of running into a single
+mold vast masses of metal. Probably the gates here mentioned were
+solid; but occasionally, it would seem, the Babylonians had gates of a
+different kind, composed of a number of perpendicular bars, united by
+horizontal ones above and below [as in PLATE XIX., Fig. 2.]. They had
+also, it would appear, metal gateways of a similar character.
+
+The metal-work of personal ornaments, such as bracelets and armlets, and
+again that of dagger handles, seems to have resembled the work of the
+Assyrians.
+
+Small figures in bronze were occasionally cast by the Babylonians, which
+were sometimes probably used as amulets, while perhaps more generally
+they wore mere ornaments of houses, furniture, and the like. Among these
+may be noticed figures of dogs in a sitting posture, much resembling the
+dog represented among the constellations, figures of men, grotesque
+in character, and figures of monsters. An interesting specimen, which
+combines a man and a monster, was found by Sir R. Ker Porter at Babylon.
+[PLATE XX., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XX.]
+
+
+The pottery of the Babylonians was of excellent quality, and is scarcely
+to be distinguished from the Assyrian, which it resembles alike in form
+and in material. The bricks of the best period were on the whole better
+than any used in the sister country, and may compare for hardness and
+fineness with the best Roman. The earthenware is of a fine terra-cotta,
+generally of a light red color, and slightly baked, but occasionally of
+a yellow hue, with a tinge of green. It consists of cups, jars, vases,
+and other vessels. They appear to have been made upon the wheel, and
+are in general unornamented. From representations upon the cylinders, it
+appears that the shapes were often elegant. Long and narrow vases with
+thin necks seem to have been used for water vessels; these had rounded
+or pointed bases, and required therefore the support of a stand. Thin
+jugs were also in use, with slight elegant handles. It is conjectured
+that sometimes modelled figures may have been introduced at the sides as
+handles to the vases; but neither the cylinders nor the extant remains
+confirm this supposition. The only ornamentation hitherto observed
+consists in a double band which seems to have been carried round some of
+the vases in an incomplete spiral. The vases sometimes have two handles;
+but they are plain and small, adding nothing to the beauty of the
+vessels. Occasionally the whole vessel is glazed with a rich blue color.
+[PLATE XX., Fig. 3.]
+
+The Babylonians certainly employed glass for vessels for a small size.
+They appear not to have been very skilful blowers, since their bottles
+are not unfrequently misshappen. [PLATE XX., Fig. 3.] They generally
+stained their glass with, some coloring matter, and occasionally
+ornamented it with a ribbing. Whether they were able to form masses
+of glass of any considerable size, whether they used it, like the
+Egyptians, for beads and bugles, or for mosaics, is uncertain. If we
+suppose a foundation in fact for Pliny's story of the great emerald (?)
+presented by a king of Babylon to an Egyptian Pharaoh, we must conclude
+that very considerable masses of glass were produced by the Babylonians,
+at least occasionally; for the said emerald, which can scarcely have
+been of any other material, was four cubits (or six feet) long and three
+cubits (or four and a half feet) broad.
+
+Of all the productions of the Babylonians none obtained such, high
+repute in ancient times as their textile fabrics. Their carpets
+especially were of great celebrity, and were largely exported to foreign
+countries. They were dyed of various colors, and represented objects
+similar to those found on the gems, as griffins and such like monsters.
+Their position in the ancient world may be compared to that which is
+now borne by the fabrics of Turkey and Persia, which are deservedly
+preferred to those of all other countries.
+
+Next to their carpets, the highest, character was borne by their
+muslins. Formed of the finest cotton, and dyed of the most brilliant
+colors, they seemed to the Oriental the very best possible material for
+dress. The Persian kings preferred them for their own wear; and they
+had an early fame in foreign countries at a considerable distance from
+Babylonia. It is probable that they were sometimes embroidered with
+delicate patterns, such as those which may be seen on the garments of
+the early Babylonian kings.
+
+Besides woollen and cotton fabrics, the Babylonians also manufactured
+a good deal of linen cloth, the principal seat of the manufacture being
+Borsippa. This material was produced, it is probable, chiefly for home
+consumption, long linen robes being generally worn by the people.
+
+From the arts of the Babylonians we may now pass to their science--an
+obscure subject, but one which possesses more than common interest. If
+the classical writers were correct in their belief that Chaldaea was
+the birthplace of Astronomy, and that their own astronomical science was
+derived mainly from this quarter, it must be well worth inquiry what the
+amount of knowledge was which the Babylonians attained on the subject,
+and what were the means whereby they made their discoveries.
+
+On the broad flat plains of Chaldsea, where the entire celestial
+hemisphere is continually visible to every eye, and the clear
+transparent atmosphere shows night after night the heavens gemmed with
+countless stars, each shining with a brilliancy unknown in our moist
+northern climes, the attention of man was naturally turned earlier than
+elsewhere to these luminous bodies, and attempts were made to grasp, and
+reduce to scientific form, the array of facts which nature presented to
+the eye in a confused and tangled mass. It required no very long course
+of observation to acquaint men with a truth, which at first sight none
+would have suspected--namely, that the luminous points whereof the sky
+was full were of two kinds, some always maintaining the same position
+relatively to one another, while others were constantly changing their
+places, and as it were wandering about the sky. It is certain that the
+Babylonians at a very early date distinguished from the fixed stars
+those remarkable five, which, from their wandering propensities, the
+Greeks called the "planets," and which are the only erratic stars that
+the naked eye, or that even the telescope, except at a very high power,
+can discern. With these five they were soon led to class the Moon, which
+was easily observed to be a wandering luminary, changing her place among
+the fixed stars with remarkable rapidity. Ultimately, it came to be
+perceived that the Sun too rose and set at different parts of the year
+in the neighborhood of different constellations, and that consequently
+the great luminary was itself also a wanderer, having a path in the sky
+which it was possible, by means of careful observation, to mark out.
+
+But to do this, to mark out with accuracy the courses of the Sun and
+Moon among the fixed stars, it was necessary, or at least convenient, to
+arrange the stars themselves into groups. Thus, too, and thus only, was
+it possible to give form and order to the chaotic confusion in which
+the stars seem at first sight to lie, owing to the irregularity of
+their intervals, the difference in their magnitude, and their apparent
+countlessness. The most uneducated eye, when raised to the starry
+heavens on a clear night, fixes here and there upon groups of stars: in
+the north, Cassiopeia, the Great Bear, the Pleiades--below the Equator,
+the Southern Cross--must at all times have impressed those who beheld
+them with a certain sense of unity. Thus the idea of a "constellation"
+is formed; and this once done, the mind naturally progresses in the same
+direction, and little by little the whole sky is mapped out into certain
+portions or districts to which names are given--names taken from some
+resemblance, real or fancied, between the shapes of the several groups
+and objects familiar to the early observers. This branch of practical
+astronomy is termed "uranography" by moderns; its utility is very
+considerable; thus and thus only can we particularize the individual
+stars of which we wish to speak; thus and thus only can we retain in
+our memory the general arrangement of the stars and their positions
+relatively to each other.
+
+There is reason to believe that in the early Babylonian astronomy
+the subject of uranography occupied a prominent place. The Chaldaean
+astronomers not only seized on and named those natural groups which
+force themselves upon the eye, but artificially arranged the whole
+heavens into a certain number of constellations or asterisms. The very
+system of uranography which maintains itself to the present day on our
+celestial globes and maps, and which is still acknowledged--albeit under
+protest--in the nomenclature of scientific astronomers, came in all
+probability from this source, reaching us from the Arabians, who took
+it from the Greeks who derived it from the Babylonians. The Zodiacal
+constellations at any rate, or those through which the sun's course lies
+would seem to have had this origin; and many of them may be distinctly
+recognized on Babylonian monuments which are plainly of a stellar
+character. The accompanying representation, taken from a conical black
+stone in the British Museum [PLATE XX., Fig. 2.], and belonging to the
+twelfth century before our era, is not perhaps, strictly speaking, a
+zodiac, but it is almost certainly an arrangement of constellations
+according to the forms assigned them in Babylonian uranography. [PLATE
+XXI.] The Ram, the Bull, the Scorpion, the Serpent, the Dog, the Arrow,
+the Eagle or Vulture may all be detected on the stone in question, as
+may similar forms variously arranged on other similar monuments.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXI.]
+
+
+The Babylonians called the Zodiacal constellations the "Houses of the
+Sun," and distinguished from them another set of asterisms, which they
+denominated the "Houses of the Moon." As the Sun and Moon both move
+through the sky in nearly the same plane, the path of the Moon merely
+crossing and recrossing that of the Sun, but never diverging from it
+further than a few degrees, it would seem that these "Houses of the
+Moon," or lunar asterisms, must have been a division of the Zodiacal
+stars different from that employed with respect to the sun, either
+in the number of the "Houses," or in the point of separation between
+"House" and "House."
+
+The Babylonians observed and calculated eclipses; but their power of
+calculation does not seem to have been based on scientific knowledge,
+nor to have necessarily implied sound views as to the nature of eclipses
+or as to the size, distance, and real motions of the heavenly bodies.
+The knowledge which they possessed was empirical. Their habits of
+observation led them to discover the period of 223 lunations or 18 years
+10 days, after which eclipses--especially those of the the moon--recur
+again in the same order. Their acquaintance with this cycle would enable
+them to predict lunar eclipses with accuracy for many ages, and solar
+eclipses without much inaccuracy for the next cycle or two.
+
+That the Babylonians carefully noted and recorded eclipses is witnessed
+by Ptolemy, who had access to a continuous series of such observations
+reaching back from his own time to B.C. 747. Five of these--all eclipses
+of the moon--were described by Hipparchus from Babylonian sources, and
+are found to answer all the requirements of modern science. They belong
+to the years B.C. 721, 720, 621, and 523. One of them, that of B.C. 721,
+was total at Babylon. The others were partial, the portion of the moon
+obscured varying from one digit to seven.
+
+There is no reason to think that the observation of eclipses by the
+Babylonians commenced with Nabonassar. Ptolemy indeed implies that the
+series extant in his day went no higher; but this is to be accounted for
+by the fact, which Berosus mentioned, that Nabonassar destroyed, as
+far as he was able, the previously existing observations, in order that
+exact chronology might commence with his own reign.
+
+Other astronomical achievements of the Babylonians were the following.
+They accomplished a catalogue of the fixed stars, of which the Greeks
+made use in compiling their stellar tables. They observed and recorded
+their observations upon occultations of the planets by the sun and moon.
+They invented the _gnomon_ and the _polos_, two kinds of sundial, by
+means of which they were able to measure time during the day, and to
+fix the true length of the solar day, with sufficient accuracy. They
+determined correctly within a small fraction the length of the synodic
+revolution of the moon. They knew that the true length of the solar
+year was 365 days and a quarter, nearly. They noticed comets, which they
+believed to be permanent bodies, revolving in orbits like those of
+the planets, only greater. They ascribed eclipses of the sun to the
+interposition of the moon between the sun and the earth. They had
+notions not far from the truth with respect to the relative distance
+from the earth of the sun, moon, and planets. Adopting, as was natural,
+a geocentric system, they decided that the Moon occupied the position
+nearest to the earth; that beyond the Moon was Mercury, beyond Mercury
+Venus, beyond Venus Mars, beyond Mars Jupiter, and beyond Jupiter, in
+the remotest position of all, Saturn. This arrangement was probably
+based upon a knowledge, more or less exact, of the periodic times which
+the several bodies occupy in their (real or apparent) revolutions. From
+the difference in the times the Babylonians assumed a corresponding
+difference in the size of the orbits, and consequently a greater or less
+distance from the common centre.
+
+Thus far the astronomical achievements of the Babylonians rest upon
+the express testimony of ancient writers--a testimony confirmed in many
+respects by the monuments already deciphered. It is suspected that, when
+the astronomical tablets which exist by hundreds in the British Museum
+come to be thoroughly understood, it will be found that the acquaintance
+of the Chaldaean sages with astronomical phenomena, if not also with
+astronomical laws, went considerably beyond the point at which we should
+place it upon the testimony of the Greek and Roman writers. There is
+said to be distinct evidence that they observed the four satellites of
+Jupiter, and strong reason to believe that they were acquainted likewise
+with the seven satellites of Saturn. Moreover, the general laws of the
+movements of the heavenly bodies seem to have been so far known to
+them that they could state by anticipation the position of the various
+planets throughout the year.
+
+In order to attain the astronomical knowledge which they seem to have
+possessed, the Babylonians must undoubtedly have employed a certain
+number of instruments. The invention of sun-dials, as already observed,
+is distinctly assigned to them. Besides these contrivances for measuring
+time during the day, it is almost certain that they must have possessed
+means of measuring time during the night. The clepsydra, or water-clock,
+which was in common use among the Greeks as early as the fifth century
+before our era, was probably introduced into Greece from the East,
+and is likely to have been a Babylonian invention. The astrolabe, an
+instrument for measuring the altitude of stars above the horizon, which
+was known to Ptolemy, may also reasonably be assigned to them. It has
+generally been assumed that they were wholly ignorant of the telescope.
+But if the satellites of Saturn are really mentioned, as it is thought
+that they are, upon some of the tablets, it will follow--strange as it
+may seem to us--that the Babylonians possessed optical instruments of
+the nature of telescopes, since it is impossible, even in the clear and
+vapor-loss sky of Chaldaea, to discern the faint moons of that distant
+planet without lenses. A lens, it must be remembered, with a fair
+magnifying power, has been discovered among the Mesopotamian ruins.
+A people ingenious enough to discover the magnifying-glass would be
+naturally led on to the invention of its opposite. When once lenses
+of the two contrary kinds existed, the elements of a telescope were in
+being. We could not assume from these data that the discovery was made;
+but if it shall ultimately be substantiated that bodies invisible to the
+naked eye were observed by the Babylonians, we need feel no difficulty
+in ascribing to them the possession of some telescopic instrument.
+
+The astronomical zeal of the Babylonians was in general, it must be
+confessed, no simple and pure love of an abstract science. A school of
+pure astronomers existed among them; but the bulk of those who engaged
+in the study undoubtedly pursued it in the belief that the heavenly
+bodies had a mysterious influence, not only upon the seasons, but upon
+the lives and actions of men--an influence which it was possible to
+discover and to foretell by prolonged and careful observation. The
+ancient writers, Biblical and other, state this fact in the strongest
+way; and the extant astronomical remains distinctly confirm it.
+The great majority of the tablets are of an astrological character,
+recording the supposed influence of the heavenly bodies, singly, in
+conjunction, or in opposition, upon all sublunary affairs, from the fate
+of empires to the washing of hands or the paring of nails. The modern
+prophetical almanac is the legitimate descendant and the sufficient
+representative of the ancient Chaldee Ephemeris, which was just as
+silly, just as pretentious, and just as worthless.
+
+The Chaldee astrology was, primarily and mainly, genethlialogical.
+It inquired under what aspect of the heavens persons were born, or
+conceived, and, from the position of the celestial bodies at one or
+other of these moments, it professed to deduce the whole life and
+fortunes of the individual. According to Diodorus, it was believed
+that a particular star or constellation presided over the birth of each
+person, and thenceforward exercised over his life a special malign or
+benignant influence. But his lot depended, not on this star alone, but
+on the entire aspect of the heavens at a certain moment. To cast the
+horoscope was to reproduce this aspect, and then to read by means of it
+the individual's future.
+
+Chaldee astrology, was not, however, limited to genethlialogy. The
+Chaldaeans professed to predict from the stars such things as the
+changes of the weather, high winds and storms, great heats, the
+appearance of comets, eclipses, earthquakes, and the like. They
+published lists of luck and unlucky days, and tables showing what aspect
+of the heavens portended good or evil to particular countries. Curiously
+enough, it appears that they regarded their art as locally limited to
+the regions inhabited by themselves and their kinsmen, so that while
+they could boldly predict storm, tempest, failing or abundant crops,
+war, famine, and the like, for Syria, Babylonia, and Susiana, they could
+venture on no prophecies with respect to other neighboring lands, as
+Persia, Media, Armenia.
+
+A certain amount of real meteorological knowledge was probably mixed
+up with the Chaldaean astrology. Their calendars, like modern almanacs,
+boldly predicted the weather for fixed days in the year. They must
+also have been mathematicians to no inconsiderable extent, since their
+methods appear to have been geometrical. It is said that the Greek
+mathematicians often quoted with approval the works of their Chaldaean
+predecessors, Ciden, Naburianus, and Sudinus. Of the nature and extent
+of their mathematical acquirements, no account, however, can be given,
+since the writers who mention them enter into no details on the subject.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. MANNERS AND CUSTOMS.
+
+
+"Girded with girdles upon their loins, exceeding in dyed attire upon
+their heads, all of them princes to look to, after the manner of the
+Babylonians of Chaldaea, the land of their nativity."--Ezek. xxiii. 15.
+
+
+The manners and customs of the Babylonians, though not admitting of that
+copious illustration from ancient monuments which was found possible in
+the case of Assyria, are yet sufficiently known to us, either from the
+extant remains or from the accounts of ancient writers of authority, to
+furnish materials for a short chapter. Herodotus, Strabo, Diodorus, and
+Nicolas of Damascus, present us with many interesting traits of this
+somewhat singular people; the sacred writers contemporary with the acme
+of the nation add numerous touches; while the remains, though scanty,
+put distinctly and vividly before our eyes a certain number of curious
+details.
+
+Herodotus describes with some elaboration the costume of the Babylonians
+in his day. He tells us that they wore a long linen gown reaching down
+to their feet, a woollen gown or tunic above this, a short cloak or cape
+of a white color, and shoes like those of the Boeotians. Their hair they
+allowed to grow long, but confined it by a head-band or a turban; and
+they always carried a walking-stick with a carving of some kind on
+the handle. This portraiture, it is probable, applies to the richer
+inhabitants of the capital, and represents the Babylonian gentleman
+of the fifth century before our era, as he made his appearance in the
+streets of the metropolis.
+
+The cylinders seem to show that the ordinary Babylonian dress was
+less complicated. The worshipper who brings an offering to a god is
+frequently represented with a bare head, and wears apparently but
+one garment, a tunic generally ornamented with a diagonal fringe, and
+reaching from the shoulder to a little above the knee. The tunic is
+confined round the waist by a belt. [PLATE XXII., Fig. 1.] Richer
+worshippers, who commonly present a goat, have a fillet or headband, not
+a turban, round the head. They wear generally the same sort of tunic
+as the others; but over it they have a long robe, shaped like a modern
+dressing-gown, except that it has no sleeves, and does not cover the
+right shoulder. [PLATE XXII., Fig. 1.] In a few instances only we see
+underneath this open gown a long inner dress or robe, such as that
+described by Herodotus. [PLATE XXII., Fig. 2.] A cape or tippet of the
+kind which he describes is worn sometimes by a god, but is never seen,
+it is believed, in any representation of a mortal.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXII.]
+
+
+The short tunic, worn by the poorer worshippers, is seen also in a
+representation (hereafter to be given) of hunters attacking a lion. A
+similar garment is worn by the man--probably a slave--who accompanies
+the dog, supposed to represent an Indian hound; and also by a warrior,
+who appears on one of the cylinders conducting six foreign captives.
+[PLATE XXII., Fig. 4.] There is consequently much reason to believe that
+such a tunic formed the ordinary costume of the common people, as it
+does at present of the common Arab inhabitants of the country. It left
+the arms and right shoulder bare, covering only the left. Below the belt
+it was not made like a frock but lapped over in front, being in fact
+not so much a garment as a piece of cloth wrapped round the body.
+Occasionally it is represented as patterned; but this is somewhat
+unusual. [PLATE XXII., Fig. 3.]
+
+In lieu of the long robe reaching to the feet, which seems to have
+been the ordinary costume of the higher classes, we observe sometimes
+a shorter, but still a similar garment--a sort of coat without sleeves,
+fringed down both sides, and reaching only a little below the knee. The
+worshippers who wear this robe have in most cases the head adorned with
+a fillet. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXIII.]
+
+
+It is unusual to find any trace of boots or shoes in the representations
+of Babylonians. A shoe patterned with a sort of check work was worn
+by the king; and soldiers seem to have worn a low boot in their
+expeditions. But with rare exceptions the Babylonians are represented
+with bare feet on the monuments; and if they commonly wore shoes in the
+time of Herodotus, we may conjecture that they had adopted the practice
+from the example of the Medes and Persians. A low boot, laced in front,
+was worn by the chiefs of the Susianians. Perhaps the "peculiar shoe" of
+the Babylonians was not very different. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 1.]
+
+The girdle was an essential feature of Babylonian costume, common to
+high and low, to the king and to the peasant. It was a broad belt,
+probably of leather, and encircled the waist rather high up. The warrior
+carried his daggers in it; to the common man it served the purpose of
+keeping in place the cloth which he wore round his body. According to
+Herodotus, it was also universal in Babylonia to carry a seal and a
+walking-stick.
+
+Special costumes, differing considerably from those hitherto described,
+distinguished the king and the priests. The king wore a long gown,
+somewhat scantily made, but reaching down to the ankles, elaborately
+patterned and fringed. Over this, apparently, he had a close-fitting
+sleeved vest, which came down to the knees, and terminated in a set of
+heavy tassels. The girdle was worn outside the outer vest, and in war
+the monarch carried also two cross-belts, which perhaps supported his
+quiver. The upper vest was, like the under one, richly adorned with
+embroidery. From it, or from the girdle, depended in front a single
+heavy tassel attached by a cord, similar to that worn by the early kings
+of Assyria.
+
+Tho tiara of the monarch was very remarkable. It was of great height,
+nearly cylindrical, but with a slight tendency to swell out toward the
+crown, which was ornamented with a row of feathers round its entire
+circumference. The space below was patterned with rosettes, sacred
+trees, and mythological figures. From the centre of the crown there rose
+above the feathers a projection resembling in some degree the projection
+which distinguishes the tiara of the Assyrian kings, the rounded, and
+not squared, at top. This head-dress, which has a heavy appearance, was
+worn low on the brow, and covered nearly all the back of the head. It
+can scarcely have been composed of a heaver material than cloth or felt.
+Probably it was brilliantly colored.
+
+The monarch wore bracelets, but (apparently) neither necklaces nor
+earrings. Those last are assigned by Nicolas of Damascus to a Babylonian
+governor; and they were so commonly used by the Assyrians that we
+can scarcely suppose them unknown to their kindred and neighbors. The
+Babylonian monuments, however, contain no traces of earrings as worn by
+men, and only a few doubtful ones of collars or necklaces; whence we
+may at any rate conclude that neither were worn at all generally.
+The bracelets which encircle the royal wrist resemble the most common
+bracelet of the Assyrians, consisting of a plain band, probably of
+metal, with a rosette in the centre.
+
+The dress of the priests was a long robe or gown, flounced and striped,
+over which they seem to have worn an open jacket of a similar character.
+A long scarf or riband depended from behind down their backs. They
+carried on their heads an elaborate crown or mitre, which is assigned
+also to many of the gods. In lieu of this mitre, we find sometimes,
+though rarely, a horned cap; and, in one or two instances, a mitre of a
+different kind. In all sacrificial and ceremonial acts the priests seem
+to have worn their heads covered. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 6.]
+
+On the subject of the Babylonian military costume our information is
+scanty and imperfect. In the time of Herodotus the Chaldaeans seem to
+have had the same armature as the Assyrians--namely, bronze helmets,
+linen breastplates, shields, spears, daggers, and maces or clubs; and,
+at a considerably earlier date, we find in Scripture much the same
+arms, offensive and defensive, assigned them. There is, however, one
+remarkable difference between the Biblical account and that given by
+Herodotus. The Greek historian says nothing of the use of bows by the
+Chaldaeans; while in Scripture the bow appears as their favorite weapon,
+that which principally renders them formidable. The monuments are on
+this point thoroughly in accordance with Scripture. The Babylonian king
+already represented carries a bow and two arrows. The soldier conducting
+captives has a bow an arrow, and a quiver. A monument of an earlier
+date, which is perhaps rather Proto-Chaldaean than pure Babylonian, yet
+which has certain Babylonian characteristics, makes the arms of a king
+a bow and arrow, a club (?), and a dagger. In the marsh fights of
+the Assyrians, where their enemies are probably Chaldaeans of the low
+country, the bow is the sole weapon which we see in use.
+
+The Babylonian bow nearly resembles the ordinary curved bow of the
+Assyrians. It has a knob at either extremity, over which the string
+passes, and is thicker towards the middle than at the two ends; the bend
+is slight, the length when strung less than four feet. [PLATE XXIII.,
+Fig. 2.] The length of the arrow is about three feet. It is carefully
+notched and feathered, and has a barbed point. The quiver, as
+represented in the Assyrian sculptures, has nothing remarkable about
+it; but the single extant Babylonian representation makes it terminate
+curiously with a large ornament resembling a spearhead. It is difficult
+to see the object of this appendage, which must have formed no
+inconsiderable addition to the weight of the quiver. [PLATE XXIII., Fig.
+3.]
+
+Babylonian daggers were short, and shaped like the Assyrian; but their
+handles were less elegant and less elaborately ornamented. They were
+worn in the girdle (as they are at the present day in all eastern
+countries) either in pairs or singly. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 3.]
+
+Other weapons of the Babylonians, which we may be sure they used in
+war, though the monuments do not furnish any proof of the fact, were the
+spear and the bill or axe. These weapons are exhibited in combination
+upon one of the most curious of the cylinders, where a lion is disturbed
+in his meal off an ox by two rustics, one of whom attacks him in front
+with a spear, while the other seizes his tail and assails him in the
+rear with an axe. [PI. XXIII., Fig. 5.] With the axe here represented
+may be compared another, which is found on a clay tablet brought from
+Sinkara, and supposed to belong to the early Chaldaean period.30 The
+Sinkara axe has a simple square blade: the axe upon the cylinder has a
+blade with long curved sides and a curved edge; while, to balance the
+weight of the blade, it has on the lower side three sharp spikes. The
+difference between the two implements marks the advance of mechanical
+art in the country between the time of the first and that of the fourth
+monarchy. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 4.]
+
+Babylonian armies seem to have been composed, like Assyrian, of three
+elements--infantry, cavalry, and chariots. Of the chariots we appear
+to have one or two representations upon the cylinders, but they are too
+rudely carved to be of much value. It is not likely that the chariots
+differed much either in shape or equipment from the Assyrian, unless
+they were, like those of Susiana, ordinarily drawn by mules. A peculiar
+car, four-wheeled, and drawn by four horses, with an elevated platform
+in front and a seat behind for the driver, which the cylinders
+occasionally exhibit, is probably not a war-chariot, but a sacred
+vehicle, like the tensa or thensa of the Romans. [PLATE XXIV., Fig. 2.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXIV.]
+
+
+The Prophet Habakkuk evidently considered the cavalry of the Babylonians
+to be their most formidable arm. "They are terrible and dreadful," he
+said; "from them shall proceed judgment and captivity; their horses
+also are swifter than the leopards, and are more fierce than the evening
+wolves; and their horsemen shall spread themselves, and their horsemen
+shall come from far; they shall fly, as the eagle that hasteth to
+eat." Similarly Ezekiel spoke of the "desirable young men, captains
+and rulers, great lords and renowned; all of them riding upon horses,"
+Jeremiah couples the horses with the chariots, as if he doubted whether
+the chariot force or the cavalry were the more to be dreaded. "Behold,
+he shall come up as clouds, and his chariot shall be as a whirlwind; his
+horses are swifter than eagles. Woe unto us! for we are spoiled." In the
+army of Xerxes the Babylonians seem to have served only on foot, which
+would imply that they were not considered in that king's time to furnish
+such good cavalry as the Persians, Medes, Cissians, Indians, and
+others, who sent contingents of horse. Darius, however, in the Behistun
+inscription, speaks of Babylonian horsemen; and the armies which overran
+Syria, Palestine, and Egypt, seem to have consisted mainly of horse.
+The Babylonian armies, like the Persian, were vast hosts, poorly
+disciplined, composed not only of native troops, but of contingents
+from the subject nations, Cissians, Elamites, Shuhites, Assyrians, and
+others. They marched with vast noise and tumult, spreading themselves
+far and wide over the country which they were invading, plundering
+and destroying on all sides. If their enemy would consent to a pitched
+battle, they were glad to engage with him; but, more usually, their
+contests resolved themselves into a succession of sieges, the bulk of
+the population attacked retreating to their strongholds, and offering
+behind walls a more or less protracted resistance. The weaker towns were
+assaulted with battering-rams; against the stronger, mounds were raised,
+reaching nearly to the top of the walls, which were then easily scaled
+or broken down. A determined persistence in sieges seems to have
+characterized this people, who did not take Jerusalem till the third,
+nor Tyre till the fourteenth year.
+
+In expeditions it sometimes happened that a question arose as to the
+people or country next to be attacked. In such cases it appears that
+recourse was had to divination, and the omens which were obtained
+decided whither the next effort of the invader should be directed.
+Priests doubtless accompanied the expeditions to superintend the
+sacrifices and interpret them on such occasions. According to Diodorus,
+the priests in Babylonia were a caste, devoted to the service of the
+native deities and the pursuits of philosophy, and held in high honor by
+the people. It was their business to guard the temples and serve at
+the altars of the gods, to explain dreams and prodigies, to understand
+omens, to read the warnings of the stars, and to instruct men how to
+escape the evils threatened in those various ways, by purifications,
+incantations, and sacrifices. They possessed a traditional knowledge
+which had come down from father to son, and which none thought of
+questioning. The laity looked up to them as the sole possessors of a
+recondite wisdom of the last importance to humanity.
+
+With these statements of the lively but inaccurate Sicilian those of the
+Book of Daniel are very fairly, if not entirely, in accordance. A class
+of "wise men" is described as existing at Babylon, foremost among whom
+are the Chaldaeans; they have a special "learning," and (as it would
+seem) a special "tongue;" their business is to expound dreams and
+prodigies; they are in high favor with the monarch, and are often
+consulted by him. This body of "wise men" is subdivided into four
+classes--"Chaldaeans, magicians, astrologers, and soothsayers"--a
+subdivision which seems to be based upon difference of occupation. It is
+not distinctly stated that they are priests; nor does it seem that
+they were a caste; for Jews are enrolled among their number, and Daniel
+himself is made chief of the entire body. But they form a very distinct
+order, and constitute a considerable power in the state; they have
+direct communication with the monarch, and they are believed to possess,
+not merely human learning, but a supernatural power of predicting future
+events. High civil office is enjoyed by some of their number.
+
+Notices agreeing with these, but of less importance, are contained in
+Herodotus and Strabo. Herodotus speaks of the Chaldaeans as "priests;"
+Strabo says that they were "philosophers," who occupied themselves
+principally in astronomy. The latter writer mentions that they were
+divided into sects, who differed one from another in their doctrines. He
+gives the names of several Chaldaeans whom the Greek mathematicians
+were in the habit of quoting. Among them is a Seleucus, who by his name
+should be a Greek.
+
+From these various authorities we may assume that there was in Babylon,
+as in Egypt, and in later Persia, a distinct priest class, which enjoyed
+high consideration. It was not, strictly speaking, a caste. Priests
+may have generally brought up their sons to the occupation; but other
+persons, even foreigners (and if foreigners, then _a fortiori_ natives),
+could be enrolled in the order, and attain its highest privileges.
+It was at once a sacerdotal and a learned body. It had a literature,
+written in peculiar language, which its members were bound to study.
+This language and this literature were probably a legacy from the old
+times of the first (Turano-Cushite) kingdom, since even in Assyria it
+is found that the literature was in the main Turanian, down to the very
+close of the empire. Astronomy, astrology, and mythology were no doubt
+the chief subjects which the priests studied; but history, chronology,
+grammar, law, and natural science most likely occupied some part of
+their attention. Conducting everywhere the worship of the gods, they
+were of course scattered far and wide through the country; but they had
+certain special seats of learning, corresponding perhaps in some sort to
+our universities, the most famous of which were Erech or Orchoe (Warka),
+and Borsippa, the town represented by the modern Birs-i-Nimrud. They
+were diligent students, not wanting in ingenuity, and not content merely
+to hand down the wisdom of their ancestors. Schools arose among them;
+and a boldness of speculation developed itself akin to that which we
+find among the Greeks. Astronomy, in particular, was cultivated with a
+good deal of success; and stores were accumulated of which the Greeks in
+later times understood and acknowledged the value.
+
+In social position the priest class stood high. They had access to the
+monarch: they were feared and respected by the people; the offerings of
+the faithful made them wealthy; their position as interpreters of the
+divine will secured them influence. Being regarded as capable of civil
+employment, they naturally enough obtained frequently important offices,
+which added to their wealth and consideration.
+
+The mass of the people in Babylonia were employed in the two pursuits
+of commerce and agriculture. The commerce was both foreign and domestic.
+Great numbers of the Babylonians were engaged in the manufacture of
+those textile fabrics, particularly carpets and muslins, which Babylonia
+produced not only for her own use, but also for the consumption of
+foreign countries. Many more must have been employed as lapidaries in
+the execution of those delicate engravings on hard stone, wherewith the
+seal, which every Babylonian carried, was as a matter of course adorned.
+The ordinary trades and handicrafts practised in the East no doubt
+flourished in the country. A brisk import and export trade was
+constantly kept up, and promoted a healthful activity throughout the
+entire body politic. Babylonia is called "a land of traffic" by
+Ezekiel, and Babylon "a city of merchants." Isaiah says "theory of the
+Chaldaeans" was "in their ships." The monuments show that from very
+early times the people of the low country on the borders of the Persian
+Gulf were addicted to maritime pursuits, and navigated the gulf freely,
+if they did not even venture on the open ocean. And AEschylus is a
+witness that the nautical character still attached to the people after
+their conquest by the Persians; for he calls the Babylonians in the army
+of Xerxes "navigators of ships."
+
+The Babylonian import trade, so far as it was carried on by themselves,
+seems to have been chiefly with Arabia, with the islands in the Persian
+Gulf, and directly or indirectly with India. From Arabia they must have
+imported the frankincense which they used largely in their religious
+ceremonies; from the Persian Gulf they appear to have derived pearls,
+cotton, and wood for walking sticks from India they obtained dogs and
+several kinds of gems. If we may believe Strabo, they had a colony
+called Gerrha, most favorably situated on the Arabian coast of the gulf,
+which was a great emporium, and conducted not only the trade between
+Babylonia and the regions to the south, but also that which passed
+through Babylonia into the more nothern districts. The products of the
+various countries of Western Asia flowed into Babylonia down the courses
+of the rivers. From Armenia, or rather Upper Mesopotamia, came wine,
+gems, emery, and perhaps stone for building; from Phoenicia, by way
+of Palmyra and Thapsacus, came tin, perhaps copper, probably musical
+instruments, and other objects of luxury; from Media and the countries
+towards the east came fine wool, lapis-lazuli, perhaps silk, and
+probably gold and ivory. But these imports seem to have been brought to
+Babylonia by foreign merchants rather than imported by the exertions of
+native traders. The Armenians, the Phoenicians, and perhaps the Greeks,
+used for the conveyance of their goods the route of the Euphrates. The
+Assyrians, the Paretaceni, and the Medes probably floated theirs down
+the Tigris and its tributaries.
+
+A large-probably the largest-portion of the people must have been
+engaged in the occupations of agriculture. Babylonia was, before all
+things, a grain-producing country--noted for a fertility unexampled
+elsewhere, and to moderns almost incredible. The soil was a deep and
+rich alluvium, and was cultivated with the utmost care. It grew chiefly
+wheat, barley millet, and sesame, which all nourished with wonderful
+luxuriance. By a skilful management of the natural water supply, the
+indispensable fluid was utilized to the utmost, and conveyed to every
+part of the country. Date-groves spread widely over the land, and
+produced abundance of an excellent fruit.
+
+For the cultivation of the date nothing was needed but a proper water
+supply, and a little attention at the time of fructification. The male
+and female palm are distinct trees, and the female cannot produce fruit
+unless the pollen from the male comes in contact with its blossoms. If
+the male and the female trees are grown in proper proximity, natural
+causes will always produce a certain amount of impregnation. But
+to obtain a good crop, art may be serviceably applied. According to
+Herodotus, the Babylonians were accustomed to tie the branches of
+the male to those of the female palm. This was doubtless done at the
+blossoming time, when it would have the effect he mentions, preventing
+the fruit of the female, or date-producing palms, from falling off.
+
+The date palm was multiplied in Babylonia by artificial means. It was
+commonly grown from seed, several stones being planted together for
+greater security; But occasionally it was raised from suckers or
+cuttings. It was important to plant the seeds and cuttings in a sandy
+soil; and if nature had not sufficiently impregnated the ground with
+saline particles, salt had to be applied artificially to the soil
+around as a dressing. The young plants needed a good deal of attention.
+Plentiful watering was required; and transplantation was desirable at
+the end of both the first and second year. The Babylonians are said
+to have transplanted their young trees in the height of summer; other
+nations preferred the springtime.
+
+For the cultivation of grain the Babylonians broke up their land with
+the plough; to draw which they seem to have employed two oxen, placed
+one before the other, in the mode still common in many parts of England.
+The plough had two handles, which the ploughman guided with his two
+hands. It was apparently of somewhat slight construction. The tail rose
+from the lower part of one of the handles, and was of unusual length.
+[PLATE XXIV., Fig. 3.]
+
+It is certain that dates formed the main food of the inhabitants, The
+dried fruit, being to them the staff of life, was regarded by the Greeks
+as their "bread." It was perhaps pressed into cakes, as is the common
+practice in the country at the present day. On this and goat's milk,
+which we know to have been in use, the poorer class, it is probable,
+almost entirely subsisted. Palm-wine, the fermented sap of the tree, was
+an esteemed, but no doubt only an occasional beverage. It was pleasant
+to the taste, but apt to leave a headache behind it. Such vegetables
+as gourds, melons, and cucumbers, must have been cheap, and may have
+entered into the diet of the common people. They were also probably the
+consumers of the "pickled bats," which (according to Strabo) were eaten
+by the Babylonians.
+
+In the marshy regions of the south there were certain tribes whose
+sole, or at any rate whose chief, food was fish. Fish abound in these
+districts, and are readily taken either with the hook or in nets. The
+mode of preparing this food was to dry it in the sun, to pound it fine,
+strain it through a sieve, and then make it up into cakes, or into a
+kind of bread.
+
+The diet of the richer classes was no doubt varied and luxurious.
+Wheaten bread, meats of various kinds, luscious fruits, fish, game,
+loaded the board; and wine, imported from abroad was the usual beverage.
+The wealthy Babylonians were fond of drinking to excess; their banquets
+were magnificent, but generally ended in drunkenness; they were not,
+however, mere scenes of coarse indulgence, but had a certain refinement,
+which distinguishes them from the riotous drinking-bouts of the less
+civilized Modes. Music was in Babylonia a recognized accompaniment of
+the feast; and bands of performers, entering with the wine, entertained
+the guests with concerted pieces. A rich odor of perfume floated around,
+for the Babylonians were connoisseurs in unguents. The eye was delighted
+with a display of gold and silver plate. The splendid dresses of the
+guests, the exquisite carpets and hangings, the numerous attendants,
+gave an air of grandeur to the scene, and seemed half to excuse the
+excess of which too many were guilty.
+
+A love of music appears to have characterized both the Babylonians and
+their near neighbors and kinsmen, the Susianians. In the sculptured
+representations of Assyria, the Susianians are shown to have possessed
+numerous instruments, and to have organized large bands of performers.
+The Prophet Daniel and the historian Ctesias similarly witness to the
+musical taste of the Babylonians, which had much the same character.
+Ctesias said that Annarus (or Nannarus), a Babylonian noble, entertained
+his guests at a banquet with music performed by a company of 150 women.
+Of these a part sang, while the rest played upon instruments, some using
+the pipe, others the harp, and a certain number the psaltery. These same
+instruments are assigned to the Babylonians by the prophet Daniel, who,
+however, adds to them three more--viz., the horn, the sambuca, and an
+instrument called the sumphonia, or "symphony." It is uncertain whether
+the horn intended was straight, like the Assyrian, or curved, like the
+Roman cornu and lituus. The pipe was probably the double instrument,
+played at the end, which was familiar to the Susianians and Assyrians.
+The harp would seem to have resembled the later harp of the Assyrians;
+but it had fewer strings, if we may judge from a representation upon
+a cylinder. Like the Assyrian, it was carried under one arm, and was
+played by both hands, one on either side of the strings. [PLATE XXV.,
+Fig. 3.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXV.]
+
+
+The character of the remaining instruments is more doubtful. The sambuca
+seems to have been a large harp, which rested on the ground, like the
+harps of the Egyptians. The psaltery was also a stringed instrument,
+and, if its legitimate descendant is the modern santour, we may presume
+that it is represented in the hands of a Susianian musician on the
+monument which is our chief authority for the Oriental music of the
+period. The symphonia is thought by some to be the bagpipe, which is
+called sampogna by the modern Italians: by others it is regarded as a
+sort of organ.
+
+The Babylonians used music, not merely in their private entertainments,
+but also in their religious ceremonies. Daniel's account of their
+instruments occurs casually in his mention of Nebuchadnezzar's
+dedication of a colossal idol of gold. The worshippers were to prostrate
+themselves before the idol as soon as they heard the music commence,
+and were probably to continue in the attitude of worship until the sound
+ceased.
+
+The seclusion of women seems scarcely to have been practised in
+Babylonia with as much strictness as in most Oriental countries. The
+two peculiar customs on which Herodotus descants at length--the public
+auction of the marriageable virgins in all the towns of the empire, and
+the religious prostitution authorized in the worship of Beltis--were
+wholly incompatible with the restraints to which the sex has commonly
+submitted in the Eastern world. Much modesty can scarcely have belonged
+to those whose virgin charms were originally offered in the public
+market to the best bidder, and who were required by their religion, at
+least once in their lives, openly to submit to the embraces of a man
+other than their husband. It would certainly seem that the sex had
+in Babylonia a freedom--and not only a freedom, but also a
+consideration--unusual in the ancient world, and especially rare in
+Asia. The stories of Semiramis and Nitocris may have in them no great
+amount of truth; but they sufficiently indicate the belief of the
+Greeks as to the comparative publicity allowed to their women by the
+Babylonians.
+
+The monuments accord with the view of Babylonian manners thus opened to
+us. The female form is not eschewed by the Chaldaean artists. Besides
+images of a goddess (Beltis or Ish-tar) suckling a child, which are
+frequent, we find on the cylinders numerous representations of women,
+engaged in various employments. Sometimes they are represented in a
+procession, visiting the shrine of a goddess, to whom they offer their
+petitions, by the mouth of one of their number, or to whom they bring
+their children for the purpose, probably, of placing them under her
+protection [PLATE XXV., Fig. 5.], sometimes they may be seen amusing
+themselves among birds and flowers in a garden, plucking the fruit from
+dwarf palms, and politely handing it to one another. [PLATE XXV., Fig.
+4.] Their attire is in every case nearly the same; they wear a long but
+scanty robe, reaching to the ankles, ornamented at the bottom with a
+fringe and apparently opening in front. The upper part of the dress
+passes over only one shoulder. It is trimmed round the top with a fringe
+which runs diagonally across the chest, and a similar fringe edges the
+dress down the front where it opens. A band or fillet is worn round the
+head, confining the hair, which is turned back behind the head, and tied
+by a riband, or else held up by the fillet.
+
+Female ornaments are not perceptible on the small figures of
+the cylinders; but from the modelled image in clay, of which a
+representation has been already given, we learn that bracelets and
+earrings of a simple character were worn by Babylonian women, if they
+were not by the men. On the whole, however, female dress seems to have
+been plain and wanting in variety, though we may perhaps suspect that
+the artists do not trouble themselves to represent very accurately such
+diversities of apparel as actually existed.
+
+From a single representation of a priestess it would seem that women
+of that class wore nothing but a petticoat, thus exposing not only the
+arms, but the whole of the body as far as the waist.
+
+The monuments throw a little further light on the daily life of the
+Babylonians. A few of their implements, as saws and hatchets, are
+represented. [PLATE XXV., Fig. 2]; and from the stools, the chairs, the
+tables, and stands for holding water-jars which occur occasionally on
+the cylinders, we may gather that the fashion of their furniture
+much resembled that of their northern neighbors, the Assyrians. It is
+needless to dwell on this subject, which presents no novel features,
+and has been anticipated by the discussion on Assyrian furniture in the
+first volume. The only touch that can be added to what was there said
+is that in Babylonia, the chief--almost the sole-material employed for
+furniture was the wood of the palm-tree, a soft and light fabric which
+could be easily worked, and which had considerable strength, but did not
+admit of a high finish.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. RELIGION.
+
+
+The Religion of the later Babylonians differed in so few respects from
+that of the early Chaldaeans, their predecessors in the same country,
+that it will be unnecessary to detain the reader with many observations
+on the subject. The same gods were worshipped in the same temples and
+with the same rites--the same cosmogony was taught and held--the same
+symbols were objects of religious regard--even the very dress of the
+priests was maintained unaltered; and, could Urukh or Chedorlaomer have
+risen from the grave and revisited the shrines wherein they sacrificed
+fourteen centuries earlier, they would have found but little to
+distinguish the ceremonies of their own day from those in vogue
+under the successors of Nabopolassar. Some additional splendor in the
+buildings, the idols, and perhaps the offerings, some increased use
+of music as a part of the ceremonial, some advance of corruption with
+respect to priestly impostures and popular religious customs might
+probably have been noticed; but otherwise the religion of Nabonidus and
+Belshazzar was that of Urukh and Ilgi, alike in the objects and the mode
+of worship, in the theological notions entertained and the ceremonial
+observances taught and practised.
+
+The identity of the gods worshipped during the entire period is
+sufficiently proved by the repair and restoration of the ancient temples
+under Nebuchadnezzar, and their re-dedication (as a general rule) to
+the same deities. It appears also from the names of the later kings and
+nobles, which embrace among their elements the old divine appellations.
+Still, together with this general uniformity, we seem to see a certain
+amount of fluctuation--a sort of fashion in the religion, whereby
+particular gods were at different times exalted to a higher rank in the
+Pantheon, and were sometimes even confounded with other deities commonly
+regarded as wholly distinct from them. Thus Nebuchadnezzar devoted
+himself in an especial way to Merodach, and not only assigned him titles
+of honor which implied his supremacy over all the remaining gods, but
+even identified him with the great Bel, the ancient tutelary god of the
+capital. Nabonidus, on the other hand, seems to have restored Bel to his
+old position, re-establishing the distinction between him and Merodach,
+and preferring to devote himself to the former.
+
+A similar confusion occurs between the goddesses Beltis and Nana or
+Ishtar, though this is not peculiar to the later kingdom. It may perhaps
+be suspected from such instances of connection and quasi-convertibility,
+that an esoteric doctrine, known to the priests and communicated by
+them to the kings, taught the real identity of the several gods and
+goddesses, who may have been understood by the better instructed to
+represent, not distinct and separate beings, but the several phases
+of the Divine Nature. Ancient polytheism had, it may be surmised, to a
+great extent this origin, the various names and titles of the Supreme,
+which designated His different attributes or the different spheres of
+His operation, coming by degrees to be misunderstood, and to pass, first
+with the vulgar, and at last with all but the most enlightened, for the
+appellations of a number of gods.
+
+The chief objects of Babylonian worship were Bel, Merodach, and Nebo.
+Nebo, the special deity of Borsippa, seems to have been regarded as a
+sort of powerful patron-saint under whose protection it was important
+to place individuals. During the period of the later kingdom, no divine
+element is so common in names. Of the seven kings who form the entire
+list, three certainly, four probably, had appellations composed with it.
+The usage extended from the royal house to the courtiers; and such names
+as Nebu-zar-adan, Samgar-Nebo, and Nebushazban, show the respect which
+the upper class of citizens paid to this god. It may even be suspected
+that when Nebuchadnezzar's Master of the Eunuchs had to give Babylonian
+names to the young Jewish princes whom he was educating, he designed to
+secure for one of them this powerful patron, and consequently called
+him Abed-Nebo--the servant of Nebo--a name which the later Jews, either
+disdaining or not understanding, have corrupted into the Abed-nogo of
+the existing text.
+
+Another god held in peculiar honor by the Babylonians was Nergal.
+Worshipped at Cutha as the tutelary divinity of the town, he was also
+held in repute by the people generally. No name is more common on the
+cylinder seals. It is sometimes, though not often, an element in the
+names of men, as in "Nergal-shar-ezer, the Eab-mag," and (if he be a
+different person) in Neriglissar, the king.
+
+Altogether, there was a strong local element in the religion of the
+Babylonians. Bel and Merodach were in a peculiar way the gods of
+Babylon, Nebo of Borsippa, Nergal of Cutha, the Moon of Ur or Hur,
+Beltis of Niffer, Hea or Hoa of Hit, Ana of Erech, the Sun of Sippara.
+Without being exclusively honored at a single site, the deities in
+question held the foremost place each in his own town. There especially
+was worship offered to them; there was the most magnificent of their
+shrines. Out of his own city a god was not greatly respected, unless by
+those who regarded him as their special personal protector.
+
+The Babylonians worshipped their gods indirectly, through images.
+Each shrine had at least one idol, which was held in the most pious
+reverence, and was in the minds of the vulgar identified with the god.
+It seems to have been believed by some that the actual idol ate and
+drank the offerings. Others distinguished between the idol and the god,
+regarding the latter as only occasionally visiting the shrine where he
+was worshipped. Even these last, however, held gross anthropomorphic
+views, since they considered the god to descend from heaven in order to
+hold commerce with the chief priestess. Such notions were encouraged by
+the priests, who furnished the inner shrine in the temple of Bel with a
+magnificent couch and a golden table, and made the principal priestess
+pass the night in the shrine on certain occasions.
+
+The images of the gods were of various materials. Some were of wood,
+others of stone, others again of metal; and these last were either
+solid or plated. The metals employed were gold, silver, brass, or rather
+bronze, and iron. Occasionally the metal was laid over a clay model.
+Sometimes images of one metal were overlaid with plates of another, as
+was the case with one of the great images of Bel, which was originally
+of silver but was coated with gold by Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+The worship of the Babylonians appears to have been conducted with much
+pomp and magnificence. A description has been already given of their
+temples. Attached to these imposing structures was, in every case, a
+body of priests; to whom the conduct of the ceremonies and the custody
+of the treasures were intrusted. The priests were married, and lived
+with their wives and children, either in the sacred structure itself,
+or in its immediate neighborhood. They were supported either by lands
+belonging to the temple, or by the offerings of the faithful. These
+consisted in general of animals, chiefly oxen and goats; but other
+valuables were no doubt received when tendered. The priest always
+intervened between the worshipper and the deities, presenting him to
+them and interceding with uplifted hands on his behalf.
+
+In the temple of Bel at Babylon, and probably in most of the other
+temples both there and elsewhere throughout the country, a great
+festival was celebrated once in the course of each year. We know little
+of the ceremonies with which these festivals were accompanied; but
+we may presume from the analogy of other nations that there were
+magnificent processions on these occasions, accompanied probably with
+music and dancing. The images of the gods were perhaps exhibited either
+on frames or on sacred vehicles. Numerous victims were sacrificed; and
+at Babylon it was customary to burn on the great altar in the precinct
+of Bel a thousand talents' weight of frankincense. The priests no doubt
+wore their most splendid dresses; the multitude was in holiday costume;
+the city was given up to merry-making. Everywhere banquets were held. In
+the palace the king entertained his lords; in private houses there was
+dancing and revelling. Wine was freely drunk; passion Was excited; and
+the day, it must be feared, too often terminated in wild orgies, wherein
+the sanctions of religion were claimed for the free indulgence of the
+worst sensual appetites. In the temples of one deity excesses of this
+description, instead of being confined to rare occasions, seem to have
+been of every-day occurrence. Each woman was required once in her life
+to visit a shrine of Beltis, and there remain till some stranger cast
+money in her lap and took her away with him. Herodotus, who seems to
+have visited the disgraceful scene, describes it as follows. "Many women
+of the wealthier sort, who are too proud to mix with the others, drive
+in covered carriages to the precinct, followed by a goodly train of
+attendants, and there take their station. But the larger number seat
+themselves within the holy inclosure with wreaths of string about their
+heads--and here there is always a great crowd, some coming and others
+going. Lines of cord mark out paths in all directions among the woman;
+and the strangers pass along them to make their choice. A women who
+has once taken her seat is not allowed to return home till one of the
+strangers throws a silver coin into her lap, and takes her with
+him beyond the holy ground. When he throws the coin, he says these
+words--'The goddess Mylitta (Beltis) prosper thee.' The silver coin may
+be of any size; it cannot be refused; for that is forbidden by the law,
+since once thrown it is sacred. The woman goes with the first man who
+throws her money, and rejects no one. When she has gone with him, and
+so satisfied the goddess, she returns home; and from that time forth
+no gift, however great, will prevail with her. Such of the women as are
+tall and beautiful are soon released; but others, who are ugly, have to
+stay a long time before they can fulfil the law. Some have even waited
+three or four years in the precinct." The demoralizing tendency of this
+religious prostitution can scarcely be overrated.
+
+Notions of legal cleanliness and uncleanliness, akin to those prevalent
+among the Jews, are found to some extent in the religious system of the
+Babylonians. The consummation of the marriage rite made both the man
+and the woman impure, as did every subsequent act of the same kind.
+The impurity was communicated to any vessel that either might touch. To
+remove it, the pair were required first to sit down before a censer of
+burning incense, and then to wash themselves thoroughly. Thus only could
+they re-enter into the state of legal cleanness. A similar impurity
+attached to those who came into contact with a human corpse. The
+Babylonians are remarkable for the extent to which they affected
+symbolism in religion. In the first place they attached to each god a
+special mystic number, which is used as his emblem and may even stand
+for his name in an inscription. To the gods of the First Triad-Ami, Bel,
+and Hea or Hoa--were assigned respectively the numbers 60, 50, and 40;
+to those of the Second Triad--the Moon, the Sun and the Atmosphere--were
+given the other integers, 30, 20, and 10 (or perhaps six). To Beltis was
+attached the number 15, to Nergal 12, to Bar or Nin (apparently) 40, as
+to Hoa; but this is perhaps doubtful. It is probable that every god,
+or at any rate all the principle deities, had in a similar way some
+numerical emblem. Many of these are, however, as yet undiscovered.
+
+Further, each god seems to have had one or more emblematic signs by
+which he could be pictorially symbolized. The cylinders are full of such
+forms, which are often crowded into every vacant space where room
+could be found for them. A certain number can be assigned definitely to
+particular divinities. Thus a circle, plain or crossed, designates the
+Sun-god, San or Shamas; a six-rayed or eight-rayed star the Sun-goddess,
+Gula or Anunit; a double or triple thunderbolt the Atmospheric god, Vul;
+a serpent probably Hoa; a naked female form Nana or Ishtar; a fish Bar
+or Nin-ip. But besides these assignable symbols, there are a vast number
+with regard to which we are still wholly in the dark. Among these may
+
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 229]
+
+
+tree, an ox, a bee, a spearhead. A study of the inscribed cylinders
+shows these emblems to have no reference to the god or goddess named
+in the inscription upon them. Each, apparently, represents a distinct
+deity; and the object of placing them upon a cylinder is to imply the
+devotion of the man whose seal it is to other deities besides those
+whose special servant he considers himself. A single cylinder sometimes
+contains as many as eight or ten such emblems. The principal temples
+of the gods had special sacred appellations. The great temple of Bel
+at Babylon was known as Bit-Saggath, that of the same god at Niffer as
+Kharris-Nipra. that of Beltis at Warka (Erech) as Bit-Ana, that of
+the sun at Sippara as Bit-Parra, that of Anunit at the same place as
+Bit-Ulmis, that of Nebo at Borsippa as Bit-Tsida, etc. It is seldom that
+these names admit of explanation. They had come down apparently from
+the old Chaldaean times, and belonged to the ancient (Turanian) form of
+speech; which is still almost unintelligible. The Babylonians themselves
+probably in few cases understood their meaning. They used the words
+simply as proper names, without regarding them as significative.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. HISTORY AND CHRONOLOGY.
+
+
+The history of the Babylonian Empire commences with Nabopolassar,
+who appears to have mounted the throne in the year B.C. 625; but to
+understand the true character of the kingdom which he set up, its
+traditions and its national spirit, we must begin at a far earlier date.
+We must examine, in however incomplete and cursory a manner, the middle
+period of Babylonian history, the time of obscurity and comparative
+insignificance, when the country was as a general rule, subject to
+Assyria, or at any rate played but a secondary part in the affairs of
+the East. We shall thus prepare the way for our proper subject, while at
+the same time we shall link on the history of the Fourth to that of
+the First Monarchy, and obtain a second line of continuous narrative,
+connecting the brilliant era of Cyaxares and Nebuchadnezzar with the
+obscure period of the first Cushite kings.
+
+It has been observed that the original Chaldaean monarchy lasted,
+under various dynasties from about B.C. 2400 to B.C. 1300, when it was
+destroyed by the Assyrians, who became masters of Babylonia under the
+first Tiglathi-Nin, and governed it for a short time from their own
+capital. Unable, however, to maintain this unity very long, they appear
+to have set up in the country an Assyrian dynasty, over which they
+claimed and sometimes exercised a kind of suzerainty, but which was
+practically independent and managed both the external and internal
+affairs of the kingdom at its pleasure. The first king of this dynasty
+concerning whom we have any information is a Nebuchadnezzar, who was
+contemporary with the Assyrian monarch Asshur-ris-ilim, and made two
+attacks upon his territories. The first of these was by the way of
+the Diyaleh and the outlying Zagros hills, the line taken by the great
+Persian military road in later times. The second was directly across the
+plain. If we are to believe the Assyrian historian who gives an account
+of the campaigns, both attacks were repulsed, and after his second
+failure the Babylonian monarch fled away into his own country hastily.
+We may perhaps suspect that a Babylonian writer would have told a
+different story. At any rate Asshur-ris-ilim was content to defend his
+own territories and did not attempt to retaliate upon his assailant. It
+was not till late in the reign of his son and successor, Tiglath-Pileser
+I., that any attempt was made to punish the Babylonians for their
+audacity. Then, however, that monarch invaded the southern kingdom,
+which had passed into the hands of a king named Merodach-iddin-akhi,
+probably a son of Nebuchadnezzar. After two years of fighting, in which
+he took Eurri-Galzu (Akkerkuf), the two Sipparas, Opis, and even
+Babylon itself, Tiglath-Pileser retired, satisfied apparently with his
+victories; but the Babylonian monarch was neither subdued nor daunted.
+Hanging on the rear of the retreating force, he harassed it by cutting
+off its baggage, and in this way he became possessed of certain Assyrian
+idols, which he carried away as trophies to Babylon. War
+continued between the two countries during the ensuing reigns of
+Merodach-shapik-ziri in Babylon and Asshur-bil-kala in Assyria, but with
+no important successes, so far as appears, on either side.
+
+The century during which these wars took place between Assyria and
+Babylonia, which corresponds with the period of the later Judges in
+Israel, is followed by an obscure interval, during which but little is
+known of either country. Assyria seems to have been at this time in
+a state of great depression. Babylonia, it may be suspected, was
+flourishing; but as our knowledge of its condition comes to us almost
+entirely through the records of the sister country, which here fail
+us, we can only obtain a dim and indistinct vision of the greatness now
+achieved by the southern kingdom. A notice of Asshur-izir-pal's seems
+to imply that Babylon, during the period in question, enlarged her
+territories at the expense of Assyria, and another in Macrobius, makes
+it probable that she held communications with Egypt. Perhaps these two
+powers, fearing the growing strength of Assyria, united against her,
+and so checked for a while that development of her resources which they
+justly dreaded.
+
+However, after two centuries of comparative depression, Assyria once
+more started forward, and Babylonia was among the first of her neighbors
+whom she proceeded to chastise and despoil. About the year B.C. 880
+Asshur-izir-pal led an expedition to the south-east and recovered the
+territory which, had been occupied by the Babylonians during the period
+of weakness. Thirty years later, his son, the Black-Obelisk king, made
+the power of Assyria still more sensibly felt. Taking advantage of
+the circumstance that a civil war was raging in Babylonia between the
+legitimate monarch Merodach-sum-adin, and his young brother, he marched
+into the country, took a number of the towns, and having defeated and
+slain the pretender, was admitted into Babylon itself. From thence he
+proceeded to overrun Chaldaea, or the district upon the coast, which
+appears at this time to have been independent of Babylon, and governed
+by a number of petty kings. The Babylonian monarch probably admitted the
+suzerainty of the invader, but was not put to any tribute. The Chaldaean
+chiefs, however, had to submit to this indignity. The Assyrian monarch
+returned to his capital, having "struck terror as far as the sea." Thus
+Assyrian influence was once more extended over the whole of the southern
+country, and Babylonia resumed her position of a secondary power,
+dependent on the great monarchy of the north.
+
+But she was not long allowed to retain even the shadow of an autonomous
+rule. In or about the year B.C. 821 the son and successor of the
+Black-Obelisk king, apparently without any pretext, made a fresh
+invasion of the country. Mero-dach-belatzu-ikm, the Babylonian monarch,
+boldly met him in the field, but was defeated in two pitched battles (in
+the latter of which he had the assistance of powerful allies) and was
+forced to submit to his antagonist. Babylon, it is probable, became at
+once an Assyrian tributary, and in this condition she remained till
+the troubles which came upon Assyria towards the middle of the eighth
+century B.C. gave an opportunity for shaking off the hated yoke. Perhaps
+the first successes were obtained by Pul, who, taking advantage of
+Assyria's weakness under Asshur-dayan III. (ab. B.C. 770), seems to
+have established a dominion over the Euphrates valley and Western
+Mesopotamia, from which he proceeded to carry his arms into Syria and
+Palestine. Or perhaps Pul's efforts merely, by still further weakening
+Assyria, paved the way for Babylon to revolt, and Nabonassar, who became
+king of Babylon in B.C. 747, is to be regarded as the re-establisher
+of her independence. In either case it is apparent that the recovery of
+independence was accompanied, or rapidly followed, by a disintegration
+of the country, which was of evil omen for its future greatness. While
+Nabonassar established himself at the head of affairs in Babylon, a
+certain Yakin, the father of Merodach-Baladan, became master of the
+tract upon the coast; and various princes, Nadina, Zakiru, and others,
+at the same time obtained governments, which they administered in their
+own name towards the north. The old Babylonian kingdom was broken up;
+and the way was prepared for that final subjugation which was ultimately
+affected by the Sargonids.
+
+Still, the Babylonians seemed to have looked with complacency on this
+period, and they certainly made it an era from which to date their later
+history. Perhaps, however, they had not much choice in this matter.
+Nabonassar was a man of energy and determination. Bent probably on
+obliterating the memory of the preceding period of subjugation, he
+"destroyed the acts of the kings who had preceded him;" and the result
+was that the war of his accession became almost necessarily the era from
+which subsequent events had to be dated.
+
+Nabonassar appears to have lived on friendly terms with Tiglath-Pileser,
+the contemporary monarch of Assyria, who early in his reign invaded the
+southern country, reduced several princes of the districts about Babylon
+to subjection, and forced Merodach-Baladan, who had succeeded his
+father, Yakin, in the low region, to become his tributary. No war seems
+to have been waged between Tiglath-Pileser and Nabonassar. The king of
+Babylon may have seen with satisfaction the humiliation of his immediate
+neighbors and rivals, and may have felt that their subjugation rather
+improved than weakened his own position. At any rate it tended to place
+him before the nation as their only hope and champion--the sole barrier
+which protected their country from a return of the old servitude.
+
+Nabonassar held the throne of Babylon for fourteen years, from B.C. 747
+to B.C. 733. It has generally been supposed that this period is the same
+with that regarded by Herodotus as constituting the reign of Semiramis.
+As the wife or as the mother of Nabonassar, that lady (according to
+many) directed the affairs of the Babylonian state on behalf of her
+husband or her son. The theory is not devoid of a certain plausibility,
+and it is no doubt possible that it may be true; but at present it is
+a mere conjecture, wholly unconfirmed by the native records; and we may
+question whether on the whole it is not more probable that the Semiramis
+of Herodotus is misplaced. In a former volume it was shown that a
+Semiramis flourished in Assyria towards the end of the ninth and the
+beginning of the eighth centuries B.C.---during the period, that is,
+of Babylonian subjection to Assyria. She may have been a Babylonian
+princess, and have exercised an authority in the southern capital. It
+would seem therefore to be more probable that she is the individual whom
+Herodotus intends, though he has placed her about half a century too
+late, than that there were two persons of the same name within so short
+a time, both queens, and both ruling in Mesopotamia.
+
+Nabonassar was succeeded in the year B.C. 733 by a certain Nadius,
+who is suspected to have been among the independent princes reduced
+to subjection by Tiglath-Pileser in his Babylonian expedition. Nadius
+reigned only two years--from B.C. 733 to B.C. 731--when he was succeeded
+by Ghinzinus and Porus, two princes whose joint rule lasted from
+B.C. 731 to B.C. 726. They were followed by an Elulseus, who has
+been identified with the king of that name called by Menander king of
+Tyre--the Luliya of the cuneiform inscriptions; but it is in the highest
+degree improbable that one and the same monarch should have borne sway
+both in Phoenicia and Chaldaea at a time when Assyria was paramount
+over the whole of the intervening country. Elulseus therefore must
+be assigned to the same class of utterly obscure monarchs with his
+predecessors, Porus, Chinzinus, and Nadius; and it is only with
+Merodach-Baladan, his successor, that the darkness becomes a little
+dispelled, and we once more see the Babylonian throne occupied by a
+prince of some reputation and indeed celebrity.
+
+Merodach-Baladan was the son of a monarch, who in the troublous times
+that preceded, or closely followed, the era of Nabonassar appears to
+have made himself master of the lower Babylonian territory--the true
+Chaldaea--and to have there founded a capital city, which he
+called after his own name, Bit-Yakin. On the death of his father
+Merodach-Baladan inherited this dominion; and it is here that we first
+find him, when, during the reign of Nabonassar, the Assyrians under
+Tiglath-Pileser II. invade the country. Forced to accept the position
+of Assyrian tributary under this monarch, to whom he probably looked
+for protection against the Babylonian king, Nabonassar, Merodach-Baladan
+patiently bided his time, remaining in comparative obscurity during the
+two reigns of Tiglath-Pileser and Shalmaneser his successor, and only
+emerging contemporaneously with the troubles which ushered in the
+dynasty of the Sargonids. In B.C. 721--the year in which Sargon made
+himself master of Nineveh--Merodach-Baladan extended his authority
+over the upper country, and was recognized as king of Babylon. Here he
+maintained himself for twelve years; and it was probably at some point
+of time within this space that he sent embassadors to Hezekiah at
+Jerusalem, with orders to inquire into the particulars of the curious
+astronomical marvel, or miracle, which had accompanied the sickness and
+recovery of that monarch. It is not unlikely that the embassy, whereof
+this was the pretext, had a further political object. Morodach-Baladan,
+aware of his inability to withstand singly the forces of Assyria, was
+probably anxious to form a powerful league against the conquering state,
+which threatened to absorb the whole of Western Asia into its dominion.
+Hezekiah received his advances favorably, as appears by the fact that he
+exhibited to him all his treasures. Egypt, we may presume, was cognizant
+of the proceedings, and gave them her support. An alliance, defensive if
+not also offensive, was probably concluded between Egypt and Judaea on
+the one hand, Babylon, Susiana, and the Aramaean tribes of the middle
+Euphrates on the other. The league would have been formidable but for
+one circumstance--Assyria lay midway between the allied states, and
+could attack either moiety of the confederates separately at her
+pleasure. And the Assyrian king was not slow to take advantage of his
+situation. In two successive years Sargon marched his troops against
+Egypt and against Babylonia, and in both directions carried all before
+him. In Egypt he forced Sabaco to sue for peace. In Babylonia (B.C.
+710) he gained a great victory over Merodach-Baladan and his allies,
+the Aramaeans and Susianians, took Bit-Yakin, into which the defeated
+monarch had thrown himself, and gained possession of his treasures and
+his person. Upon this the whole country submitted; Merodach-Baladan
+was carried away captive into Assyria; and Sargon himself, mounting the
+throne, assumed the title-rarely taken by an Assyrian monarch of "King
+of Babylon."
+
+But this state of things did not continue long. Sargon died in the year
+B.C. 704, and coincident with his death we find a renewal of troubles in
+Babylonia. Assyria's yoke was shaken off; various pretenders started
+up; a son of Sargon and brother of Sennacherib re-established Assyrian
+influence for a brief space; but fresh revolts followed. A certain
+Hagisa became king of Babylon for a month. Finally, Merodach-Baladan,
+again appeared upon the scene, having escaped from his Assyrian prison,
+murdered Hagisa, and remounted the throne from which he had been deposed
+seven years previously. But the brave effort to recover independence
+failed. Sennacherib in his second year, B.C. 703, descended upon
+Babylonia, defeated the army which Merodach-Baladan brought against him,
+drove that monarch himself into exile, after a reign of six months, and
+re-attached his country to the Assyrian crown. From this time to
+the revolt of Nabopolassar--a period of above three quarters of a
+century--Babylonia with few and brief intervals of revolt, continued
+an Assyrian fief. The assyrian kings governed her either by means
+of viceroys, such as Belibus, Regibelus, Mesesimordachus, and
+Saos-duchinus, or directly in their own persons, as was the case during
+the reign of Esarhaddon, and during the later years of Asshur-bani-pal.
+
+The revolts of Babylon during this period have been described at length
+in the history of Assyria. Two fall into the reign of Sennacherib,
+one into that of Asshur-bani-pal, his grandson. In the former,
+Merodach-Baladan, who had not yet given up his pretensions to the lower
+country, and a certain Susub, who was acknowledged as king at Babylon,
+were the leaders. In the latter, Saos-duchinus, the Assyrian viceroy,
+and brother of Asshur-bani-pal, the Assyrian king, seduced from
+his allegiance by the hope of making himself independent headed the
+insurrection. In each case the struggle was brief, being begun and
+ended within the year. The power of Assyria at this time so vastly
+preponderated over that of her ancient rival that a single campaign
+sufficed on each occasion of revolt to crush the nascent insurrection.
+
+A tabular view of the chronology of this period is appended.
+
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 237]
+
+
+Having thus briefly sketched the history of the kingdom of Babylon from
+its conquest by Tiglathi-Nin to the close of the long period of Assyrian
+predominance in Western Asia, we may proceed to the consideration of the
+"Empire." And first, as to the circumstances of its foundation.
+
+When the Medes first assumed an aggressive attitude towards Assyria,
+and threatened the capital with a siege, Babylonia apparently remained
+unshaken in her allegiance. When the Scythian hordes spread themselves
+over Upper Mesopotamia and wasted with fire and sword the fairest
+regions under Assyrian rule, there was still no defection in this
+quarter. It was not till the Scythic ravages were over, and the Medes
+for the second time poured across Zagros into Adiabene, resuming the
+enterprise from which they had desisted at the time of the Scythic
+invasion, that the fidelity of the Southern people wavered.
+Simultaneously with the advance of the Medes against the Assyrian
+capital from the east, we hear of a force threatening it from the south,
+a force which can only have consisted of Susianians, of Babylonians,
+or of both combined. It is probable that the emissaries of Cyaxares had
+been busy in this region for some time before his second attack took
+place, and that by a concerted plan while the Medes debouched from the
+Zagros passes, the south rose in revolt and sent its hasty levies along
+the valley of the Tigris.
+
+In this strait the Assyrian king deemed it necessary to divide his
+forces and to send a portion against the enemy which was advancing from
+the south, while with the remainder he himself awaited the coming of the
+Medes. The troops detached for the former service he placed under the
+command of a certain Nabopolassar? (Nabu-pal-uzur), who was probably
+an Assyrian nobleman of high rank and known capacity. Nabopolassar had
+orders to proceed to Babylon, of which he was probably made viceroy, and
+to defend the southern capital against the rebels. We may conclude that
+he obeyed these orders so far as to enter Babylon and install himself
+in office; but shortly afterwards he seems to have made up his mind
+to break faith with his sovereign, and aim at obtaining for himself
+an independent kingdom out of the ruins of the Assyrian power. Having
+formed this resolve, his first step was to send an embassy to Cyaxares,
+and to propose terms of alliance, while at the same time he arranged
+a marriage between his own son, Nebuchadnezzar, and Amuhia, or Amyitis
+(for the name is written both ways), the daughter of the Median
+monarch.
+
+Cyaxares gladly accepted the terms offered; the young persons were
+betrothed; and Nabopolassar immediately led, or sent, a contingent of
+troops to join the Medes, who took an active part in the great siege
+which resulted in the capture and destruction of the Assyrian capital.
+
+A division of the Assyrian Empire between the allied monarchs followed.
+While Cyaxares claimed for his own share Assyria Proper and the various
+countries dependent on Assyria towards the north and the north-west,
+Nabopolassar was rewarded by his timely defection, not merely by
+independence but by the transfer to his government of Susiana on the
+one hand and of the valley of the Euphrates, Syria, and Palestine on
+the other. The transfer appears to have been effected quietly, the
+Babylonian yoke being peacefully accepted in lieu of the Assyrian
+without the necessity arising for any application of force. Probably
+it appeared to the subjects of Assyria, who had been accustomed to a
+monarch holding his court alternately at Nineveh and at Babylon, that
+the new power was merely a continuation of the old, and the monarch a
+legitimate successor of the old line of Ninevite kings.
+
+Of the reign of Nabopolassar the information which has come down to
+us is scanty. It appears by the canon of Ptolemy that he dated his
+accession to the throne from the year B.C. 625, and that his reign
+lasted twenty-one years, from B.C. 625 to B.C. 604. During the greater
+portion of this period the history of Babylon is a blank. Apparently the
+"golden city" enjoyed her new position at the head of an empire too much
+to endanger it by aggression; and, her peaceful attitude provoking no
+hostility, she was for a while left unmolested by her neighbors. Media,
+bound to her by formal treaty as well as by dynastic interests, could be
+relied upon as a firm friend; Persia was too weak, Lydia too remote, to
+be formidable; in Egypt alone was there a combination of hostile feeling
+with military strength such as might have been expected to lead speedily
+to a trial of strength; but Egypt was under the rule of an aged and wary
+prince, one trained in the school of adversity, whose years forbade his
+engaging in any distant enterprise, and whose prudence led him to think
+more of defending his own country than of attacking others. Thus, while
+Psammetichus lived, Babylon had little to fear from any quarter, and
+could afford to "give herself to pleasures and dwell carelessly."
+
+The only exertion which she seems to have been called upon to make
+during her first eighteen years of empire resulted from the close
+connection which had been established between herself and Media.
+Cyaxares, as already remarked, proceeded from the capture of Nineveh to
+a long series of wars and conquests. In some, if not in all, of these he
+appears to have been assisted by the Babylonians, who were perhaps bound
+by treaty to furnish a contingent as often as he required it, Either
+Nabopolassar himself, or his son Nebuchadnezzar, would lead out the
+troops on such occasions; and thus the military spirit of both prince
+and people would be pretty constantly exercised.
+
+It was as the leader of such a contingent that Nabopolassar was able
+on one occasion to play the important part of peacemaker in one of the
+bloodiest of all Cyaxares' wars. After five years' desperate fighting
+the Medes and Lydians were once more engaged in conflict when an eclipse
+of the sun took place. Filled with superstitious dread the two armies
+ceased to contend, and showed a disposition for reconciliation, of which
+the Babylonian monarch was not slow to take advantage. Having consulted
+with Syennesis of Cilicia, the foremost man of the allies on the other
+side, and found him well disposed to second his efforts, he proposed
+that the sword should be returned to the scabbard, and that a conference
+should be held to arrange terms of peace. This timely interference
+proved effectual. A peace was concluded between the Lydians and the
+Medes, which was cemented by a royal intermarriage: and the result
+was to give to Western Asia, where war and ravage had long been almost
+perpetual, nearly half a century of tranquillity.
+
+Successful in his mediation, almost beyond his hopes, Nabopolassar
+returned from Asia Minor to Babylon. He was now advanced in years,
+and would no doubt gladly have spent the remainder of his days in
+the enjoyment of that repose which is so dear to those who feel the
+infirmities of age creeping upon them. But Providence had
+ordained otherwise. In B.C. 610--probably the very year of the
+eclipse--Psammetichus died, and was succeeded by his son Neco, who was
+in the prime of life and who in disposition was bold and enterprising.
+This monarch very shortly after his accession cast a covetous eye upon
+Syria, and in the year B.C. 608, having made vast preparations, he
+crossed his frontier and invaded the territories of Nabopolassar.
+Marching along the usual route, by the _Shephilah_ and the plain of
+Esdraelon, he learned, when he neared Megiddo, that a body of troops was
+drawn up at that place to oppose him, Josiah, the Jewish king, regarding
+himself as bound to resist the passage through his territories of an
+army hostile to the monarch of whom he held his crown, had collected his
+forces, and, having placed them across the line of the invader's march,
+was calmly awaiting in this position the approach of his master's enemy.
+Neco hereupon sent ambassadors to persuade Josiah to let him pass,
+representing that he had no quarrel with the Jews, and claiming a
+divine sanction to his undertaking. But nothing could shake the Jewish
+monarch's sense of duty; and Neco was consequently forced to engage with
+him, and to drive his troops from their position. Josiah, defeated and
+mortally wounded, returned to Jerusalem, where he died. Neco pressed
+forward through Syria to the Euphrates; and carrying all before him,
+established his dominion over the whole tract lying between Egypt on
+the one hand, and the "Great River" upon the other. On his return three
+months later he visited Jerusalem, deposed Jehoahaz, a younger son of
+Josiah, whom the people had made king, and gave the crown to Jehoiakim,
+his elder brother. It was probably about this time that he besieged and
+took Gaza, the most important of the Philistine towns next to Ashdod.
+
+The loss of this large and valuable territory did not at once arouse the
+Babylonian monarch from his inaction or induce him to make any effort
+for its recovery. Neco enjoyed his conquests in quiet for the space
+of at least three full years. At length, in the year B.C. 605,
+Nabopolassar, who felt himself unequal to the fatigues of a campaign,
+resolved to entrust his forces to Nebuchadnezzar, his son, and to send
+him to contend with the Egyptians. The key of Syria at this time was
+Carchemish, a city situated on the right bank of the Euphrates, probably
+near the site which was afterwards occupied by Hierapolis. Here
+the forces of Neco were drawn up to protect his conquests, and here
+Nebuchadnezzar proceeded boldly to attack them. A great battle was
+fought in the vicinity of the river, which was utterly disastrous to the
+Egyptians, who "fled away" in confusion, and seem not to have ventured
+on making a second stand. Nebuchadnezzar rapidly recovered the lost
+territory, received the submission of Jehoiakim, king of Judah, restored
+the old frontier line, and probably pressed on into Egypt itself, hoping
+to cripple or even to crush his presumptuous adversary. But at this
+point he was compelled to pause. News arrived from Babylon that
+Nabopolassar was dead; and the Babylonian prince, who feared a disputed
+succession, having first concluded a hasty arrangement with Neco,
+returned at his best speed to his capital.
+
+Arriving probably before he was expected, he discovered that his fears
+were groundless. The priests had taken the direction of affairs during
+his absence, and the throne had been kept vacant for him by the Chief
+Priest, or Head of the Order. No pretender had started up to dispute his
+claims. Doubtless his military prestige, and the probability that the
+soldiers would adopt his cause, had helped to keep back aspirants; but
+perhaps it was the promptness of his return, as much as anything, that
+caused the crisis to pass off without difficulty.
+
+Nebuchadnezzar is the great monarch of the Babylonian Empire, which,
+lasting only 88 years--from B.C. 625 to B.C. 538--was for nearly half
+the time under his sway. Its military glory is due chiefly to him, while
+the constructive energy, which constitutes its especial characteristic,
+belongs to it still more markedly through his character and genius.
+It is scarcely too much to say that, but for Nebuchadnezzar, the
+Babylonians would have had no place in history. At any rate, their
+actual place is owing almost entirely to this prince, who to the
+military talents of an able general added a grandeur of artistic
+conception and a skill in construction which place him on a par with the
+greatest builders of antiquity.
+
+We have no complete, or even general account of Nebuchadnezzar's wars.
+Our chief, our almost sole, information concerning them is derived from
+the Jewish writers. Consequently, those wars only which interested these
+writers, in other words those whose scene is Palestine or its immediate
+vicinity, admit of being placed before the reader. If Nebuchadnezzar had
+quarrels with the Persians, or the Arabians, or the Medes, or the tribes
+in Mount Zagros, as is not improbable, nothing is now known of their
+course or issue. Until some historical document belonging to his time
+shall be discovered, we must be content with a very partial knowledge
+of the external history of Babylon during his reign. We have a tolerably
+full account of his campaigns against the Jews, and some information
+as to the general course of the wars which he carried on with Egypt and
+Phoenicia; but beyond these narrow limits we know nothing.
+
+It appears to have been only a few years after Nebuchadnezzar's
+triumphant campaign against Neco that renewed troubles broke out in
+Syria. Phoenicia revolted under the leadership of Tyre; and about the
+same time Jehoiakim, the Jewish king, having obtained a promise of aid
+from the Egyptians, renounced his allegiance. Upon this, in his seventh
+year (B.C. 598), Nebuchadnezzar proceeded once more into Palestine
+at the head of a vast army, composed partly of his allies, the Medes,
+partly of his own subjects. He first invested Tyre; but, finding that
+city too strong to be taken by assault, he left a portion of his army to
+continue the siege, while he himself pressed forward against Jerusalem.
+On his near approach, Jehoiakim, seeing that the Egyptians did not care
+to come to his aid, made his submission; but Nebuchadnezzar punished his
+rebellion with death, and, departing from the common Oriental practice,
+had his dead body treated with indignity. At first he placed upon the
+throne Jehoia-chin, the son of the late monarch, a youth of eighteen;
+but three months later, becoming suspicious (probably not without
+reason) of this prince's fidelity, he deposed him and had him brought
+a captive to Babylon, substituting in his place his uncle, Zedekiah,
+a brother of Jehoiakim and Jehoahaz. Meanwhile the siege of Tyre was
+pressed, but with little effect. A blockade is always tedious; and the
+blockade of an island city, strong in its navy, by an enemy unaccustomed
+to the sea, and therefore forced to depend mainly upon the assistance of
+reluctant allies, must have been a task of such extreme difficulty that
+one is surprised it was not given up in despair. According to the Tyrian
+historians their city resisted all the power of Nebuchadnezzar for
+thirteen years. If this statement is to be relied on, Tyre must have
+been still uncaptured, when the time came for its sister capital to make
+that last effort for freedom in which it perished.
+
+After receiving his crown from Nebuchadnezzar, Zedekiah continued for
+eight years to play the part of a faithful vassal. At length, however,
+in the ninth year, he fancied he saw a way to independence. A young and
+enterprising monarch, Uaphris--the Apries of Herodotus--had recently
+mounted the Egyptian throne. If the alliance of this prince could be
+secured, there was, Zedekiah thought, a reasonable hope that the yoke
+of Babylon might be thrown off and Hebrew autonomy re-established. The
+infatuated monarch did not see that, do what he would, his country
+had no more than a choice of masters, that by the laws of political
+attraction Judaea must gravitate to one or other of the two great
+states between which it had the misfortune of lying. Hoping to free his
+country, he sent ambassadors to Uaphris, who were to conclude a treaty
+and demand the assistance of a powerful contingent, composed of both
+foot and horse. Uaphris received the overture favorably; and Zedekiah at
+once revolted from Babylon, and made preparations to defend himself with
+vigor. It was not long before the Babylonians arrived. Determined to
+crush the daring state, which, weak as it was, had yet ventured to
+revolt against him now for the fourth time, Nebuchadnezzar came in
+person, "he and all his host," against Jerusalem, and after overcoming
+and pillaging the open country, "built forts" and besieged the city.
+Uaphris, upon this, learning the danger of his ally, marched out of
+Egypt to his relief; and the Babylonian army, receiving intelligence
+of his approach, raised the siege and proceeded in quest of their new
+enemy. According to Josephus a battle was fought, in which the Egyptians
+were defeated; but it is perhaps more probable that they avoided an
+engagement by a precipitate retreat into their own country. At any
+rate the attempt effectually to relieve Jerusalem failed. After a brief
+interval the siege was renewed; a complete blockade was established; and
+in a year and a half from the time of the second investment, the city
+fell.
+
+Nebuchadnezzar had not waited to witness this success of his arms.
+The siege of Tyre was still being pressed at the date of the second
+investment of Jerusalem, and the Chaldaean monarch had perhaps thought
+that his presence on the borders of Phoenicia was necessary to animate
+his troops in that quarter. If this was his motive in withdrawing from
+the Jewish capital, the event would seem to have shown that he judged
+wisely. Tyre, if it fell at the end of its thirteen years' siege,
+must have been taken in the very year which followed the capture of
+Jerusalem, B.C. 585. We may suppose that Nebuchadnezzar, when he quitted
+Jerusalem and took up his abode at Eiblah in the Coele-Syrian valley,
+turned his main attention to the great Phoenician city, and made
+arrangements which caused its capture in the ensuing year.
+
+The recovery of these two important cities secured to the Babylonian
+monarch the quiet possession thenceforth of Syria and Palestine. But
+still he had not as yet inflicted any chastisement upon Egypt; though
+policy, no less than honor, required that the aggressions of this
+audacious power should be punished. If we may believe Josephus, however,
+the day of vengeance was not very long delayed. Within four years of the
+fall of Tyre, B.C. 581, Nebuchadnezzar, he tells us, invaded Egypt, put
+Uaphris, the monarch who had succored Zedekiah, to death, and placed
+a creature of his own upon the throne. Egyptian history, it is true,
+forbids our accepting this statement as correct in all its particulars.
+Uaphris appears certainly to have reigned at least as late as B.C.
+569, and according to Herodotus, he was put to death, not by a foreign
+invader, but by a rebellious subject. Perhaps we may best harmonize the
+conflicting statements on the subject by supposing that Josephus has
+confounded two distinct invasions of Egypt, one made by Nebuchadnezzar
+in his twenty-third year, B.C. 581, which had no very important
+consequences, and the other eleven years later, B.C. 570, which
+terminated in the deposition of Uaphris, and the establishment on
+the throne of a new king, Amasis, who received a nominal royalty from
+Chaldaean monarch.
+
+Such--as far as they are known--were the military exploits of this great
+king. He defeated Neco, recovered Syria, crushed rebellion in Judaea,
+took Tyre, and humiliated Egypt. According to some writers his successes
+did not stop here. Megasthenes made him subdue most of Africa, and
+thence pass over into Spain and conquer the Iberians. He even went
+further, and declared that, on his return from these regions, he settled
+his Iberian captives on the shores of the Euxine in the country between
+Armenia and the Caucasus! Thus Nebuchadnezzar was made to reign over an
+empire extending from the Atlantic to the Caspian, and from the Caucasus
+to the Great Sahara.
+
+The victories of Nebuchadnezzar were not without an effect on his home
+administration and on the construction of the vast works with which his
+name is inseparably associated. It was through them that he obtained
+that enormous command of "naked human strength" which enabled him,
+without undue oppression of his own people, to carry out on the grandest
+scale his schemes for at once beautifying and benefiting his kingdom.
+From the time when he first took the field at the head of an army
+he adopted the Assyrian system of forcibly removing almost the whole
+population of a conquered country, and planting it in a distant part
+of his dominions. Crowds of captives--the produce of his various
+wars--Jews, Egyptians, Phoenicians, Syrians, Ammonites, Moabites, were
+settled in various parts of Mesopotamia, more especially about Babylon.
+From these unfortunates forced labor was as a matter of course required;
+and it seems to have been chiefly, if not solely, by their exertions
+that the magnificent series of great works was accomplished, which
+formed the special glory of the Fourth Monarchy.
+
+The chief works expressly ascribed to Nebuchadnezzar by the ancient
+writers are the following: He built the great wall of Babylon, which,
+according to the lowest estimate, must have contained more than
+500,000,000 square feet of solid masonry, and must have required
+three or four times that number of bricks. He constructed a new and
+magnificent palace in the neighborhood of the ancient residence of the
+kings. He made the celebrated "Hanging Garden" for the gratification of
+his wife, Amyitis. He repaired and beautified the great temple of Belus
+at Babylon. He dug the huge reservoir near Sippara, said to have been
+140 miles in circumference, and 180 feet deep, furnishing it with
+flood-gates, through which its water could be drawn off for purposes
+of irrigation. He constructed a number of canals, among them the Nahr
+Malcha or "Royal River," a broad and deep channel which connected the
+Euphrates with the Tigris. He built quays and breakwaters along the
+shores of the Persian Gulf, and he at the same time founded the city of
+Diridotis or Teredon in the vicinity of that sea.
+
+To these constructions may be added, on the authority either of
+Nebuchadnezzar's own inscriptions or of the existing remains, the
+Birs-i-Nimrud, or great temple of Nebo at Bor-sippa; a vast reservoir
+in Babylon itself, called the Yapur-Shapu; an extensive embankment along
+the course of the Tigris, near Baghdad; and almost innumerable temples,
+walls, and other public buildings at Cutha, Sippara, Borsippa, Babylon,
+Chilmad, Bit-Digla, etc. The indefatigable monarch seems to have either
+rebuilt, or at least repaired, almost every city and temple throughout
+the entire country. There are said to be at least a hundred sites in
+the tract immediately about Babylon, which give evidence, by inscribed
+bricks bearing his legend, of the marvellous activity and energy of this
+king.
+
+We may suspect that among the constructions of Nebuchadnezzar was
+another great work, a work second in utility to none of those above
+mentioned, and requiring for its completion an enormous amount of labor.
+This is the canal called by the Arabs the _Kerek Saideh_, or canal of
+Saideh, which they ascribe to a wife of Nebuchadnezzar, a cutting
+400 miles in length, which commenced at Hit on the Euphrates, and was
+carried along the extreme western edge of the alluvium close to the
+Arabian frontier, finally falling into the sea at the head of the Bubian
+creek, about twenty miles to the west of the Shat el-Arab. The traces
+of this canal which still remain indicate a work of such magnitude
+and difficulty that we can scarcely ascribe it with probability to any
+monarch who has held the country since Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+The Pallacopas, or canal of Opa (Palga Opa), which left the Euphrates
+at Sippara (Mosaib) and ran into a great lake in the neighborhood of
+Borsippa, whence the lands in the neighborhood were irrigated, may also
+have been one of Nebuchadnezzar's constructions. It was an old canal,
+much out of repair, in the time of Alexander, and was certainly the
+work, not of the Persian conquerors, but of some native monarch anterior
+to Cyrus. The Arabs, who call it the Nahr Abba, regard it as the oldest
+canal in the country.
+
+Some glimpses into the private life and personal character of
+Nebuchadnezzar are afforded us by certain of the Old Testament writers.
+We see him in the Book of Daniel at the head of a magnificent Court,
+surrounded by "princes, governors, and captains, judges, treasurers,
+councillors, and sheriffs;" waited on by eunuchs selected with the
+greatest care, "well-favored" and carefully educated; attended, whenever
+he requires it, by a multitude of astrologers and other "wise men," who
+seek to interpret to him the will of Heaven. He is an absolute monarch,
+disposing with a word of the lives and properties of his subjects, even
+the highest. All offices are in his gift. He can raise a foreigner
+to the second place in the kingdom, and even set him over the entire
+priestly order. His wealth is enormous, for he makes of pure gold an
+image, or obelisk, ninety feet high and nine feet broad. He is religious
+after a sort, but wavers in his faith, sometimes acknowledging the
+God of the Jews as the only real deity, sometimes relapsing into an
+idolatrous worship, and forcing all his subjects to follow his example.
+Even then, however, his polytheism is of a kind which admits of a
+special devotion to a particular deity, who is called emphatically "his
+god." In temper he is hasty and violent, but not obstinate; his fierce
+resolves are taken suddenly and as suddenly repented of; he is moreover
+capable of bursts of gratitude and devotion, no less than of accesses of
+fury; like most Orientals, he is vainglorious but he can humble himself
+before the chastening hand of the Almighty; in his better moods he shows
+a spirit astonishing in one of his country and time--a spirit of real
+piety, self-condemnation, and self-abasement, which renders him one of
+the most remarkable characters in Scripture.
+
+A few touches of a darker hue must be added to this portrait of the
+great Babylonian king from the statements of another contemporary, the
+prophet Jeremiah. The execution of Jehoi-akim, and the putting out of
+Zedekiah's eyes, though acts of considerable severity, may perhaps be
+regarded as justified by the general practice of the age, and therefore
+as not indicating in Nebuchadnezzar any special ferocity of disposition.
+But the ill-treatment of Jehoiakim's dead body, the barbarity
+of murdering Zedekiah's sons before his eyes, and the prolonged
+imprisonment both of Zedekiah and of Jehoiachin, though the latter had
+only contemplated rebellion, cannot be thus excused. They were unusual
+and unnecessary acts, which tell against the monarch who authorized
+them, and must be considered to imply a real cruelty of disposition,
+such as is observable in Sargon and Asshur-bani-pal. Nebuchadnezzar, it
+is plain, was not content with such a measure of severity as was
+needed to secure his own interests, but took a pleasure in the wanton
+infliction of suffering on those who had provoked his resentment.
+
+On the other hand, we obtain from the native writer, Berosus, one
+amiable trait which deserves a cursory mention. Nebuchadnezzar was
+fondly attached to the Median princess who had been chosen for him as
+a wife by his father from political motives. Not content with ordinary
+tokens of affection, he erected, solely for her gratification, the
+remarkable structure which the Greeks called the "Hanging Garden."
+A native of a mountainous country, Amyitis disliked the tiresome
+uniformity of the level alluvium, and pined for the woods and hills
+of Media. It was to satisfy this longing by the best substitute which
+circumstances allowed that the celebrated Garden was made. Art strove
+to emulate nature with a certain measure of success, and the lofty rocks
+and various trees of this wonderful Paradise, if they were not a very
+close imitation of Median mountain scenery, were at any rate a pleasant
+change from the natural monotony of the Babylonian plain, and must have
+formed a grateful retreat for the Babylonian queen, whom they reminded
+at once of her husband's love and of the beauty of her native country.
+
+The most remarkable circumstance in Nebuchadnezzar's life remains to be
+noticed. Towards the close of his reign, when his conquests and probably
+most of his great works were completed, in the midst of complete
+tranquillity and prosperity, a sudden warning was sent him. He dreamt
+a strange dream, and when he sought to know its meaning, the Prophet
+Daniel was inspired to tell him that it portended his removal from the
+kingly office for the space of seven years, in consequence of a curious
+and very unusual kind of madness. This malady, which is not unknown to
+physicians, has been termed "Lycanthropy." It consists in the belief
+that one is not a man but a beast, in the disuse of language, the
+rejection of all ordinary human food, and sometimes in the loss of the
+erect posture and a preference for walking on all fours. Within a year
+of the time that he received the warning, Nebuchadnezzar was smitten.
+The great king became a wretched maniac. Allowed to indulge in his
+distempered fancy, he eschewed human habitations, lived in the open air
+night and day, fed on herbs, disused clothing, and became covered with
+a rough coat of hair. His subjects generally, it is probable, were not
+allowed to know of his condition, although they could not but be aware
+that he was suffering from some terrible malady. The queen most likely
+held the reins of power, and carried on the government in his name. The
+dream had been interpreted to mean that the lycanthropy would not be
+permanent; and even the date of recovery had been announced, only with
+a certain ambiguity. The Babylonians were thereby encouraged to await
+events, without taking any steps that would have involved them in
+difficulties if the malady ceased. And their faith and patience met
+with a reward. After suffering obscuration for the space of seven years,
+suddenly the king's intellect returned to him. His recovery was received
+with joy by his Court. Lords and councillors gathered about him. He once
+more took the government into his own hands, issued his proclamations,
+and performed the other functions of royalty. He was now an old man, and
+his reign does not seem to have been much prolonged; but "the glory of
+his kingdon," his "honor and brightness" returned; his last days were as
+brilliant as his first: his sun set in an unclouded sky, shorn of none
+of the rays that had given splendor to its noonday. Nebuchadnezzar
+expired at Babylon in the forty-fourth year of his reign, B.C. 561,
+after an illness of no long duration. He was probably little short of
+eighty years old at his death.
+
+The successor of Nebuchadnezzar was his son Evil-Mero-dach, who reigned
+only two years, and of whom very little is known. We may expect that the
+marvellous events of his father's life, which are recorded in the Book
+of Daniel, had made a deep impression upon him, and that he was thence
+inclined to favor the persons, and perhaps the religion, of the Jews.
+One of his first acts was to release the unfortunate Jehoiachin from the
+imprisonment in which he had languished for thirty-five years, and to
+treat him with kindness and respect. He not only recognized his royal
+rank, but gave him precedence over all the captive kings resident at
+Babylon. Josephus says that he even admitted Jehoiachin into the number
+of his most intimate friends. Perhaps he may have designed him some
+further advancement, and may in other respects have entertained projects
+which seemed strange and alarming to his subjects. At any rate he had
+been but two years upon the throne when a conspiracy was formed
+against him; he was accused of lawlessness and intemperance; his
+own brother-in-law, Neriglissar, the husband of a daughter of
+Nebuchadnezzar, headed the malcontents; and Evil-Merodach lost his life
+with his crown.
+
+Neriglissar, the successful conspirator, was at once acknowledged
+king. He is probably identical with the "Nergal-shar-ezer, Rab-Mag," of
+Jeremiah, who occupied a prominent position among the Babylonian nobles
+left to press the siege of Jerusalem when Nebuchadnezzar retired to
+Riblah. The title of "Rab-Mag," is one that he bears upon his bricks.
+It is doubtful what exactly his office was; for we have no reason to
+believe that there were at this time any Magi at Babylon; but it was
+certainly an ancient and very high dignity of which even kings might
+be proud. It is remarkable that Neriglissar calls himself the son of
+Bel-sum-iskun, "king of Babylon"--a monarch whose name does not appear
+in Ptolemy's list, but who is probably to be identified with a chieftain
+so called, who assumed the royal title in the troubles which preceded
+the fall of the Assyrian Empire.
+
+During his short reign of four years, or rather three years and a
+few months, Neriglissar had not time to distinguish himself by many
+exploits. So far as appears, he was at peace with all his neighbors, and
+employed his time principally in the construction of the Western
+Palace at Babylon, which was a large building placed at one corner of a
+fortified inclosure, directly opposite the ancient royal residence, and
+abutting on the Euphrates. If the account which Diodorus gives of this
+palace be not a gross exaggeration of the truth, it must have been a
+magnificent erection, elaborately ornamented with painting and sculpture
+in the best style of Babylonian art, though in size it may have been
+inferior to the old residence of the kings on the other side of the
+river.
+
+Neriglissar reigned from B.C. 559 to B.C. 556, and dying a natural death
+in the last-named year, left his throne to his son, Laborosoarchod,
+or Labossoracus. This prince, who was a mere boy, and therefore quite
+unequal to the task of governing a great empire in critical times, was
+not allowed to retain the crown many months. Accused by those
+about him--whether justly or unjustly we cannot say--of giving many
+indications of a bad disposition, he was deposed and put to death by
+torture. With him power passed from the House of Nabopolassar, which had
+held the throne for just seventy years.
+
+On the death of Laborosoarchod the conspirators selected one of their
+number, a certain Nabonadius or Nabannidochus, and invested him with the
+sovereignty. He was in no way related to the late monarch, and his claim
+to succeed must have been derived mainly from the part which he had
+played in the conspiracy. But still he was a personage of some rank, for
+his father had, like Neriglissar, held the important office of Rab Mag.
+It is probable that one of his first steps on ascending the throne was
+to connect himself by marriage with the royal house which had preceded
+him in the kingdom. Either the mother of the late king Laborosoarchod,
+and widow of Neriglissar, or possibly some other daughter of
+Nebuchadnezzar, was found willing to unite her fortune with those of the
+new sovereign, and share the dangers and the dignity of his position.
+Such a union strengthened the hold of the reigning monarch on the
+allegiance of his subjects, and tended still more to add stability to
+his dynasty. For as the issue of such a marriage would join in one the
+claims of both royal houses, he would be sure to receive the support of
+all parties in the state. Very shortly after the accession of Nabonadius
+(B.C. 555) he received an embassy from the far north-west. An important
+revolution had occurred on the eastern frontier of Babylonia three years
+before, in the reign of Neriglissar; but its effects only now began to
+make themselves felt among the neighboring nations. Had Cyrus, on taking
+the crown, adopted the policy of Astyages, the substitution of Persia
+for Media as the ruling Arian nation would have been a matter of small
+account. But there can be little doubt that he really entered at once
+on a career of conquest, Lydia, at any rate, felt herself menaced by the
+new power, and seeing the danger which threatened the other monarchies
+of the time, if they allowed the great Arian kingdom to attack them
+severally with her full force, proposed a league whereby the common
+enemy might, she thought, be resisted with success. Ambassadors seem
+to have been sent from Sardis to Babylon in the very year in which
+Nabonadius became king. He therefore had at once to decide whether he
+would embrace the offer made him, and uniting with Lydia and Egypt in
+a league against Persia, make that power his enemy, or refuse the
+proffered alliance and trust to the gratitude of Cyrus for the future
+security of his kingdom. It would be easy to imagine the arguments pro
+and contra which presented themselves to his mind at this conjuncture;
+but as they would be destitute of a historical foundation, it is perhaps
+best to state simply the decision at which he is known to have arrived.
+This was an acceptance of the Lydian offer. Nabonadius consented to join
+the proposed league; and a treaty was probably soon afterwards concluded
+between the three powers whereby they united in an alliance offensive
+and defensive against the Persians.
+
+Knowing that he had provoked a powerful enemy by this bold act, and
+ignorant how soon he might be called upon to defend his kingdom, from
+the entire force of his foe, which might be suddenly hurled against him
+almost at any moment, Nabonadius seems to have turned his attention at
+once to providing means of defence. The works ascribed by Herodotus to a
+queen, Nitocris, whom he makes the mother of Nabonadius (Labynetus)
+must be regarded as in reality constructions of that monarch himself,
+undertaken with the object of protecting Babylon from Cyrus. They
+consisted in part of defences within the city, designed apparently to
+secure it against an enemy who should enter by the river, in part of
+hydraulic works intended to obstruct the advances of an army by the
+usual route. The river had hitherto flowed in its natural bed through
+the middle of the town. Nabonadius confined the stream by a brick
+embankment carried the whole way along both banks, after which he built
+on the top of the embankment a wall of a considerable height, pierced
+at intervals by gateways, in which were set gates of bronze. He likewise
+made certain cuttings, reservoirs, and sluices at some distance from
+Babylon towards the north, which were to be hindrances to an enemy's
+march, though in what way is not very apparent. Some have supposed that
+besides these works there was further built at the same time a great
+wall which extended entirely across the tract between the two rivers--a
+huge barrier a hundred feet high and twenty thick--meant, like the Roman
+walls in Britain and the great wall of China, to be insurmountable by an
+unskillful foe; but there is ground for suspecting that this belief is
+ill-founded, having for its sole basis a misconception of Xenophon's.
+
+Nabonadius appears to have been allowed ample time to carry out to the
+full his system of defences, and to complete all his preparations.
+The precipitancy of Croesus, who plunged into a war with Persia
+single-handed, asking no aid from his allies, and the promptitude of
+Cyrus, who allowed him no opportunity of recovering from his first false
+step, had prevented Nabonadius from coming into actual collision with
+Persia in the early part of his reign. The defeat of Croesus in the
+battle of Pteria, the siege of Sardis, and its capture, followed so
+rapidly on the first commencement of hostilities, that whatever his
+wishes may have been, Nabonadius had it not in his power to give any
+help to his rash ally. Actual war was thus avoided at this time; and
+no collision having occurred, Cyrus could defer an attack on the great
+kingdom of the south until he had consolidated his power in the north
+and the northeast, which he rightly regarded as of the last importance.
+Thus fourteen years intervened between the capture of Sardis by the
+Persian arms and the commencement of the expedition against Babylon.
+
+When at last it was rumored that the Persian king had quitted Ecbatana
+(B.C. 539) and commenced his march to the south-west, Nabonadius
+received the tidings with indifference. His defences were completed: his
+city was amply provisioned; if the enemy should defeat him in the open
+field, he might retire behind his walls, and laugh to scorn all attempts
+to reduce his capital either by blockade or storm. It does not appear to
+have occurred to him that it was possible to protect his territory. With
+a broad, deep, and rapid river directly interposed between him and his
+foe, with a network of canals spread far and wide over his country, with
+an almost inexhaustible supply of human labor at his command for
+the construction of such dikes, walls, or cuttings as he should deem
+advisable, Nabonadius might, one would have thought, have aspired to
+save his land from invasion, or have disputed inch by inch his enemy's
+advance towards the capital. But such considerations have seldom had
+much force with Orientals, whose notions of war and strategy are even
+now of the rudest and most primitive description. To measure one's
+strength as quickly as possible with that of one's foe, to fight one
+great pitched battle in order to decide the question of superiority
+in the field, and then, if defeated, either to surrender or to retire
+behind walls, has been the ordinary conception of a commander's duties
+in the East from the time of the Ramesside kings to our own day. No
+special blame therefore attaches to Nabonadius for his neglect. He
+followed the traditional policy of Oriental monarchs in the course which
+he took. And his subjects had less reason to complain of his resolution
+than most others, since the many strongholds in Babylonia must have
+afforded them a ready refuge, and the great fortified district within
+which Babylon itself stood must have been capable of accommodating with
+ease the whole native population of the country.
+
+If we may trust Herodotus, the invader, having made all his preparations
+and commenced his march, came to a sudden pause midway between Ecbatana
+and Babylon. One of the sacred white horses, which drew the chariot of
+Ormazd, had been drowned in crossing a river; and Cyrus had thereupon
+desisted from his march, and, declaring that he would revenge himself
+on the insolent stream, had set his soldiers to disperse its waters into
+360 channels. This work employed him during the whole summer and autumn;
+nor was it till another spring had come that he resumed his expedition.
+To the Babylonians such a pause must have appeared like irresolution.
+They must have suspected that the invader had changed his mind and would
+not venture across the Tigris. If the particulars of the story reached
+them, they probably laughed at the monarch who vented his rage on
+inanimate nature, while he let his enemies escape scot free.
+
+Cyrus, however, had a motive for his proceedings which will appear
+in the sequel. Having wintered on the banks of the Gyndes in a mild
+climate, where tents would have been quite a sufficient protection to
+his army, he put his troops in motion at the commencement of spring,
+crossed the Tigris apparently unopposed, and soon came in sight of the
+capital. Here he found the Babylonian army drawn out to meet him under
+the command of Nabonadius himself, who had resolved to try the chance
+of a battle. An engagement ensued, of which we possess no details; our
+informants simply tell us that the Babylonian monarch was completely
+defeated, and that, while most of his army sought safety within the
+walls of the capital, he himself with a small body of troops threw
+himself into Borsippa, an important town lying at a short distance from
+Babylon towards the south-west. It is not easy to see the exact object
+of this movement. Perhaps Nabonadius thought that the enemy would
+thereby be obliged to divide his army, which might then more easily be
+defeated; perhaps he imagined that by remaining without the walls he
+might be able to collect such a force among his subjects and allies as
+would compel the beleaguering army to withdraw. Or, possibly, he merely
+followed an instinct of self-preservation, and fearing that the soldiers
+of Cyrus might enter Babylon with his own, if he fled thither, sought
+refuge in another city.
+
+It might have been supposed that his absence would have produced anarchy
+and confusion in the capital; but a step which he had recently
+taken with the object of giving stability to his throne rendered
+the preservation of order tolerably easy. At the earliest possible
+moment--probably when he was about fourteen--he had associated with him
+in the government his son, Belshazzar, or Bel-shar-uzur, the grandson
+of the great Nebuchadnezzar. This step, taken most likely with a view to
+none but internal dangers, was now found exceedingly convenient for
+the purposes of the war. In his father's absence Belshazzar took
+the direction of affairs within the city, and met and foiled for a
+considerable time all the assaults of the Persians. He was young and
+inexperienced, but he had the counsels of the queen-mother to guide and
+support him, as well as those of the various lords and officers of
+the court. So well did he manage the defence that after a while Cyrus
+despaired, and as a last resource ventured on a stratagem in which it
+was clear that he must either succeed or perish.
+
+Withdrawing the greater part of his army from the vicinity of the city,
+and leaving behind him only certain corps of observation, Cyrus marched
+away up the course of the Euphrates for a certain distance, and there
+proceeded to make a vigorous use of the spade. His soldiers could
+now appreciate the value of the experience which they had gained by
+dispersing the Gyndes, and perceive that the summer and autumn of the
+preceding year had not been wasted. They dug a channel or channels from
+the Euphrates, by means of which a great portion of its water would be
+drawn off, and hoped in this way to render the natural course of the
+river fordable.
+
+When all was prepared, Cyrus determined to wait for the arrival of a
+certain festival, during which the whole population were wont to engage
+in drinking and revelling, and then silently in the dead of night to
+turn the water of the river and make his attack. It fell out as he hoped
+and wished. The festival was held with even greater pomp and splendor
+than usual; for Belshazzar, with the natural insolence of youth, to
+mark his contempt of the besieging army, abandoned himself wholly to the
+delights of the season, and himself entertained a thousand lords in his
+palace. Elsewhere the rest of the population was occupied in feasting
+and dancing. Drunken riot and mad excitement held possession of the
+town; the siege was forgotten; ordinary precautions were neglected.
+Following the example of their king, the Babylonians gave themselves
+up for the night to orgies in which religious frenzy and drunken excess
+formed a strange and revolting medley.
+
+Meanwhile, outside the city, in silence and darkness, the Persians
+watched at the two points where the Euphrates entered and left the
+walls. Anxiously they noted the gradual sinking of the water in the
+river-bed; still more anxiously they watched to see if those within
+the walls would observe the suspicious circumstance and sound an alarm
+through the town. Should such an alarm be given, all their labors would
+be lost. If, when they entered the river-bed, they found the river-walls
+manned and the river-gates fast-locked, they would be indeed "caught in
+a trap." Enfiladed on both sides by an enemy whom they could neither
+see nor reach, they would be overwhelmed and destroyed by his missiles
+before they could succeed in making their escape. But, as they watched,
+no sounds of alarm reached them--only a confused noise of revel and
+riot, which showed that the unhappy townsmen were quite unconscious of
+the approach of danger.
+
+At last shadowy forms began to emerge from the obscurity of the deep
+river-bed, and on the landing-places opposite the river-gates scattered
+clusters of men grew into solid columns--the undefended gateways were
+seized--a war-shout was raised--the alarm was taken and spread--and
+swift runners started off to "show the King of Babylon that his city was
+taken at one end." In the darkness and confusion of the night a terrible
+massacre ensued. The drunken revellers could make no resistance. The
+king paralyzed with fear at the awful handwriting upon the wall, which
+too late had warned him of his peril, could do nothing even to check
+the progress of the assailants, who carried all before them everywhere.
+Bursting into the palace, a band of Persians made their way to the
+presence of the monarch, and slew him on the scene of his impious
+revelry. Other bands carried fire and sword through the town. When
+morning came, Cyrus found himself undisputed master of the city, which,
+if it had not despised his efforts, might with the greatest ease have
+baffled them.
+
+The war, however, was not even yet at an end. Nabonadius still held
+Borsippa, and, if allowed to remain unmolested, might have gradually
+gathered strength and become once more a formidable foe. Cyrus,
+therefore, having first issued his orders that the outer fortifications
+of Babylon should be dismantled, proceeded to complete his conquest by
+laying siege to the town where he knew that Nabonadius had taken refuge.
+That monarch, however, perceiving that resistance would be vain, did
+not wait till Borsippa was invested, but on the approach of his enemy
+surrendered himself. Cyrus rewarded his submission by kind and liberal
+treatment. Not only did he spare his life, but (if we may trust
+Abydenus) he conferred on him the government of the important province
+of Carmania.
+
+Thus perished the Babylonian empire. If we seek the causes of its fall,
+we shall find them partly in its essential military inferiority to
+the kingdom that had recently grown up upon its borders, partly in the
+accidental circumstance that its ruler at the time of the Persian attack
+was a man of no great capacity. Had Nebuchadnezzar himself, or a prince
+of his mental calibre, been the contemporary of Cyrus, the issue of the
+contest might have been doubtful. Babylonia possessed naturally vast
+powers of resistance--powers which, had they been made use of to the
+utmost, might have tired out the patience of the Persians. That lively,
+active, but not over-persevering people would scarcely have maintained
+a siege with the pertinacity of the Babylonians themselves or of
+the Egyptians. If the stratagem of Cyrus had failed--and its success
+depended wholly on the Babylonians exercising no vigilance--the capture
+of the town would have been almost impossible. Babylon was too large to
+be blockaded; its walls were too lofty to be scaled, and too massive to
+be battered down by the means possessed by the ancients. Mining in the
+soft alluvial soil would have been dangerous work, especially as the
+town ditch was deep and supplied with abundant water from the Euphrates.
+Cyrus, had he failed in his night attack, would probably have at once
+raised the siege; and Babylonian independence might perhaps in that case
+have been maintained down to the time of Alexander.
+
+Even thus, however, the "Empire" would not have been continued. So soon
+as it became evident that the Babylonians were no match for the Persians
+in the field, their authority over the subject nations was at an end.
+The Susianians, the tribes of the middle Euphrates, the Syrians, the
+Phoenicians, the Jews, the Idumseans, the Ammonites and Moabites, would
+have gravitated to the stronger power, even if the attack of Cyrus on
+Babylon itself had been repulsed. For the conquests of Cyrus in Asia
+Minor, the Oxus region, and Afghanistan, had completely destroyed the
+balance of power in Western Asia, and given to Persia a preponderance
+both in men and in resources against which the cleverest and most
+energetic of Babylonian princes would have struggled in vain. Persia
+must in any case have absorbed all the tract between Mount Zagros and
+the Mediterranean, except Babylonia Proper; and thus the successful
+defence of Babylon would merely have deprived the Persian Empire of a
+province.
+
+In its general character the Babylonian Empire was little more than
+a reproduction of the Assyrian. The same loose organization of the
+provinces under native kings rather than satraps almost universally
+prevailed, with the same duties on the part of suzerain and subjects and
+the same results of ever-recurring revolt and re-conquest. Similar
+means were employed under both empires to check and discourage
+rebellion--mutilations and executions of chiefs, pillage of the
+rebellious region, and wholesale deportation of its population. Babylon,
+equally with Assyria, failed to win the affections of the subject
+nations, and, as a natural result, received no help from them in her
+hour of need. Her system was to exhaust and oppress the conquered
+races for the supposed benefit of the conquerors, and to impoverish the
+provinces for the adornment and enrichment of the capital. The wisest of
+her monarch's thought it enough to construct works of public utility
+in Babylonia Proper, leaving the dependent countries to themselves, and
+doing nothing to develop their resources. This selfish system was, like
+most selfishness, short-sighted; it alienated those whom it would have
+been true policy to conciliate and win. When the time of peril came, the
+subject nations were no source of strength to the menaced empire, On
+the contrary, it would seem that some even turned against her and made
+common cause with the assailants.
+
+Babylonian civilization differed in many respects from Assyrian, to
+which however it approached more nearly than to any other known type.
+Its advantages over Assyrian were in its greater originality, its
+superior literary character, and its comparative width and flexibility.
+Babylonia seems to have been the source from which Assyria drew her
+learning, such as it was, her architecture, the main ideas of her
+mimetic art, her religious notions, her legal forms, and a vast number
+of her customs and usages. But Babylonia herself, so far as we know,
+drew her stores from no foreign country. Hers was apparently the genius
+which excogitated an alphabet--worked out the simpler problems
+of arithmetic--invented implements for measuring the lapse of
+time--conceived the idea of raising enormous structures with the poorest
+of all materials, clay--discovered the art of polishing, boring, and
+engraving gems--reproduced with truthfulness the outlines of human and
+animal forms--attained to high perfection in textile fabrics--studied
+with success the motions of the heavenly bodies--conceived of grammar
+as a science--elaborated a system of law--saw the value of an exact
+chronology--in almost every branch of science made a beginning, thus
+rendering it comparatively easy for other nations to proceed with the
+superstructure. To Babylonia, far more than to Egypt, we owe the art
+and learning of the Greeks. It was from the East, not from Egypt,
+that Greece derived her architecture, her sculpture, her science, her
+philosophy, her mathematical knowledge--in a word, her intellectual
+life. And Babylon was the source to which the entire stream of Eastern
+civilization may be traced. It is scarcely too much to say that, but
+for Babylon, real civilization might not even yet have dawned upon the
+earth. Mankind might never have advanced beyond that spurious and
+false form of it which in Egypt, India, China, Japan, Mexico, and Peru,
+contented the aspirations of the species.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+
+
+
+A. STANDARD INSCRIPTION OF NEBUCHADNEZZAR.
+
+
+The Inscription begins with the various titles of Nebuchadnezzar. It
+then contains prayers and invocations to the Gods, Merodach and Nebo.
+The extent of N.'s power is spoken of--it reaches from one sea to the
+other.
+
+An account is then given of the wonders of Babylon, viz.:
+
+1. The great temple of Merodach. (The mound of Babil is the tower or
+ziggurat of this.)
+
+2. The Borsippa temple (or Birs).
+
+3. Various other temples in Babylon and Borsippa.
+
+The subjoined description of the city follows: "The double inclosure
+which Nabopolassar my father had made but not completed, I finished.
+Nabopolassar made its ditch. With two long embankments of brick and
+mortar he bound its bed. He made the embankment of the Arahha. He lined
+the other side of the Euphrates with brick. He made a bridge (?) over
+the Euphrates, but did not finish its buttresses (?). From... (the name
+of a place) he made with bricks burnt as hard as stones, by the help
+of the great Lord Merodach, a way (for) a branch of the Shimat to the
+waters of the Yapur-Shapu, the great reservoir of Babylon, opposite to
+the gate of Nin.
+
+"The _Ingur-Bel_ and the _Nimiti-Bel_--the great double wall of
+Babylon--I finished. With two long embankments of brick and mortar I
+built the sides of its ditch. I joined it on with that which my father
+had made. I strengthened the city. Across the river to the west I
+built the wall of Babylon with brick. The Yapur-Shapu-the reservoir of
+Babylon--by the grace of Merodach I filled completely full of water.
+With bricks burnt as hard as stones, and with bricks in huge masses like
+mountains (?), the Yapur-Shapu, from the gate of Mula as far as Nana,
+who is the protectress of her votaries, by the grace of his godship
+(i.e. Merodach) I strengthened. With that which my father had made I
+joined it. I made the way of Nana, the protectress of her votaries.
+The great gates of the Ingur-Bel and the Nimiti-Bel-the reservoir of
+Babylon, at the time of the flood (lit. of fulness), inundated them.
+These gates I raised. Against the waters their foundations with brick
+and mortar I built. [Here follows a description of the gates, with
+various architectural details, an account of the decorations, hangings,
+etc.] For the delight of mankind I filled the reservoir. Behold! besides
+the Ingur-Bel, the impregnable fortification of Babylon. I constructed
+inside Babylon on the eastern side of the river a fortification such
+as no king had ever made before me, viz., a long rampart, 4000 ammas
+square, as an extra defence. I excavated the ditch: with brick and
+mortar I bound its bed; a long rampart at its head (?) I strongly built.
+I adorned its gates. The folding doors and the pillars I plated with
+copper. Against presumptuous enemies, who were hostile to the men of
+Babylon, great waters, like the waters of the ocean, I made use of
+abundantly. Their depths were like the depths of the vast ocean. I did
+not allow the waters to overflow, but the fulness of their floods I
+caused to flow on, restraining them with a brick embankment.... Thus I
+completely made strong the defences of Babylon. May it last forever!"
+
+[Here follows a similar account of works at Borsippa.] "In Babylon--the
+city which is the delight of my eyes, and which I have glorified--when
+the waters were in flood, they inundated the foundations of the great
+palace called Taprati-nisi, or 'the Wonder of Mankind;' (a palace) with
+many chambers and lofty towers; the high-place of Royalty; (situated) in
+the land of Babylon, and in the middle of Babylon; stretching from the
+Ingur-Bel to the bed of the Shebil, the eastern canal, (and) from
+the bank of the Sippara river, to the water of the Yapur-Shapu;
+which Nabopolassar my father built with brick and raised up; when the
+reservoir of Babylon was full, the gates of this palace were flooded.
+I raised the mound of brick on which it was built, and made smooth its
+platform. I cut off the floods of the water, and the foundations (of
+the palace) I protected against the water with bricks and mortar: and I
+finished it completely. Long beams I set up to support it: with pillars
+and beams plated with copper and strengthened with iron I built up its
+gates. Silver and gold, and precious stones whose names were almost
+unknown [here follow several unknown names of objects, treasures of the
+palace], I stored up inside, and placed there the treasure-house of
+my kingdom. Four years (?), the seat of my kingdom in the city...,
+which....did not rejoice (my) heart. In all my dominions I did not build
+a high-place of power; the precious treasures of my kingdom I did not
+lay up. In Babylon, buildings for myself and the honor of my kingdom I
+did not lay out. In the worship of Merodach my lord, the joy of my heart
+(?), in Babylon, the city of his sovereignty and the seat of my empire,
+I did not sing his praises (?), and I did not furnish his altars (i.e.
+with victims), nor did I clear out the canals." [Here follow further
+negative clauses.]
+
+"As a further defence in war, at the Ingur-Bel, the impregnable outer
+wall, the rampart of the Babylonians--with two strong lines of brick and
+mortar I made a strong fort, 400 ammas square inside the Nimiti-Bel,
+the inner defence of the Babylonians. Masonry of brick within them (the
+lines) I constructed. With the palace of my father I connected it. In a
+happy month and on an auspicious day its foundations I laid in the earth
+like.... I completely finished its top. In fifteen days I completed it,
+and made it the high-place of my kingdom. [Here follows a description of
+the ornamentation of the palace.] A strong fort of brick and mortar in
+strength I constructed. Inside the brick fortification another great
+fortification of long stones, of the size of great mountains, I made.
+Like Shedim I raised up its head. And this building I raised for a
+wonder; for the defence of the people I constructed it."
+
+
+
+
+B. ON THE MEANINGS OF BABYLONIAN NAMES.
+
+The names of the Babylonians, like those of the Assyrians, were
+significant. Generally, if not always, they were composed of at least
+two elements. These might be a noun in the nominative case with a verb
+following it, a noun in the nominative with a participle in apposition,
+or a word meaning "servant" followed by the name of a god. Under the
+first class came such names as "Bel-ipni"--"Bel has made (me)"--from Bel,
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 263]
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 264]
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 265]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Seven Great Monarchies Of The
+Ancient Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon, by George Rawlinson
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+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
+ <title>
+ The Seven Great Monarchies, by George Rawlinson, The Fourth Monarchy
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd7; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 2em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 20%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 25%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient
+Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon, by George Rawlinson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon
+ The History, Geography, And Antiquities Of Chaldaea,
+ Assyria, Babylon, Media, Persia, Parthia, And Sassanian
+ or New Persian Empire; With Maps and Illustrations.
+
+Author: George Rawlinson
+
+Illustrator: George Rawlinson
+
+Release Date: July 1, 2005 [EBook #16164]
+Last Updated: September 6, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SEVEN GREAT MONARCHIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE SEVEN GREAT MONARCHIES
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ OF THE ANCIENT EASTERN WORLD; OR, THE HISTORY, GEOGRAPHY, AND ANTIQUITIES
+ OF CHALDAEA, ASSYRIA BABYLON, MEDIA, PERSIA, PARTHIA, AND SASSANIAN, OR
+ NEW PERSIAN EMPIRE. <b> BY </b> <b> GEORGE RAWLINSON, M.A., </b> CAMDEN
+ PROFESSOR OF ANCIENT HISTORY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD IN THREE VOLUMES.
+ VOLUME II. WITH MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;EXTENT OF THE
+ EMPIRE.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CLIMATE
+ AND PRODUCTIONS.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2H_4_0004"> CHAPTER III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ PEOPLE.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2H_4_0005"> CHAPTER IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ CAPITAL.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ARTS
+ AND SCIENCES.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MANNERS
+ AND CUSTOMS.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HISTORY AND
+ CHRONOLOGY.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2H_APPE"> APPENDIX.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2H_4_0011"> A. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;STANDARD INSCRIPTION OF
+ NEBUCHADNEZZAR.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2H_4_0012"> B. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ON
+ THE MEANINGS OF BABYLONIAN NAMES.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ List of Illustrations
+ </h2>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0001"> Map </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0002"> Plate VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0003"> Plate VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0004"> Plate IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0005"> Plate X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0006"> Plate XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0007"> Plate XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0008"> Plate XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0009"> Page 182 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0010"> Plate XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0011"> Plate XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0012"> Plate XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0013"> Plate XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0014"> Plate XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0015"> Plate XIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0016"> Plate XX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0017"> Plate XXI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0018"> Plate XXII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0019"> Plate XXIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0020"> Plate XXIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0021"> Plate XXV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0022"> Page 229 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0023"> Page 237 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0024"> Page 263 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0025"> Page 264 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0026"> Page 265 </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE FOURTH MONARCHY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ BABYLONIA. <br /> <br /> <a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"></a>
+ <br /> <a href="images/map_vol2.jpg">ENLARGE TO FULL SIZE</a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="map_vol2b (129K)" src="images/map_vol2b.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> Click on the Map to enlarge to full size. <a name="link2HCH0001"
+ id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. EXTENT OF THE EMPIRE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Behold, a tree in the midst of the earth, and the height thereof was
+ great; the tree grew and was strong: and the height thereof reached unto
+ heaven, and the sight thereof to the end of all the earth.&rdquo;&mdash;Dan. iy.
+ 10, 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The limits of Babylonia Proper, the tract in which the dominant power of
+ the Fourth Monarchy had its abode, being almost identical with those which
+ have been already described under the head of Chaldaea, will not require
+ in this place to be treated afresh, at any length. It needs only to remind
+ the reader that Babylonia Proper is that alluvial tract towards the mouth
+ of the two great rivers of Western Asia&mdash;the Tigris and the Euphrates&mdash;which
+ intervenes between the Arabian Desert on the one side, and the more
+ eastern of the two streams on the other. Across the Tigris the country is
+ no longer Babylonia, but Cissia, or Susiana&mdash;a distinct region, known
+ to the Jews as Elam&mdash;the habitat of a distinct people. Babylonia lies
+ westward of the Tigris, and consists of two vast plains or flats, one
+ situated between the two rivers, and thus forming the lower portion of the
+ &ldquo;Mesopotamia&rdquo; of the Greeks and Romans&mdash;the other interposed between
+ the Euphrates and Arabia, a long but narrow strip along the right bank of
+ that abounding river. The former of these two districts is shaped like an
+ ancient amphora, the mouth extending from Hit to Samarah, the neck lying
+ between Baghdad and Ctesiphon on the Tigris, Mohammed and Mosaib on the
+ Euphrates, the full expansion of the body occurring between Serut and El
+ Khithr, and the pointed base reaching down to Kornah at the junction of
+ the two streams. This tract, the main region of the ancient Babylonia, is
+ about 320 miles long, and from 20 to 100 broad. It may be estimated to
+ contain about 18,000 square miles. The tract west of the Euphrates is
+ smaller than this. Its length, in the time of the Babylonian Empire, may
+ be regarded as about 350 miles, its average width is from 25 to 30 miles,
+ which would give an area of about 9000 square miles. Thus the Babylonia of
+ Nabopolassar and Nebuchadnezzar may be regarded as covering a space of
+ 27,000 square miles&mdash;a space a little exceeding the area of the Low
+ countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The small province included within these limits&mdash;smaller than
+ Scotland or Ireland, or Portugal or Bavaria&mdash;became suddenly, in the
+ latter half of the seventh century B.C., the mistress of an extensive
+ empire. On the fall of Assyria, about B.C. 625, or a little later, Media
+ and Babylonia, as already observed, divided between them her extensive
+ territory. It is with the acquisitions thus made that we have now to deal.
+ We have to inquire what portion exactly of the previous dominions of
+ Assyria fell to the lot of the adventurous Nabopolassar, when Nineveh
+ ceased to be&mdash;what was the extent of the territory which was ruled
+ from Babylon in the latter portion of the seventh and the earlier portion
+ of the sixth century before our era?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the evidence which we possess on this point is threefold. It consists
+ of certain notices in the Hebrew Scriptures, contemporary records of
+ first-rate historical value; of an account which strangely mingles truth
+ with fable in one of the books of the Apocrypha; and of a passage of
+ Berosus preserved by Josephus in his work against Apion. The Scriptural
+ notices are contained in Jeremiah, in Daniel, and in the books of Kings
+ and Chronicles. From these sources we learn that the Babylonian Empire of
+ this time embraced on the one hand the important country of Susiana or
+ Elymais (Elam), while on the other it ran up the Euphrates at least as
+ high as Carchemish, from thence extending westward to the Mediterranean,
+ and southward to, or rather perhaps into, Egypt. The Apocryphal book of
+ Judith enlarges these limits in every direction. That the Nabuchodonosor
+ of that work is a reminiscence of the real Nebuchadnezzar there can be no
+ doubt. The territories of that monarch are made to extend eastward, beyond
+ Susiana, into Persia; northward to Nineveh; westward to Cilicia in Asia
+ Minor; and southward to the very borders of Ethiopia. Among the countries
+ under his sway are enumerated Elam, Persia, Assyria, Cilicia, Coele-Syria,
+ Syria of Damascus, Phoenicia, Galilee, Gilead, Bashan, Judsea, Philistia,
+ Goshen, and Egypt generally. The passage of Berosus is of a more partial
+ character. It has no bearing on the general question of the extent of the
+ Babylonian Empire, but, incidentally, it confirms the statements of our
+ other authorities as to the influence of Babylon in the West. It tells us
+ that Coele-Syria, Phoenicia, and Egypt, were subject to Nabopolassar, and
+ that Nebuchadnezzar ruled, not only over these countries, but also over
+ some portion of Arabia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From these statements, which, on the whole, are tolerably accordant, we
+ may gather that the great Babylonian Empire of the seventh century B.C.
+ inherited from Assyria all the southern and western portion of her
+ territory, while the more northern and eastern provinces fell to the share
+ of Media. Setting aside the statement of the book of Judith (wholly
+ unconfirmed as it is by any other authority), that Persia was at this time
+ subject to Babylon, we may regard as the most eastern portion of the
+ Empire the district of Susiana, which corresponded nearly with the modern
+ Khuzistan and Luristan. This acquisition advanced the eastern frontier of
+ the Empire from the Tigris to the Bakhtiyari Mountains, a distance of 100
+ or 120 miles. It gave to Babylon an extensive tract of very productive
+ territory, and an excellent strategic boundary. Khuzistan is one of the
+ most valuable provinces of modern Persia. It consists of a broad tract of
+ fertile alluvium, intervening between the Tigris and the mountains, well
+ watered by numerous large streams, which are capable of giving an abundant
+ irrigation to the whole of the low region. Above this is Luristan, a still
+ more pleasant district, composed of alternate mountain, valley, and upland
+ plain, abounding in beautiful glens, richly wooded, and full of gushing
+ brooks and clear rapid rivers. Much of this region is of course
+ uncultivable mountain, range succeeding range, in six or eight parallel
+ lines, as the traveller advances to the north-east; and most of the ranges
+ exhibiting vast tracts of bare and often precipitous rock, in the clefts
+ of which snow rests till midsummer. Still the lower flanks of the
+ mountains are in general cultivable, while the valleys teem with orchards
+ and gardens, and the plains furnish excellent pasture. The region closely
+ resembles Zagros, of which it is a continuation. As we follow it, however,
+ towards the south-east into the Bakhtiyari country, where it adjoins upon
+ the ancient Persia, it deteriorates in character; the mountains becoming
+ barer and more arid, and the valleys narrower and less fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the other acquisitions of Babylonia at this period lay towards the
+ west. They consisted of the Euphrates valley, above Hit; of Mesopotamia
+ Proper, or the country about the two streams of the Bilik and the Khabour;
+ of Syria, Phoenicia, Palestine, Idumasa, Northern Arabia, and part of
+ Egypt. The Euphrates valley from Hit to Balis is a tract of no great
+ value, except as a line of communication. The Mesopotamian Desert presses
+ it closely upon the one side, and the Arabian upon the other. The river
+ flows mostly in a deep bed between cliffs of marl, gypsum, and limestone,
+ or else between bare hills producing only a few dry sapless shrubs and a
+ coarse grass; and there are but rare places where, except by great
+ efforts, the water can be raised so as to irrigate, to any extent, the
+ land along either bank. The course of the stream is fringed by date-palms
+ as high as Anah, and above is dotted occasionally with willows, poplars,
+ sumacs, and the unfruitful palm-tree. Cultivation is possible in places
+ along both banks, and the undulating country on either side affords
+ patches of good pasture. The land improves as we ascend. Above the
+ junction of the Khabour with the main stream, the left bank is mostly
+ cultivable. Much of the land is flat and well-wooded, while often there
+ are broad stretches of open ground, well adapted for pasturage. A
+ considerable population seems in ancient times to have peopled the valley,
+ which did not depend wholly or even mainly on its own products, but was
+ enriched by the important traffic which was always passing up and down the
+ great river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mesopotamia Proper, or the tract extending from the head streams of the
+ Khabour about Mardin and Nisibin to the Euphrates at Bir, and thence
+ southwards to Karkesiyeh or Circesium, is not certainly known to have
+ belonged to the kingdom of Babylon, but may be assigned to it on grounds
+ of probability. Divided by a desert or by high mountains from the valley
+ of the Tigris, and attached by means of its streams to that of the
+ Euphrates, it almost necessarily falls to that power which holds the
+ Euphrates under its dominion. The tract is one of considerable extent and
+ importance. Bounded on the north by the range of hills which Strabo calls
+ Mons Masius, and on the east by the waterless upland which lies directly
+ west of the middle Tigris, it comprises within it all the numerous
+ affluents of the Khabour and Bilik, and is thus better supplied with water
+ than almost any country in these regions. The borders of the streams
+ afford the richest pasture, and the whole tract along the flank of Masius
+ is fairly fertile. Towards the west, the tract between the Khabour and the
+ Bilik, which is diversified by the Abd-el-Aziz hills, is a land of
+ fountains. &ldquo;Such,&rdquo; says Ibn Haukal, &ldquo;are not to be found elsewhere in all
+ the land of the Moslems, for there are more than three hundred pure
+ running brooks.&rdquo; Irrigation is quite possible in this region; and many
+ remains of ancient watercourses show that large tracts, at some distance
+ from the main streams, were formerly brought under cultivation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opposite to Mesopotamia Proper, on the west or right bank of the
+ Euphrates, lay Northern Syria, with its important fortress of Carchemish,
+ which was undoubtedly included in the Empire. This tract is not one of
+ much value. Towards the north it is mountainous, consisting of spurs from
+ Amanus and Taurus, which gradually subside into the desert a little to the
+ south of Aleppo. The bare, round-backed, chalky or rocky ranges, which
+ here continually succeed one another, are divided only by narrow tortuous
+ valleys, which run chiefly towards the Euphrates or the lake of Antioch.
+ This mountain tract is succeeded by a region of extensive plains,
+ separated from each other by low hills, both equally desolate. The soil is
+ shallow and stony; the streams are few and of little volume; irrigation is
+ thus difficult, and, except where it can be applied, the crops are scanty.
+ The pistachio-nut grows wild in places; Vines and olives are cultivated
+ with some success; and some grain is raised by the inhabitants; but the
+ country has few natural advantages, and it has always depended more upon
+ its possession of a carrying trade than on its home products for
+ prosperity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ West and south-west of this region, between it and the Mediterranean, and
+ extending southwards from Mount Amanus to the latitude of Tyre, lies Syria
+ Proper, the Coele-Syria of many writers, a long but comparatively narrow
+ tract of great fertility and value. Here two parallel ranges of mountains
+ intervene between the coast and the desert, prolific parents of a numerous
+ progeny of small streams. First, along the line of the coast, is the range
+ known as Libanusin the south, from lat. 33° 20&rsquo; to lat. 34° 40&rsquo;, and as
+ Bargylus in the north, from lat. 34° 45&rsquo; to the Orontes at Antioch, a
+ range of great beauty, richly wooded in places, and abounding in deep
+ glens, foaming brooks, and precipices of a fantastic form. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0002">[PLATE VII., Fig 2.]</a> More inland is
+ Antilibanus, culminating towards the south in Hermon, and prolonged
+ northward in the Jebel Shashabu, Jebel Biha, and Jebel-el-Ala, which
+ extends from near Hems to the latitude of Aleppo. More striking than even
+ Lebanon at its lower extremity, where Hermon lifts a snowy peak into the
+ air during most of the year, it is on the whole inferior in beauty to the
+ coast range, being bleaker, more stony, and less broken up by dells and
+ valleys towards the south, and tamer, barer, and less well supplied with
+ streams in its more northern portion. Between the two parallel ranges lies
+ the &ldquo;Hollow Syria,&rdquo; a long and broadish valley, watered by the two streams
+ of the Orontes and the &ldquo;Litany&rdquo; which, rising at no great distance from
+ one another, flow in opposite directions, one hurrying northwards nearly
+ to the flanks of Amanus, the other southwards to the hills of Galilee. Few
+ places in the world are more, remarkable, or have a more stirring history,
+ than this wonderful vale. Extending for above two hundred miles from north
+ to south, almost in a direct line, and without further break than an
+ occasional screen of low hills, it furnishes the most convenient line of
+ passage between Asia and Africa, alike for the journeys of merchants and
+ for the march of armies. Along this line passed Thothines and Barneses,
+ Sargon, and Sennacherib, Neco and Nebuchadnezzar, Alexander and his
+ warlike successors, Pompey, Antony, Kaled, Godfrey of Bouillon; along this
+ must pass every great army which, starting from the general seats of power
+ in Western Asia, seeks conquests in Africa, or which, proceeding from
+ Africa, aims at the acquisition of an Asiatic dominion. Few richer tracts
+ are to be found even in these most favored portions of the earth&rsquo;s
+ surface. Towards the south the famous El-Bukaa is a land of cornfields and
+ vineyards, watered by numerous small streams which fall into the Litany.
+ Towards the north El-Ghab is even more splendidly fertile, with a dark
+ rich soil, luxuriant vegetation, and water in the utmost abundance, though
+ at present it is cultivated only in patches immediately about the towns,
+ from fear of the Nusairiyeh and the Bedouins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate007.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Vii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Parallel with the southern part of the Coele-Syrian valley, to the west
+ and to the east, were two small but important tracts, usually regarded as
+ distinct states. Westward, between the heights of Lebanon and the sea, and
+ extending somewhat beyond Lebanon, both up and down the coast, was
+ Phoenicia, a narrow strip of territory lying along the shore, in length
+ from 150 to 180 miles, and in breadth varying from one mile to twenty.
+ This tract consisted of a mere belt of sandy land along the sea, where the
+ smiling palm-groves grew from which the country derived its name, of a
+ broader upland region along the flank of the hills, which was cultivated
+ in grain, and of the higher slopes of the mountains which furnished
+ excellent timber. Small harbors, sheltered by rocky projections, were
+ frequent along the coast. Wood cut in Lebanon was readily floated down the
+ many streams to the shore, and then conveyed by sea to the ports. A narrow
+ and scanty land made commerce almost a necessity. Here accordingly the
+ first great maritime nation of antiquity grew up. The Phoenician fleets
+ explored the Mediterranean at a time anterior to Homer, and conveyed to
+ the Greeks and the other inhabitants of Europe, and of Northern and
+ Western Africa, the wares of Assyria, Babylon, and Egypt. Industry and
+ enterprise reaped their usual harvest of success; the Phoenicians grew in
+ wealth, and their towns became great and magnificent cities. In the time
+ when the Babylonian Empire came into being, the narrow tract of Phoenicia&mdash;smaller
+ than many an English county&mdash;was among the most valuable countries of
+ Asia; and its possession was far more to be coveted than that of many a
+ land whose area was ten or twenty times as great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eastward of Antilibanus, in the tract between that range and the great
+ Syrian desert, was another very important district&mdash;the district
+ which the Jews called &ldquo;Aram-Dammesek,&rdquo; and which now forms the chief part
+ of the Pashalik of Damascus. From the eastern flanks of the Antilibanus
+ two great and numerous smaller streams flow down into the Damascene plain,
+ and, carrying with them that strange fertilizing power which water always
+ has in hot climates, convert the arid sterility of the desert into a
+ garden of the most wonderful beauty. The Barada and Awaaj, bursting by
+ narrow gorges from the mountain chain, scatter themselves in numerous
+ channels over the great flat, intermingling their waters, and spreading
+ them out so widely that for a circle of thirty miles the deep verdure of
+ Oriental vegetation replaces the red hue of the Hauran. Walnuts, planes,
+ poplars, cypresses, apricots, orange-trees, citrons, pomegranates, olives,
+ wave above; corn and grass of the most luxuriant growth, below. In the
+ midst of this great mass of foliage the city of Damascus &ldquo;strikes out the
+ white arms of its streets hither and thither&rdquo; among the trees, now hid
+ among them, now overtopping them with its domes and minarets, the most
+ beautiful of all those beautiful towns which delight the eye of the artist
+ in the East. In the south-west towers the snow-clad peak of Hermon,
+ visible from every part of the Damascene plain. West, north-west, and
+ north, stretches the long Antilibanus range, bare, gray, and flat-topped,
+ except where about midway in its course, the rounded summit of Jebel
+ Tiniyen breaks the uniformity of the line. Outside the circle of deep
+ verdure, known to the Orientals as El Merj (&ldquo;the Meadow&rdquo;), is a setting or
+ framework of partially cultivable land, dotted with clumps of trees and
+ groves, which extend for many miles over the plain. To the Damascus
+ country must also be reckoned those many charming valleys of Hermon and
+ Antilibanus which open out into it, sending their waters to increase its
+ beauty and luxuriance, the most remarkable of which are the long ravine of
+ the Barada, and the romantic Wady Halbon, whose vines produced the famous
+ beverage which Damascus anciently supplied at once to the Tyrian
+ merchant-princes and to the voluptuous Persian kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Below the Coelo-Syrian valley, towards the south, came Palestine, the Land
+ of Lands to the Christian, the country which even the philosopher must
+ acknowledge to have had a greater influence on the world&rsquo;s history than
+ any other tract which can be brought under a single ethnic designation.
+ Palestine&mdash;etymologically the country of the Philistines&mdash;was
+ somewhat unfortunately named. Philistine influence may possibly have
+ extended at a very remote period over the whole of it; but in historical
+ times that warlike people did but possess a corner of the tract, less than
+ one tenth of the whole&mdash;the low coast region from Jamnia to Gaza.
+ Palestine contained, besides this, the regions of Galilee, Samaria, and
+ Judaea, to the west of the Jordan, and those of Ituraea, Trachonitis,
+ Bashan, and Gilead, east of that river. It was a tract 140 miles long, by
+ from 70 to 100 broad, containing probably about 11,000 square miles. It
+ was thus about equal in size to Belgium, while it was less than Holland or
+ Hanover, and not much larger than the principality of Wales, with which it
+ has been compared by a recent writer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great natural division of the country is the Jordan valley. This
+ remarkable depression, commencing on the west flank of Hermon, runs with a
+ course which is almost due south from lat. 33° 25&rsquo; to lat. 31° 47&rsquo;, where
+ it is merged in the Dead Sea, which may be viewed, however, as a
+ continuation of the valley, prolonging it to lat. 31° 8&rsquo;. This valley is
+ quite unlike any other in the whole world. It is a volcanic rent in the
+ earth&rsquo;s surface, a broad chasm which has gaped and never closed up.
+ Naturally, it should terminate at Merom, where the level of the
+ Mediterranean is nearly reached. By some wonderful convulsion, or at any
+ rate by some unusual freak of Nature, there is a channel opened out from
+ Merom, which rapidly sinks below the sea level, and allows the stream to
+ flow hastily, down and still down, from Merom to Gennesareth, and from
+ Gennesareth to the Dead Sea, where the depression reaches its lowest
+ point, and the land, rising into a ridge, separates the Jordan valley from
+ the upper end of the Gulf of Akabah. The Jordan valley divides Palestine,
+ strongly and sharply, into two regions. Its depth, its inaccessibility
+ (for it can only be entered from the highlands on either side down a few
+ steep watercourses), and the difficulty of passing across it (for the
+ Jordan has but few fords), give it a separating power almost equal to that
+ of an arm of the sea. In length above a hundred miles, in width varying
+ from one mile to ten, and averaging some five miles, or perhaps six, it
+ must have been valuable as a territory, possessing, as it does, a rich
+ soil, abundant water, and in its lower portion a tropical climate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On either side of the deep Jordan cleft lies a highland of moderate
+ elevation, on the right that of Galilee, Samaria, and Judsea, on the left
+ that of Ituraea, Bashan, and Gilead. The right or western highland
+ consists of a mass of undulating hills, with rounded tops, composed of
+ coarse gray stone, covered, or scarcely covered, with a scanty soil, but
+ capable of cultivation in corn, olives, and figs. This region is most
+ productive towards the north, barer and more arid as we proceed southwards
+ towards the desert. The lowest portion, Judaea, is unpicturesque,
+ ill-watered, and almost treeless; the central, Samaria, has numerous
+ springs, some rich plains, many wooded heights, and in places quite a
+ sylvan appearance; the highest, Galilee, is a land of water-brooks,
+ abounding in timber, fertile and beautiful. The average height of the
+ whole district is from 1500 to 1800 feet above the Mediterranean. Main
+ elevations within it vary from 2500 to 4000 feet. The axis of the range is
+ towards the East, nearer, that is, to the Jordan valley than to the sea.
+ It is a peculiarity of the highland that there is one important break in
+ it. As the Lowland mountains of Scotland are wholly separated from the
+ mountains of the Highlands by the low tract which stretches across from
+ the Frith of Forth to the Frith of Clyde, or as the ranges of St. Gall and
+ Appenzell are divided off from the rest of the Swiss mountains by the flat
+ which extends from the Rhine at Eagatz to the same river at Waldshut, so
+ the western highland of Palestine is broken in twain by the famous &ldquo;plain
+ of Esdraelon,&rdquo; which runs from the Bay of Acre to the Jordan valley at
+ Beth-Shean or Scythopolis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ East of the Jordan no such depression occurs, the highland there being
+ continuous. It differs from the western highland chiefly in this&mdash;that
+ its surface, instead of being broken up into a confused mass of rounded
+ hills, is a table-land, consisting of a long succession of slightly
+ undulating plains. Except in Trachonitis and southern Ituraea, where the
+ basaltic rock everywhere crops out, the soil is rich and productive, the
+ country in places wooded with fine trees, and the herbage luxuriant. On
+ the west the mountains rise almost precipitously from the Jordan valley,
+ above which they tower to the height of 3000 or 4000 feet. The outline is
+ singularly uniform; and the effect is that of a huge wall guarding
+ Palestine on this side from the wild tribes of the desert. Eastward the
+ tableland slopes gradually, and melts into the sands of Arabia. Here water
+ and wood are scarce; but the soil is still good, and bears the most
+ abundant crops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, Palestine contains the tract from which it derives its name, the
+ low country of the Philistines, which the Jews called the <i>Shephelah</i>,
+ together with a continuation of this tract northwards to the roots of
+ Carmol, the district known to the Jews as &ldquo;Sharon,&rdquo; or &ldquo;the smooth place.&rdquo;
+ From Carmol to the Wady Sheriah, where the Philistine country ended, is a
+ distance of about one hundred miles, which gives the length of the region
+ in question. Its breadth between the shore and the highland varies from
+ about twenty-five miles, in the south, between Gaza and the hills of Dan,
+ to three miles, or less, in the north, between Dor and the border of
+ Manasseh. Its area is probably from 1400 to 1500 square miles, This low
+ strip is along its whole course divided into two parallel belts or
+ bands-the first a flat sandy tract along the shore, the Ramleh of the
+ modern Arabs; the second, more undulating, a region of broad rolling
+ plains rich in corn, and anciently clothed in part with thick woods,
+ watered by reedy streams, which flow down from the great highland. A
+ valuable tract is this entire plain, but greatly exposed to ravage. Even
+ the sandy belt will grow fruit-trees; and the towns which stand on it, as
+ Gaza, Jaffa, and Ashdod, are surrounded with huge groves of olives,
+ sycamores, and palms, or buried in orchards and gardens, bright with
+ pomegranates and orange-trees. The more inland region is of marvellous
+ fertility. Its soil is a rich loam, containing scarcely a pebble, which
+ yields year after year prodigious crops of grain&mdash;chiefly wheat&mdash;without
+ manure or irrigation, or other cultivation than a light ploughing.
+ Philistia was the granary of Syria, and was important doubly, first, as
+ yielding inexhaustible supplies to its conqueror, and secondly as
+ affording the readiest passage to the great armies which contended in
+ these regions for the mastery of the Eastern World.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ South of the region to which we have given the name of Palestine,
+ intervening between it and Egypt, lay a tract, to which it is difficult to
+ assign any political designation. Herodotus regarded it as a portion of
+ Arabia, which he carried across the valley of the Arabah and made abut on
+ the Mediterranean. To the Jews it was &ldquo;the land of the south&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ special country of the Amalekites. By Strabo&rsquo;s time it had come to be
+ known as Idumsea, or the Edomite country; and under this appellation it
+ will perhaps be most convenient to describe it here. Idumasa, then, was
+ the tract south and south-west of Palestine from about lat. 31° 10&rsquo;. It
+ reached westward to the borders of Egypt, which were at this time marked
+ by the Wady-el-Arish, southward to the range of Sinai and the Elanitic
+ Gulf, and eastward to the Great Desert. Its chief town was Petra, in the
+ mountains east of the Arabah valley. The character of the tract is for the
+ most part a hard gravelly and rocky desert; but occasionally there is good
+ herbage, and soil that admits of cultivation; brilliant flowers and
+ luxuriantly growing shrubs bedeck the glens and terraces of the Petra
+ range; and most of the tract produces plants and bushes on which camels,
+ goats, and even sheep will browse, while occasional palm groves furnish a
+ grateful shade and an important fruit. The tract divides itself into four
+ regions&mdash;first, a region of sand, low and flat, along the
+ Mediterranean, the Shephelah without its fertility; next, a region of hard
+ gravelly plain intersected by limestone ridges, and raised considerably
+ above the sea level, the Desert of El-Tin, or of &ldquo;the Wanderings;&rdquo; then
+ the long, broad, low valley of the Arabah, which rises gradually from the
+ Dead Sea to an imperceptible watershed, and then falls gently to the head
+ of the Gulf of Akabah, a region of hard sand thickly dotted with bushes,
+ and intersected by numerous torrent courses; finally a long narrow region
+ of mountains and hills parallel with the Arabah, constituting Idumsea
+ Proper, or the original Edom, which, though rocky and rugged, is full of
+ fertile glens, ornamented with trees and shrubs, and in places cultivated
+ in terraces. In shape the tract was a rude square or oblong, with its
+ sides nearly facing the four cardinal points, its length from the
+ Mediterranean to the Gulf of Akabah being 130 miles, and its width from
+ the Wady-el-Arish to the eastern side of the Petra mountains 120 miles.
+ The area is thus about 1560 square miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond the Wady-el-Arish was Egypt, stretching from the Mediterranean
+ southwards a distance of nearly eight degrees, or more than 550 miles. As
+ this country was not, however, so much a part of the Babylonian Empire as
+ a dependency lying upon its borders, it will not be necessary to describe
+ it in this place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One region, however, remains still unnoticed which seems to have been an
+ integral portion of the Empire. This is Palmyrene, or the Syrian Desert&mdash;the
+ tract lying between Coelo-Syria on the one hand and the valley of the
+ middle Euphrates on the other, and abutting towards the south on the great
+ Arabian Desert, to which it is sometimes regarded as belonging. It is for
+ the most part a hard sandy or gravelly plain, intersected by low rocky
+ ranges, and either barren or productive only of some sapless shrubs and of
+ a low thin grass. Occasionally, however, there are oases, where the
+ fertility is considerable. Such an oasis is the region about Palmyra
+ itself, which derived its name from the palm groves in the vicinity; here
+ the soil is good, and a large tract is even now under cultivation. Another
+ oasis is that of Karyatein, which is watered by an abundant stream, and is
+ well wooded, and productive of grain. The Palmyrene, however, as a whole
+ possesses but little value, except as a passage country. Though large
+ armies can never have traversed the desert even in this upper region,
+ where it is comparatively narrow, trade in ancient times found it
+ expedient to avoid the long detour by the Orontes Valley, Aleppo, and
+ Bambuk, and to proceed directly from Damascus by way of Palymra to
+ Thapsaeus on the Euphrates. Small bands of light troops also occasionally
+ took the same course; and the great saving of distance thus effected made
+ it important to the Babylonians to possess an authority over the region in
+ question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, then, in its geographical extent, was the great Babylonian Empire.
+ Reaching from Luristan on the one side to the borders of Egypt on the
+ other, its direct length from east to west was nearly sixteen degrees, or
+ about 980 miles, while its length for all practical purposes, owing to the
+ interposition of the desert between its western and its eastern provinces,
+ was perhaps not less than 1400 miles. Its width was very disproportionate
+ to this. Between Zagros and the Arabian Desert, where the width was the
+ greatest, it amounted to about 280 miles; between Amanus and Palmyra it
+ was 250; between the Mons Masius and the middle Euphrates it may have been
+ 200; in Syria and Idumsea it cannot have been more than 100 or 160. The
+ entire area of the Empire was probably from 240,000 to 250,000 square
+ miles&mdash;which is about the present size of Austria. Its shape may be
+ compared roughly to a gnomon, with one longer and one shorter arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It added to the inconvenience of this long straggling form, which made a
+ rapid concentration of the forces of the Empire impossible, that the
+ capital, instead of occupying a central position, was placed somewhat low
+ in the longer of the two arms of the gnomon, and was thus nearly 1000
+ miles removed from the frontier province of the west. Though in direct
+ distance, as the crow flies, Babylon is not more than 450 miles from
+ Damascus, or more than 520 from Jerusalem, yet the necessary detour by
+ Aleppo is so great that it lengthens the distance, in the one case by 250,
+ in the other by 380 miles. From so remote a centre it was impossible for
+ the life-blood to circulate very vigorously to the extremities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Empire was on the whole fertile and well-watered. The two great
+ streams of Western Asia&mdash;the Tigris and the Euphrates&mdash;which
+ afforded an abundant supply of the invaluable fluid to the most important
+ of the provinces, those of the south-east, have already been described at
+ length; as have also the chief streams of the Mesopotamian district, the
+ Belik and the Khabour. But as yet in this work no account has been given
+ of a number of important rivers in the extreme east and the extreme west,
+ on which the fertility, and so the prosperity, of the Empire very greatly
+ depended. It is proposed in the present place to supply this deficiency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The principle rivers of the extreme east were the Choaspes, or modern
+ Kerkhah, the Pasitigris or Eulseus, now the Kuran, the Hedyphon or
+ Hedypnus, now the Jerahi, and the Oroatis, at present the Tab or Hindyan.
+ Of these, the Oroatis, which is the most eastern, belongs perhaps more to
+ Persia than to Babylon; but its lower course probably fell within the
+ Susianian territory. It rises in the mountains between Shiraz and
+ Persepolis, about lat. 29° 45&rsquo;, long. 52° 35&rsquo; E.; and flows towards the
+ Persian Gulf with a course which is north-west to Failiyun, then nearly W.
+ to Zehitun, after which it becomes somewhat south of west to Hindyan, and
+ then S.W. by S. to the sea. The length of the stream, without counting
+ lesser windings, is 200 miles; its width at Hindyan, sixteen miles above
+ its mouth, is eighty yards, and to this distance it is navigable for boats
+ of twenty tons burthen. At first its waters are pure and sweet, but they
+ gradually become corrupted, and at Hindyan they are so brackish as not to
+ be fit for use. The Jerahi rises from several sources in the Kuh Margun, a
+ lofty and precipitous range, forming the continuation of the chain of
+ Zagros. about long. 50° to 51°, and lat. 31° 30&rsquo;. These head-streams have
+ a general direction from N.E. to S.W. The principal of them is the
+ Kurdistan river, which rises about fifty miles to the north-east of
+ Babahan and flowing south-west to that point, then bends round to the
+ north, and runs north-west nearly to the fort of Mungasht, where it
+ resumes its original direction, and receiving from the north-east the Abi
+ Zard, or &ldquo;Yellow River&rdquo;&mdash;a delightful stream of the coldest and
+ purest water possible&mdash;becomes known as the Jerahi, and carries a
+ large body of water as far as Fellahiyeh or Dorak. Near Dorak the waters
+ of the Jerahi are drawn off into a number of canals, and the river is thus
+ greatly diminished; but still the stream struggles on, and proceeds by a
+ southerly course towards the Persian Gulf, which it enters near Gadi in
+ long. 48° 52&rsquo;. The course of the Jerahi, exclusively of the smaller
+ windings, is about equal in length to that of the Tab or Hindyan. In
+ volume, before its dispersion, it is considerably greater than that river.
+ It has a breadth of about a hundred yards before it reaches Babahan, and
+ is navigable for boats almost from its junction with the Abi Zard. Its
+ size is, however, greatly reduced in its lower course, and travellers who
+ skirt the coast regard the Tab as the more important river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Kuran is a river very much exceeding in size both the Tab and the
+ Jerahi. It is formed by the junction of two large streams&mdash;the Dizful
+ river and the Kuran proper, or river of Shuster. Of these the Shuster
+ stream is the more eastern. It rises in the Zarduh Kuh, or &ldquo;Yellow
+ Mountain,&rdquo; in lat. 32°, long. 51°, almost opposite to the river Isfahan.
+ From its source it is a large stream. Its direction is at first to the
+ southeast, but after a while it sweeps round and runs considerably north
+ of west; and this course it pursues through the mountains, receiving
+ tributaries of importance from both sides, till, near Akhili, it turns
+ round to the south, and, cutting at a right angle the outermost of the
+ Zagros ranges, flows down with a course S.W. by S. nearly to Sinister,
+ where, in consequence of a bund or dam thrown across it, it bifurcates,
+ and passes in two streams to the right and to the left of the town. The
+ right branch, which earned commonly about two thirds of the water,
+ proceeds by a tortuous course of nearly forty miles, in a direction a very
+ little west of south, to its junction with the Dizful stream, which takes
+ place about two miles north of the little town of Bandi-kir. Just below
+ that town the left branch, called at present Abi-Gargar, which has made a
+ considerable bend to the east, rejoins the main stream, which thenceforth
+ flows in a single channel. The course of the Kuran from its source to its
+ junction with the Dizful branch, including main windings, is about 210
+ miles. The Dizful. branch rises from two sources, nearly a degree apart,
+ in lat. 33° 30&rsquo;. These streams run respectively south-east and south-west,
+ a distance of forty miles, to their junction near Bahrein, whence their
+ united waters flow in a tortuous course, with a general direction of
+ south, for above a hundred miles to the outer barrier of Zagros, which
+ they penetrate near the Diz fort, through a succession of chasms and
+ gorges. The course of the stream from this point is south-west through the
+ hills and across the plain, past Dizful, to the place where it receives
+ the Beladrud from the west, when it changes and becomes first south and
+ then southeast to its junction with the Shuster river near Bandi-kir. The
+ entire course of the Dizful stream to this point is probably not less than
+ 380 miles. Below Bandi-kir, the Kuran, now become &ldquo;a noble river,
+ exceeding in size the Tigris and Euphrates,&rdquo; meanders across the plain in
+ a general direction of S.S. W., past the towns of Uris, Ahwaz, and
+ Ismaili, to Sablah, when it turns more to the west, and passing
+ Mohammerah, empties itself into the Shat-el-Arab, about 22 miles below
+ Busra. The entire course of the Kuran from its most remote source,
+ exclusive of the lesser windings, is not less than 430 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Kerkhah (anciently the Choaspes) is formed by three streams of almost
+ equal magnitude, all of them rising in the most eastern portion of the
+ Zagros range. The central of the three flows from the southern flank of
+ Mount Elwand (Orontes), the mountain behind Hamadan (Ecbatana), and
+ receives on the right, after a course of about thirty miles, the northern
+ or Singur branch, and ten miles further on the southern or Guran branch,
+ which is known by the name of the Gamas-ab. The river thus formed flows
+ westward to Behistun, after which it bonds to the south-west, and then to
+ the south, receiving tributaries on both hands, and winding among the
+ mountains as far as the ruined city of Rudbar. Here it bursts through the
+ outer barrier of the great range, and, receiving the large stream of the
+ Kirrind from the north-west, flows S.S.E. and S.E. along the foot of the
+ range, between it and the Kebir Kuh, till it meets the stream of the
+ Abi-Zal, when it finally leaves the hills and flows through the plain,
+ pursuing a S.S.E. direction to the ruins of Susa, which lie upon its left
+ bank, and then turning to the S. S. W., and running in that direction to
+ the Shat-el-Arab, which it reaches about five miles below Kurnur. Its
+ length is estimated at above 500 miles; its width, at some distance above
+ its junction with the Abi-Zal, is from eighty to a hundred yards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The course of the Kerkhah was not always exactly such as is here
+ described. Anciently it appears to have bifurcated at Pai Pul, 18 or 20
+ miles N.W. of Susa, and to have sent a branch east of the Susa ruins,
+ which absorbed the Shapur, a small tributary of the Dizful stream, and ran
+ into the Kuran a little above Ahwaz. The remains of the old channel are
+ still to be traced; and its existence explains the confusion, observable
+ in ancient times, between the Kerkhah and the Kuran, to each of which
+ streams, in certain parts of their course, we find the name Eulseus
+ applied. The proper Eulseus was the eastern branch of the Kerkhah
+ (Choaspes) from Pai Pul to Ahwaz; but the name was naturally extended both
+ northwards to the Choaspes above Pai Pul and southwards to the Kuran below
+ Ahwaz. The latter stream was, however, known also, both in its upper and
+ its lower course, as the Pasitigris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the opposite side of the Empire the rivers were less considerable.
+ Among the most important may be mentioned the Sajur, a tributary of the
+ Euphrates, the Koweik, or river of Aleppo, the Orontes, or river of
+ Antioch, the Litany, or river of Tyre, the Barada, or river of Damascus,
+ and the Jordan, with its tributaries, the Jabbok and the Hieromax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sajur rises from two principle sources on the southern flanks of
+ Amanus, which, after running a short distance, unite a little to the east
+ of Ain-Tab. The course of the stream from the point of junction is
+ south-east. In this direction it flows in a somewhat tortuous channel
+ between two ranges of hills for a distance of about 30 miles to Tel
+ Khalid, a remarkable conical hill crowned by ruins. Here it receives an
+ important affluent&mdash;the Keraskat&mdash;from the west, and becomes
+ suitable for boat navigation. At the same time its course changes, and
+ runs eastward for about 12 miles; after which the stream again inclines to
+ the south, and keeping an E.S.E. direction for 14 or 15 miles, enters the
+ Euphrates by five mouths in about lat. 36° 37&rsquo;. The course of the river
+ measures probably about 65 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Koweik, or river of Aleppo (the Chalus of Xenophon), rises in the
+ hills south of Ain-Tab. Springing from two sources, one of which is known
+ as the Baloklu-Su, or &ldquo;Fish River,&rdquo; it flows at first eastward, as if
+ intending to join the Euphrates. On reaching the plain of Aleppo, however,
+ near Sayyadok-Koi, it receives a tributary from the north, which gives its
+ course a southern inclination; and from this point it proceeds in a south
+ and south-westerly direction, winding along the shallow bed which it has
+ scooped in the Aloppo plain, a distance of 60 miles, past Aleppo to
+ Kinnisrin, near the foot of the Jebel-el-Sis. Here its further progress
+ southward is barred, and it is forced to turn to the east along the foot
+ of the mountain, which it skirts for eight or ten miles, finally entering
+ the small lake or marsh of El Melak, in which it loses itself after a
+ source of about 80 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Orontes, the great river of Assyria, rises in the Buka&rsquo;a&mdash;the
+ deep valley known to the ancients as Coele-Syria Proper&mdash;springing
+ from a number of small brooks, which flow down from the Antilibanus range
+ between lat. 34° 5&rsquo; and lat. 34° 12&rsquo;. Its most remote source is near
+ Yunin, about seven mites N.N.E. of Baalbek. The stream flows at first N.W.
+ by W. into the plain, on reaching which it turns at a right-angle to the
+ northeast, and skirts the foot of the Antilibanus range as far as Lebweh,
+ where, being joined by a larger stream from the southeast,130 it takes its
+ direction and flows N.W. and then N. across the plain to the foot of
+ Lebanon. Here it receives the waters of a much more abundant fountain,
+ which wells out from the roots of that range, and is regarded by the
+ Orientals as the true &ldquo;head of the stream.&rdquo; Thus increased the river flows
+ northwards for a short space, after which it turns to the northeast, and
+ runs in a deep cleft along the base of Lebanon, pursuing this direction
+ for 15 or 16 miles to a point beyond Ribleh, nearly in lat. 34° 30&rsquo;. Here
+ the course of the river again changes, becoming slightly west of north to
+ the Lake of Hems (Buheiret-Hems), which is nine or ten miles below Ribleh.
+ Issuing from the Lake of Hems about lat. 34° 43&rsquo;, the Orontes once more
+ flows to the north east, and in five or six miles reaches Hems itself,
+ which it leaves on its right bank. It then flows for twenty miles nearly
+ due north, after which, on approaching Hama (Hamath), it makes a slight
+ bend to the east round the foot of Jebel Erbayn, and then entering the
+ rich pasture country of El-Ghab&rsquo; runs north-west and north to the &ldquo;Iron
+ Bridge&rdquo; (Jisr Hadid), in lat. 36° 11&rsquo;. Its course thus far has been nearly
+ parallel with the coast of the Mediterranean, and has lain between two
+ ranges of mountains, the more western of which has shut it out from the
+ sea. At Jisr Hadid the western mountains come to an end, and the Orontes,
+ sweeping round their base, runs first west and then south-west down the
+ broad valley of Antioch, in the midst of the most lovely scenery, to the
+ coast, which it reaches a little above the 36th parallel, in long. 35°
+ 55&rsquo;. The course of the Orontes, exclusive of lesser windings, is about 200
+ miles. It is a considerable stream almost from its source. At Hamah, more
+ than a hundred miles from its mouth, it is crossed by a bridge of thirteen
+ arches. At Antioch it is fifty yards in width, and runs rapidly. The
+ natives now call it the Nahr-el-Asy, or &ldquo;Rebel River,&rdquo; either from its
+ running in an opposite direction to all other streams of the country, or
+ (more probably) from its violence and impetuosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is one tributary of the Orontes which deserves a cursory mention.
+ This is the Kara Su, or &ldquo;Black River,&rdquo; which reaches it from the Aga
+ Denghis, or Bahr-el-Abiyad, about five miles below Jisr Hadid and four or
+ five above Antioch. This stream brings into the Orontes the greater part
+ of the water that is drained from the southern side of Amanus. It is
+ formed by a union of two rivers, the upper Kara Su and the Afrin, which
+ flow into the Aga Denghis (White Sea), or Lake of Antioch, from the
+ north-west, the one entering it at its northern, the other at its eastern
+ extremity. Both are considerable streams; and the Kara Su on issuing from
+ the lake carries a greater body of water than the Orontes itself, and thus
+ adds largely to the volume of that stream in its lower course from the
+ point of junction to the Mediterranean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Litany, or river of Tyre, rises from a source at no great distance
+ from the head springs of the Orontes. The almost imperceptible watershed
+ of the Buka&rsquo;a runs between Yunin and Baalbek, a few miles north of the
+ latter; and when it is once passed, the drainage of the water is
+ southwards. The highest permanent fountain of the southern stream seems to
+ be a small lake near Tel Hushben, which lies about six miles to the
+ south-west of the Baalbek ruins. Springing from this source the Litany
+ flows along the lower Buka&rsquo;a in a direction which is generally a little
+ west of south, receiving on either side a number of streamlets and rills
+ from Libanus and Anti-libanus, and giving out in its turn numerous canals
+ for irrigation, which fertilize the thirsty soil. As the stream descends
+ with numerous windings, but still with the same general course, the valley
+ of the Buka&rsquo;a contracts more and more, till finally it terminates in a
+ gorge, down which thunders the Litany&mdash;a gorge a thousand feet or
+ more in depth, and so narrow that in one place it is actually bridged over
+ by masses of rock which have fallen from the jagged sides. Narrower and
+ deeper grows the gorge, and the river chafes and foams through it,
+ gradually working itself round to the west, and so clearing a way through
+ the very roots of Lebanon to the low coast tract, across which it meanders
+ slowly, as if wearied with its long struggle, before finally emptying
+ itself into the sea. The course of the Litany may be roughly estimated at
+ from 70 to 75 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Barada, or river of Damascus, rises in the plain of Zebdany&mdash;the
+ very centre of the Antilibanus. It has its real permanent source in a
+ small nameless lake in the lower part of the plain, about lat. 33° 41&rsquo;;
+ but in winter it is fed by streams flowing from the valley above,
+ especially by one which rises in lat. 33° 46&rsquo;, near the small hamlet of
+ Ain Hawar. The course of the Barada from the small lake is at first
+ towards the east; but it soon sweeps round and flows-southward for about
+ four miles to the lower end of the plain, after which it again turns to
+ the east and enters a romantic glen, running between high cliffs, and
+ cutting through the main ridge of the Antilibanus between the Zebdany
+ plain and Suk, the Abila of the ancients. From Suk the river flows through
+ a narrow but lovely valley, in a course which has a general direction of
+ south-east, past Ain Fijoh (where its waters are greatly increased),
+ through a series of gorges and glens, to the point where the roots of the
+ Antilibanus sink down upon the plain, when it bursts forth from the
+ mountains and scatters. Channels are drawn from it on either side, and its
+ waters are spread far and wide over the Merj, which it covers with fine
+ trees and splendid herbage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One branch passes right through the city, cutting it in half. Others
+ irrigate the gardens and orchards both to the north and to the south.
+ Beyond the town the tendency to division still continues. The river,
+ weakened greatly through the irrigation, separates into three main
+ channels, which flow with divergent courses towards the east, and
+ terminate in two large swamps or lakes, the Bahret-esh-Shurkiyeh and the
+ Bahret-el-Kibli-yeh, at a distance of sixteen or seventeen miles from the
+ city. The Barada is a short stream, its entire course from the plain of
+ Zebdany not much exceeding forty miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Jordan is commonly regarded as flowing from two sources in the Huleh
+ or plain immediately above Lake Merom, one at Banias (the ancient Paneas),
+ the other at Tel-el-Kady, which marks the site of Laish or Dan. But the
+ true highest present source of the river is the spring near Hasbeiya,
+ called Nebaes-Hasbany, or Eas-en-Neba. This spring rises in the
+ torrent-course known as the Wady-el-Teim, which descends from the
+ north-western flank of Hermon, and runs nearly parallel with the great
+ gorge of the Litany, having a direction from north-east to south-west. The
+ water wells forth in abundance from the foot of a volcanic bluff, called
+ Eas-el-Anjah, lying directly north of Hasbeiya, and is immediately used to
+ turn a mill. The course of the streamlet is very slightly west of south
+ down the Wady to the Huleh plain, where it is joined, and multiplied
+ sevenfold, by the streams from Banais and Tel-el-Kady, becoming at once
+ worthy of the name of river. Hence it runs almost due south to the Merom
+ lake, which it enters in lat. 33° 7&rsquo;, through a reedy and marshy tract
+ which it is difficult to penetrate. Issuing from Merom in lat. 33° 3&rsquo;, the
+ Jordan flows at first sluggishly southward to &ldquo;Jacob&rsquo;s Bridge,&rdquo; passing
+ which, it proceeds in the same direction, with a much swifter current down
+ the depressed and narrow cleft between Merom and Tiberias, descending at
+ the rate of fifty feet in a mile, and becoming (as has been said) a sort
+ of &ldquo;continuous waterfall.&rdquo; Before reaching Tiberias its course bends
+ slightly to the west of south for about two miles, and it pours itself
+ into that &ldquo;sea&rdquo; in about lat. 32° 53&rsquo;. Quitting the sea in lat. 32° 42&rsquo;,
+ it finally enters the track called the Ghor, the still lower chasm or
+ cleft which intervenes between Tiberias and the upper end of the Dead Sea.
+ Here the descent of the stream becomes comparatively gentle, not much
+ exceeding three feet per mile; for though the direct distance between the
+ two lakes is less than seventy miles, and the entire fall above 600 feet,
+ which would seem to give a descent of nine or ten feet a mile, yet, as the
+ course of the river throughout this part of its career is tortuous in the
+ extreme, the fall is really not greater than above indicated. Still it is
+ sufficient to produce as many as twenty-seven rapids, or at the rate of
+ one to every seven miles. In this part of its course the Jordan receives
+ two important tributaries, each of which seems to deserve a few words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Jarmuk, or Sheriat-el-Mandhur, anciently the Hiero-max, drains the
+ water, not only from Gaulonitis or Jaulan, the country immediately east
+ and south-east of the sea of Tiberias, but also from almost the whole of
+ the Hauran. At its mouth it is 130 feet wide, and in the winter it brings
+ down a great body of water into the Jordan. In summer, however, it shrinks
+ up into an inconsiderable brook, having no more remote sources than the
+ perennial springs at Mazarib, Dilly, and one or two other places on the
+ plateau of Jaulan. It runs through a fertile country, and has generally a
+ deep course far below the surface of the plain; ere falling into the
+ Jordan it makes its way through a wild ravine, between rugged cliffs of
+ basalt, which are in places upwards of a hundred feet in height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Zurka, or Jabbok, is a stream of the same character with the Hieromax,
+ but of inferior dimensions and importance. It drains a considerable
+ portion of the land of Gilead, but has no very remote sources, and in
+ summer only carries water through a few miles of its lower course. In
+ winter, on the contrary, it is a roaring stream with a strong current, and
+ sometimes cannot be forded. The ravine through which it flows is narrow,
+ deep, and in some places wild. Throughout nearly its whole course it is
+ fringed by thickets of cane and oleander, while above, its banks are
+ clothed with forests of oak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Jordan receives the Hieromax about four or five miles below the point
+ where it issues from the Sea of Tiberias, and the Jabbok about half-way
+ between that lake and the Dead Sea. Augmented by these streams, and others
+ of less importance from the mountains on either side, it becomes a river
+ of considerable size, being opposite Beth-shan (Beisan) 140 feet wide, and
+ three feet deep, and averaging, in its lower course, a width of ninety
+ with a depth of eight or nine feet. Its entire course, from the fountain
+ near Hasbeiya to the Dead Sea, including the passage of the two lakes
+ through which it flows, is, if we exclude meanders, about 130, if we
+ include them, 360 miles. It is calculated to pour into the Dead Sea
+ 6,090,000 tons of water daily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides these rivers the Babylonian territory comprised a number of
+ important lakes. Of these some of the more eastern have been described in
+ a former volume: as the Bahr-i-Nedjif in Lower Chaldsea, and the Lake of
+ Khatouniyeh in the tract between the Sinjar and the Khabour. It was
+ chiefly, however, towards the west that sheets of water abounded: the
+ principal of these were the Sabakhah, the Bahr-el-Melak, and the Lake of
+ Antioch in Upper Syria; the Bahr-el-Kades, or Lake of Hems, in the central
+ region; and the Damascus lakes, the Lake of Merom, the Sea of Galilee or
+ Tiberias, and the Dead Sea, in the regions lying furthest to the south. Of
+ these the greater number were salt, and of little value, except as
+ furnishing the salt of commerce; but four&mdash;the Lake of Antioch, the
+ Bahr-el-Kades, the Lake Merom, and the Sea of Galilee-were fresh-water
+ basins lying upon the courses of streams which ran through them; and these
+ not only diversified the scenery by their clear bright aspect, but were of
+ considerable value to the inhabitants, as furnishing them with many
+ excellent sorts of fish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the salt lakes the most eastern was the Sabakhah. This is a basin of
+ long and narrow form, lying on and just below the 36th parallel. It is
+ situated on the southern route from Balis to Aleppo, and is nearly equally
+ distant between the two places. Its length is from twelve to thirteen
+ miles; and its width, where it is broadest, is about five miles. It
+ receives from the north the waters of the Nahr-el-Dhahab, or &ldquo;Golden
+ River&rdquo; (which has by some been identified with the Daradax of Xenophon),
+ and from the west two or three insignificant streams, which empty
+ themselves into its western extremity. The lake produces a large quantity
+ of salt, especially after wet seasons, which is collected and sold by the
+ inhabitants of the surrounding country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bahr-el-Molak, the lake which absorbs the Koweik, or river of Aleppo,
+ is less than twenty miles distant from Lake Sabakhah, which it very much
+ resembles in its general character. Its ordinary length is about nine
+ miles, and its width three or four; but in winter it is greatly swollen by
+ the rains, and at that time it spreads out so widely that its
+ circumference sometimes exceeds fifty miles. Much salt is drawn from its
+ bed in the dry season, and a large part of Syria is hence supplied with
+ the commodity. The lake is covered with small islands, and greatly
+ frequented by aquatic birds-geese, ducks, flamingoes, and the like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lakes in the neighborhood of Damascus are three in number, and are all
+ of a very similar type. They are indeterminate in size and shape, changing
+ with the wetness or dryness of the season; and it is possible that
+ sometimes they may be all united in one. The most northern, which is
+ called the Bahret-esh-Shurkiyeh, receives about half the surplus water of
+ the Barada, together with some streamlets from the outlying ranges of
+ Antilibanus towards the north. The central one, called the
+ Bahret-el-Kibliyeh, receives the rest of the Barada water, which enters it
+ by three or four branches on its northern and western sides. The most
+ southern, known as Bahret-Hijaneh, is the receptacle for the stream of the
+ Awaaj, and takes also the water from the northern parts of the Ledjah, or
+ region of Argob. The three lakes are in the same line&mdash;a line which
+ runs from N.N.E. to S.S.W. They are, or at least were recently, separated
+ by tracts of dry land from two to four miles broad. Dense thickets of tall
+ reeds surround them, and in summer almost cover their surface. Like the
+ Bahr-el-Melak, they are a home for water-fowl, which flock to them in
+ enormous numbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By far the largest and most important of the salt lakes is the Great Lake
+ of the South&mdash;the Bahr Lut (&ldquo;Sea of Lot&rdquo;), or Dead Sea. This sheet of
+ water, which has always attracted the special notice and observation of
+ travellers, has of late years been scientifically surveyed by officers of
+ the American navy; and its shape, its size, and even its depth, are thus
+ known with accuracy. The Dead Sea is of an oblong form, and would be of a
+ very regular contour, were it not for a remarkable projection from its
+ eastern shore near its southern extremity. In this place, a long and low
+ peninsula, shaped like a human foot, projects into the lake, filling up
+ two thirds of its width, and thus dividing the expanse of water into two
+ portions, which are connected by a long and somewhat narrow passage. The
+ entire length of the sea, from north to south, is 46 miles: its greatest
+ width, between its eastern and its western shores, is 101 miles. The whole
+ area is estimated at 250 geographical square miles. Of this space 174
+ square miles belong to the northern portion of the lake (the true &ldquo;Sea&rdquo;),
+ 29 to the narrow channel, and 46 to the southern portion, which has been
+ called &ldquo;the back-water,&rdquo; or &ldquo;the lagoon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most remarkable difference between the two portions of the lake is the
+ contrast they present as to depth. While the depth of the northern portion
+ is from 600 feet, at a short distance from the mouth of the Jordan, to
+ 800, 1000, 1200, and even 1300 feet, further down, the depth of the lagoon
+ is nowhere more than 12 or 13 feet; and in places it is so shallow that it
+ has been found possible, in some seasons, to ford the whole way across
+ from one side to the other. The peculiarities of the Dead Sea, as compared
+ with other lakes, are its depression below the sea-level, its buoyancy,
+ and its extreme saltness. The degree of the depression is not yet
+ certainly known; but there is reason to believe that it is at least as
+ much at 1300 feet, whereas no other lake is known to be depressed more
+ than 570 feet. The buoyancy and the saltness are not so wholly
+ unparalleled. The waters of Lake Urumiyeh are probably as salt and as
+ buoyant; those of Lake Elton in the steppe east of the Wolga, and of
+ certain other Russian lakes, appear to be even salter. But with these few
+ exceptions (if they are exceptions), the Dead Sea water must be pronounced
+ to be the heaviest and saltest water known to us. More than one fourth of
+ its weight is solid matter held in solution. Of this solid matter nearly
+ one third is common salt, which is more than twice as much as is contained
+ in the waters of the ocean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the fresh-water lakes the largest and most important is the Sea of
+ Tiberias. This sheet of water is of an oval shape, with an axis, like that
+ of the Dead Sea, very nearly due north and south. Its greatest length is
+ about thirteen and its greatest width about six miles. Its extreme depth,
+ so far as has been ascertained, is 27 fathoms, or 165 feet. The Jordan
+ flows into its upper end turbid and muddy, and issues forth at its
+ southern extremity clear and pellucid. It receives also the waters of a
+ considerable number of small streams and springs, some of which are warm
+ and brackish; yet its own water is always sweet, cool, and transparent,
+ and, having everywhere a shelving pebbly beach, has a bright sparkling
+ appearance. The banks are lofty, and in general destitute of verdure. What
+ exactly is the amount of depression below the level of the Mediterranean
+ remains still, to some extent, uncertain; but it is probably not much less
+ than 700 feet. Now, as formerly, the lake produces an abundance of fish,
+ which are pronounced, by those who have partaken of them, to be
+ &ldquo;delicious.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nine miles above the Sea of Tiberias, on the course of the same stream, is
+ the far smaller basin known now as the Bahr-el Huleh, and anciently
+ (perhaps) as Merom. This is a mountain tarn, varying in size as the season
+ is wet or dry, but never apparently more than about seven miles long, by
+ five or six broad. It is situated at the lower extremity of the plain
+ called Huleh, and is almost entirely surrounded by flat marshy ground,
+ thickly set with reeds and canes, which make the lake itself almost
+ unapproachable. The depth of the Huleh is not known. It is a favorite
+ resort of aquatic birds, and is said to contain an abundant supply of
+ fish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bahr-el-Kades, or Lake of Hems, lies on the course of the Orontes,
+ about 139 miles N.N.E. of Merom, and nearly the same distance south of the
+ Lake of Antioch. It is a small sheet of water, not more than six or eight
+ miles long, and only two or three wide, running in the same direction with
+ the course of the river, which here turns from north to north-east.
+ According to Abulfeda and some other writers, it is mainly, if not wholly,
+ artificial, owing its origin to a dam or embankment across the stream,
+ which is from four to five hundred yards in length, and about twelve or
+ fourteen feet high. In Abulfeda&rsquo;s time the construction of the embankment
+ was ascribed to Alexander the Great, and the lake consequently was not
+ regarded as having had any existence in Babylonian times; but traditions
+ of this kind are little to be trusted, and it is quite possible that the
+ work above mentioned, constructed apparently with a view to irrigation,
+ may really belong to a very much earlier age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, in Northern Syria, 115 miles north of the Bahr-el-Kades, and
+ about 60 miles N.W.W. of the Bahr-el-Melak, is the Bahr-el-Abyad (White
+ Lake), or Sea of Antioch. <a href="#linkimage-0003">[PLATE. VIII., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ This sheet of water is a parallelogram, the angles of which face the
+ cardinal points: in its greater diameter it extends somewhat more than ten
+ miles, while it is about seven miles across. Its depth on the western
+ side, where it approaches the mountains, is six or eight feet; but
+ elsewhere it is generally more shallow, not exceeding three or four feet.
+ It lies in a marshy plain called El-Umk, and is thickly fringed with reeds
+ round the whole of its circumference. From the silence of antiquity, some
+ writers have imagined that it did not exist in ancient times; but the
+ observations of scientific travellers are opposed to this theory. The lake
+ abounds with fish of several kinds, and the fishery attracts and employs a
+ considerable number of the natives who dwell near it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate008.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Viii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Besides these lakes, there were contained within the limits of the Empire
+ a number of petty tarns, which do not merit particular description. Such
+ were the Bahr-el-Taka, and other small lakes on the right bank of the
+ middle Orontes, the Birket-el-Limum in the Lebanon, and the Birket-er-Eam
+ on the southern flank of Hermon. It is unnecessary, however, to pursue
+ this subject any further. But a few words must be added on the chief
+ cities of the Empire, before this chapter is brought to a conclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cities of the Empire may be divided into those of the dominant country
+ and those of the provinces. Those of the dominant country were, for the
+ most part, identical with the towns already described as belonging to the
+ ancient Chaldaea, Besides Babylon itself, there flourished in the
+ Babylonian period the cities of Borsippa, Duraba, Sippara or Sepharvaim,
+ Opis, Psittace, Cutha, Orchoe or Erech, and Diridotis or Teredon. The
+ sites of most of those have been described in the first volume; but it
+ remains to state briefly the positions of some few which were either new
+ creations or comparatively undistinguished in the earlier times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opis, a town of sufficient magnitude to attract the attention of
+ Herodotus, was situated on the left or east bank of the Tigris, near the
+ point where the Diyaleh or Gyndes joined the main river. Its position was
+ south of the Gyndes embouchure, and it might be reckoned as lying upon
+ either river. The true name of the place&mdash;that which it bears in the
+ cuneiform inscriptions&mdash;was Hupiya; and its site is probably marked
+ by the ruins at Khafaji, near Baghdad, which place is thought to retain,
+ in a corrupted form, the original appellation. Psittace or Sitace, the
+ town which gave name to the province of Sittacene, was in the near
+ neighborhood of Opis, lying on the same side of the Tigris, but lower
+ down, at least as low as the modern fort of the Zobeid chief. Its exact
+ site has not been as yet discovered. Teredon, or Diriaotis, appears to
+ have been first founded by Nebuchadnezzar. It lay on the coast of the
+ Persian Gulf, a little west of the mouth of the Euphrates, and protected
+ by a quay, or a breakwater, from the high tides that rolled in from the
+ Indian Ocean. There is great difficulty in identifying its site, owing to
+ the extreme uncertainty as to the exact position of the coast-line, and
+ the course of the river, in the time of Nebuchadnezzar. Probably it should
+ be sought about Zobair, or a little further inland.. The chief provincial
+ cities were Susa and Badaca in Susiana; Anat, Sirki, and Carchemish, on
+ the Middle Euphrates; Sidikan on the Khabour; Harran on the Bilik; Hamath,
+ Damascus, and Jerusalem, in Inner Syria; Tyre, Sidon, Ashdod, Ascalon, and
+ Gaza, upon the coast. Of these, Susa was undoubtedly the most important;
+ indeed, it deserves to be regarded as the second city of the Empire. Here,
+ between the two arms of the Choaspes, on a noble and well-watered plain,
+ backed at the distance of twenty-five miles by a lofty mountain range, the
+ fresh breezes from which tempered the summer heats, was the ancient palace
+ of the Kissian kings, proudly placed upon a lofty platform or mound, and
+ commanding a wide prospect of the rich pastures at its base, which
+ extended northwards to the roots of the hills, and in every other
+ direction as far as the eye could reach. Clustered at the foot of the
+ palace mound, more especially on its eastern side, lay the ancient town,
+ the foundation of the traditional Memnon who led an army to the defence of
+ Troy. The pure and sparkling water of the Choaspes&mdash;a drink fit for
+ kings&mdash;flowed near, while around grew palms, konars, and lemon-trees,
+ the plain beyond waving with green grass and golden corn. It may be
+ suspected that the Babylonian kings, who certainly maintained a palace at
+ this place, and sent high officers of their court to &ldquo;do their business&rdquo;
+ there, made it their occasional residence, exchanging, in summer and early
+ autumn, the heats and swamps of Babylon for the comparatively dry and cool
+ region at the base of the Lurish hills. But, however, this may have been,
+ at any rate Susa, long the capital of a kingdom little inferior to Babylon
+ itself, must have been the first of the provincial cities, surpassing all
+ the rest at once in size and in magnificence. Among the other cities,
+ Carchemish on the Upper Euphrates, Tyre upon the Syrian coast, and Ashdod
+ on the borders of Egypt, held the highest place. Carchemish, which has
+ been wrongly identified with Circesium, lay certainly high up the river,
+ and most likely occupied a site some distance to the north of Balis, which
+ is in lat. 36° nearly. It was the key of Syria on the east, commanding the
+ ordinary passage of the Euphrates, and being the only great city in this
+ quarter. Tyre, which had by this time surpassed its rival, Sidon, was the
+ chief of all the maritime towns; and its possession gave the mastery of
+ the Eastern Mediterranean to the power which could acquire and maintain
+ it. Ashdod was the key of Syria upon the south, being a place of great
+ strength, and commanding the coast route between Palestine and Egypt,
+ which was usually pursued by armies. It is scarcely too much to say that
+ the possession of Ashdod, Tyre, and Carchemish, involved the lordship of
+ Syria, which could not be permanently retained except by the occupation of
+ those cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The countries by which the Babylonian Empire was bounded were Persia on
+ the east, Media and her dependencies on the north, Arabia on the south,
+ and Egypt at the extreme southwest. Directly to the west she had no
+ neighbor, her territory being on that side washed by the Mediterranean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Persia, which must be described at length in the next volume, since it
+ was the seat of Empire during the Fifth Monarchy, no more need be said
+ here than that it was for the most part a rugged and sterile country, apt
+ to produce a brave and hardy race, but incapable of sustaining a large
+ population. A strong barrier separated it from the great Mesopotamian
+ lowland; and the Babylonians, by occupying a few easily defensible passes,
+ could readily prevent a Persian army from debouching on their fertile
+ plains. On the other hand, the natural strength of the region is so great
+ that in the hands of brave and active men its defence is easy; and the
+ Babylonians were not likely, if an aggressive spirit led to their pressing
+ eastward, to make any serious impression in this quarter, or ever greatly
+ to advance their frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Media, the power which bordered her upon the north, Babylonia, on the
+ contrary, lay wholly open. The Medes, possessing Assyria and Armenia, with
+ the Upper Tigris valley, and probably the Mons Masius, could at any time,
+ with the greatest ease, have marched armies into the low country, and
+ resumed the contest in which Assyria was engaged for so many hundred years
+ with the great people of the south. On this side nature had set no
+ obstacles; and, if danger threatened, resistance had to be made by means
+ of those artificial works which are specially suited for flat countries.
+ Long lines of wall, broad dykes, huge reservoirs, by means of which large
+ tracts may be laid under water, form the natural resort in such a case;
+ and to such defences as these alone, in addition to her armies, could
+ Babylonia look in case of a quarrel with the Medes. On this side, however,
+ she for many years felt no fear. Political arrangements and family ties
+ connected her with the Median reigning house, and she looked to her
+ northern neighbor as an ally upon whom she might depend for aid, rather
+ than as a rival whose ambitious designs were to be watched and baffled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Babylonia lay open also on the side of Arabia. Here, however, the nature
+ of the country is such that population must be always sparse; and the
+ habits of the people are opposed to that political union which can alone
+ make a race really formidable to others. Once only in their history, under
+ the excitement of a religious frenzy, have the Arabs issued forth from the
+ great peninsula on an errand of conquest. In general they are content to
+ vex and harass without seriously alarming their neighbors. The vast space
+ and arid character of the peninsula are adverse to the collection and the
+ movement of armies; the love of independence cherished by the several
+ tribes indisposes them to union; the affection for the nomadic life, which
+ is strongly felt, disinclines them to the occupation of conquests. Arabia,
+ as a a conterminous power, is troublesome, but rarely dangerous: one
+ section of the nation may almost always be played off against another: if
+ &ldquo;their hand is against every man,&rdquo; &ldquo;every man&rsquo;s hand&rdquo; is also &ldquo;against
+ them;&rdquo; blood-feuds divide and decimate their tribes, which are ever
+ turning their swords against each other; their neighbors generally wish
+ them ill, and will fall upon them, if they can take them at a
+ disadvantage; it is only under very peculiar circumstances, such as can
+ very rarely exist, that they are likely even to attempt anything more
+ serious than a plundering inroad. Babylonia consequently, though open to
+ attack on the side of the south as well as on that of the north, had
+ little to fear from either quarter. The friendliness of her northern
+ neighbor, and the practical weakness of her southern one, were equal
+ securities against aggression; and thus on her two largest and most
+ exposed frontiers the Empire dreaded no attack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was otherwise in the far south-west. Here the Empire bordered upon
+ Egypt, a rich and populous country, which at all times covets Syria, and
+ is often strong enough to seize and hold it in possession. The natural
+ frontier is moreover weak, no other barrier separating between Africa and
+ Asia than a narrow desert, which has never yet proved a serious obstacle
+ to an army. From the side of Egypt, if from no other quarter, Babylonia
+ might expect to have trouble. Here she inherited from her predecessor,
+ Assyria, an old hereditary feud, which might at any time break out into
+ active hostility. Here was an ancient, powerful, and well-organized
+ kingdom upon her borders, with claims upon that portion of her territory
+ which it was most difficult for her to defend effectively. By seas and by
+ land equally the strip of Syrian coast lay open to the arms of Egypt, who
+ was free to choose her time, and pour her hosts into the country when the
+ attention of Babylon was directed to some other quarter. The physical and
+ political circumstances alike pointed to hostile transactions between
+ Babylon and her south-western neighbor. Whether destruction would come
+ from this quarter, or from some other, it would have been impossible to
+ predict. Perhaps, on the whole, it may be said that Babylon might have
+ been expected to contend successfully with Egypt&mdash;that she had little
+ to fear from Arabia&mdash;that against Persia Proper it might have been
+ anticipated that she would be able to defend herself&mdash;but that she
+ lay at the mercy of Media. The Babylonian Empire was in truth an empire
+ upon sufferance. From the time of its establishment with the consent of
+ the Medes, the Modes might at any time have destroyed it. The dynastic tie
+ alone prevented this result. When that tie was snapped, and when moreover,
+ by the victories of Cyrus, Persian enterprise succeeded to the direction
+ of Median power, the fate of Babylon was sealed. It was impossible for the
+ long straggling Empire of the south, lying chiefly in low, flat, open
+ regions, to resist for any considerable time the great kingdom of the
+ north, of the high plateau, and of the mountain-chains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. CLIMATE AND PRODUCTIONS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonian Empire, lying as it did between the thirtieth and
+ thirty-seventh parallels of north latitude, and consisting mostly of
+ comparatively low countries, enjoyed a climate which was, upon the whole,
+ considerably warmer than that of Media, and less subject to extreme
+ variations. In its more southern parts-Susiana, Chaldaea (or Babylonia
+ Proper), Philistia, and Edom&mdash;-the intensity of the summer heat must
+ have been great; but the winters were mild and of short duration. In the
+ middle regions of Central Mesopotamia, the Euphrates valley, the
+ Palmyrene, Coele-Syria, Judaea, and Phoenicia, while the winters were
+ somewhat colder and longer, the summer warmth was more tolerable. Towards
+ the north, along the flanks of Masius, Taurus, and Amanus, a climate more
+ like that of eastern Media prevailed, the summers being little less hot
+ than those of the middle region, while the winters were of considerable
+ severity. A variety of climate thus existed, but a variety within somewhat
+ narrow limits. The region was altogether hotter and drier than is usual in
+ the same latitude. The close proximity of the great Arabian desert, the
+ small size of the adjoining seas, the want of mountains within the region
+ having any great elevation, and the general absence of timber, combined to
+ produce an amount of heat and dryness scarcely known elsewhere outside the
+ tropics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Detailed accounts of the temperature, and of the climate generally, in the
+ most important provinces of the Empire, Babylonia and Mesopotamia Proper,
+ have been already given, and on these points the reader is referred to the
+ first volume. With regard to the remaining provinces, it may be noticed,
+ in the first place, that the climate of Susiana differs but very slightly
+ from that of Babylonia, the region to which it is adjacent. The heat in
+ summer is excessive, the thermometer, even in the hill country, at an
+ elevation of 5000 feet, standing often at 107° Fahr. in the shade. The
+ natives construct for themselves serdaubs, or subterranean apartments, in
+ which they live during the day, thus somewhat reducing the temperature,
+ but probably never bringing it much below 100 degrees. They sleep at night
+ in the open air on the flat roofs of their houses. So far as there is any
+ difference of climate at this season between Susiana and Babylonia, it is
+ in favor of the former. The heat, though scorching, is rarely oppressive;
+ and not unfrequently a cool, invigorating breeze sets in from the
+ mountains, which refreshes both mind and body. The winters are exceedingly
+ mild, snow being unknown on the plains, and rare on the mountains, except
+ at a considerable elevation. At this time, however&mdash;from December to
+ the end of March&mdash;rain falls in tropical abundance; and occasionally
+ there are violent hail-storms, which inflict serious injury on the crops.
+ The spring-time in Susiana is delightful. Soft airs fan the cheek, laden
+ with the scent of flowers; a carpet of verdure is spread over the plains;
+ the sky is cloudless, or overspread with a thin gauzy veil; the heat of
+ the sun is not too great; the rivers run with full banks and fill the
+ numerous canals; the crops advance rapidly towards perfection; and on
+ every side a rich luxuriant growth cheers the eye of the traveller.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the opposite side of the Empire, in Syria and Palestine, a moister, and
+ on the whole a cooler climate prevails. In Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon there
+ is a severe winter, which lasts from October to April; much snow falls,
+ and the thermometer often marks twenty or thirty degrees of frost. On the
+ flanks of the mountain ranges, and in the highlands of Upper and
+ Coele-Syria, of Damascus, Samaria, and Judsea, the cold is considerably
+ less; but there are intervals of frost; snow falls, though it does not
+ often remain long upon the ground; and prolonged chilling rains make the
+ winter and early spring unpleasant. In the low regions, on the other hand,
+ in the <i>Shephelah</i>, the plain of Sharon, the Phoenician coast tract,
+ the lower valley of the Orontes, and again in the plain of Esdraelon and
+ the remarkable depression from the Merom lake to the Dead Sea, the winters
+ are exceedingly mild; frost and snow are unknown; the lowest temperature
+ is produced by cold rains and fogs, which do not bring the thermometer
+ much below 40°. During the summer these low regions, especially the Jordan
+ valley or Ghor, are excessively hot, the heat being ordinarily of that
+ moist kind which is intolerably oppressive. The upland plains and mountain
+ flanks experience also a high temperature, but there the heat is of a
+ drier character, and is not greatly complained of; the nights even in
+ summer are cold, the dews being often heavy; cool winds blow occasionally,
+ and though the sky is for months without a cloud, the prevailing heat
+ produces no injurious effects on those who are exposed to it. In Lebanon
+ and Anti-Lebanon the heat is of course still less; refreshing breezes blow
+ almost constantly; and the numerous streams and woods give a sense of
+ coolness beyond the markings of the thermometer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is one evil, however, to which almost the whole Empire must have
+ been subject. Alike in the east and in the west, in Syria and Palestine,
+ no less than in Babylonia Proper and Susiana, there are times when a
+ fierce and scorching wind prevails for days together&mdash;a wind whose
+ breath withers the herbage and is unspeakably depressing to man. Called in
+ the east the Sherghis, and in the west the Khamsin, this fiery sirocco
+ comes laden with fine particles of heated sand, which at once raise the
+ temperature and render the air unwholesome to breathe. In Syria these
+ winds occur commonly in the spring, from February to April; but in Susiana
+ and Babylonia the time for them is the height of summer. They blow from
+ various quarters, according to the position, with respect to Arabia,
+ occupied by the different provinces. In Palestine the worst are from the
+ east, the direction in which the desert is nearest; in Lower Babylonia
+ they are from the south; in Susiana from the west or the north-west.
+ During their continuance the air is darkened, a lurid glow is cast over
+ the earth, the animal world pines and droops, vegetation languishes, and,
+ if the traveller cannot obtain shelter, and the wind continues, he may
+ sink and die under its deleterious influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The climate of the entire tract included within the limits of the Empire
+ was probably much the same in ancient times as in our own days. In the low
+ alluvial plains indeed near the Persian Gulf it is probable that
+ vegetation was anciently more abundant, the date-palm being cultivated
+ much more extensively then than at present; and so far it might appear
+ reasonable to conclude that the climate of that region must have been
+ moister and cooler than it now is. But if we may judge by Strabo&rsquo;s account
+ of Susiana, where the climatic conditions were nearly the same as in
+ Babylonia, no important change can have taken place, for Strabo not only
+ calls the climate of Susiana &ldquo;fiery and scorching,&rdquo; but says that in Susa,
+ during the height of summer, if a lizard or a snake tried to cross the
+ street about noon-day, he was baked to death before accomplishing half the
+ distance. Similarly on the west, though there is reason to believe that
+ Palestine is now much more denuded of timber than it was formerly, and its
+ climate should therefore be both warmer and drier, yet it has been argued
+ with great force from the identity of the modern with the ancient
+ vegetation, that in reality there can have been no considerable change. If
+ then there has been such permanency of climate in the two regions where
+ the greatest alteration seems to have taken place in the circumstances
+ whereby climate is usually affected, it can scarcely be thought that
+ elsewhere any serious change has been brought about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief vegetable productions of Babylonia Proper in ancient times are
+ thus enumerated by Berosus. &ldquo;The land of the Babylonians,&rdquo; he says,
+ &ldquo;produces wheat as an indigenous plant,&rdquo; and has also barley, and lentils,
+ and vetches, and sesame; the banks of the streams and the marshes supply
+ edible roots, called gongoe, which have the taste of barley-cakes. Palms,
+ too, grow in the country, and apples, and fruit-trees of various kinds.
+ Wheat, it will be observed, and barley are placed first, since it was
+ especially as a grain country that Babylonia was celebrated. The
+ testimonies of Herodotus, Theophrastus, Strabo, and Pliny as to the
+ enormous returns which the Babylonian farmers obtained from their corn
+ lands have been already cited. No such fertility is known anywhere in
+ modern times; and, unless the accounts are grossly exaggerated, we must
+ ascribe it, in part, to the extraordinary vigor of a virgin soil, a deep
+ and rich alluvium; in part, perhaps, to a peculiar adaptation of the soil
+ to the wheat plant, which the providence of God made to grow spontaneously
+ in this region, and nowhere else, so far as we know, on the whole face of
+ the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides wheat, it appears that barley, millet, and lentils were cultivated
+ for food, while vetches were grown for beasts, and sesame for the sake of
+ the oil which can be expressed from its seed. All grew luxuriantly, and
+ the returns of the barley in particular are stated at a fabulous amount.
+ But the production of first necessity in Babylonia was the date-palm,
+ which flourished in great abundance throughout the region, and probably
+ furnished the chief food of the greater portion of the inhabitants. The
+ various uses to which it was applied have been stated in the first volume,
+ where a representation of its mode of growth has been also given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the adjoining country of Susiana, or at any rate in the alluvial
+ portion of it, the principal products of the earth seem to have been
+ nearly the same as in Babylonia, while the fecundity of the soil was but
+ little less. Wheat and barley returned to the sower a hundred or even two
+ hundred fold. The date-palm grew plentifully, more especially in the
+ vicinity of the towns. Other trees also were common, as probably konars,
+ acacias, and poplars, which are still found scattered in tolerable
+ abundance over the plain country. The neighboring mountains could furnish
+ good timber of various kinds; but it appears that the palm was the tree
+ chiefly used for building. If we may judge the past by the present, we may
+ further suppose that Susiana produced fruits in abundance; for modern
+ travellers tell us that there is not a fruit known in Persia which does
+ not thrive in the province of Khuzistan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Along the Euphrates valley to a considerable distance&mdash;at least as
+ far as Anah (or Hena)&mdash;the character of the country resembles that of
+ Babylonia and Susiana, and the products cannot have been very different.
+ About Anah the date-palm begins to fail, and the olive first makes its
+ appearance. Further up a chief fruit is the mulberry. Still higher, in
+ northern Mesopotamia, the mulberry is comparatively rare, but its place is
+ supplied by the walnut, the vine, and the pistachio-nut. This district
+ produces also good crops of grain, and grows oranges, pomegranates, and
+ the commoner kinds of fruit abundantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Across the Euphrates, in Northern Syria, the country is less suited for
+ grain crops; but trees and shrubs of all kinds grow luxuriantly, the
+ pasture is excellent, and much of the land is well adapted for the growth
+ of cotton. The Assyrian kings cut timber frequently in this tract; and
+ here are found at the present day enormous planes, thick forests of oak,
+ pine, and ilex, walnuts, willows, poplars, ash-trees, birches, larches,
+ and the carob or locust tree. Among wild shrubs are the oleander with its
+ ruddy blossoms, the myrtle, the bay, the arbutus, the clematis, the
+ juniper, and the honeysuckle; among cultivated fruit-trees, the orange,
+ the pomegranate, the pistachio-nut, the vine, the mulberry, and the olive.
+ The adis, an excellent pea, and the Lycoperdon, or wild potato, grow in
+ the neighborhood of Aleppo. The castor-oil plant is cultivated in the
+ plain of Edlib. Melons, cucumbers, and most of the ordinary vegetables are
+ produced in abundance and of good quality everywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Southern Syria and Palestine most of the same forms of vegetation
+ occur, with several others of quite a new character. These are due either
+ to the change of latitude, or to the tropical heat of the Jordan and Dead
+ Sea valley, or finally to the high elevation of Hermon, Lebanon, and
+ Anti-Lebanon. The date-palm fringes the Syrian shore as high as Beyrut,
+ and formerly flourished in the Jordan valley, where, however, it is not
+ now seen, except in a few dwarfed specimens near the Tiberias lake. The
+ banana accompanies the date along the coast, and even grows as far north
+ as Tripoli. The prickly pear, introduced from America, has completely
+ neutralized itself, and is in general request for hedging. The fig
+ mulberry (or true sycamore), another southern form, is also common, and
+ grows to a considerable size. Other denizens of warm climes, unknown in
+ Northern Syria, are the jujube, the tamarisk, theelasagnus or wild olive,
+ the gum-styrax plant (<i>Styrax officinalis</i>), the egg-plant, the
+ Egyptian papyrus, the sugar-cane, the scarlet misletoe, the solanum that
+ produces the &ldquo;Dead Sea apple&rdquo; (<i>Solanum Sodomceum</i>), the
+ yellow-flowered acacia, and the liquorice plant. Among the forms due to
+ high elevation are the famous Lebanon cedar, several oaks and juniper, the
+ maple, berberry, jessamine, ivy, butcher&rsquo;s broom, a rhododendron, and the
+ gum-tragacanth plant. The fruits additional to those of the north are
+ dates, lemons, almonds, shaddocks, and limes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief mineral products of the Empire seem to have been bitumen, with
+ its concomitants, naphtha and petroleum, salt, sulphur, nitre, copper,
+ iron, perhaps silver, and several sorts of precious stones. Bitumen was
+ furnished in great abundance by the springs at Hit or Is, which were
+ celebrated in the days of Herodotus; it was also procured from Ardericca
+ (Kir-Ab), and probably from Earn Ormuz, in Susiana, and likewise from the
+ Dead Sea. Salt was obtainable from the various lakes which had no outlet,
+ as especially from the Sabakhab, the Bahr-el-Melak, the Dead Sea, and a
+ small lake near Tadmor or Palmyra. The Dead Sea gave also most probably
+ both sulphur and nitre, but the latter only in small quantities. Copper
+ and iron seem to have been yielded by the hills of Palestine. Silver was
+ perhaps a product of the Anti-Lebanon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be doubted whether any gems were really found in Babylonia itself,
+ which, being purely alluvial, possesses no stone of any kind. Most likely
+ the sorts known as Babylonian came from the neighboring Susiana, whose
+ unexplored mountains may possess many rich treasures. According to
+ Dionysius, the bed of the Choaspes produced numerous agates, and it may
+ well be that from the same quarter came that &ldquo;beryl more precious than
+ gold,&rdquo; and those &ldquo;highly reputed sard,&rdquo; which Babylon seems to have
+ exported to other countries. The western provinces may, however, very
+ probably have furnished the gems which are ascribed to them, as amethysts,
+ which are said to have been found in the neighborhood of Petra, alabaster,
+ which came from near Damascus, and the cyanus, a kind of lapis-lazuli,
+ which was a production of Phoenicia. No doubt the Babylonian love of gems
+ caused the provinces to be carefully searched for stones; and it is not
+ improbable that they yielded besides the varieties already named, and the
+ other unknown kinds mentioned by Pliny, many, if not most, of the
+ materials which we find to have been used for seals by the ancient people.
+ These are, cornelian, rock-crystal, chalcedony, onyx, jasper, quartz,
+ serpentine, sienite, haematite, green felspar, pyrites, loadstone, and
+ amazon-stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stone for building was absent from Babylonia Proper and the alluvial
+ tracts of Susiana, but in the other provinces it abounded. The Euphrates
+ valley could furnish stone at almost any point above Hit; the mountain
+ regions of Susiana could supply it in whatever quantity might be required;
+ and in the western provinces it was only too plentiful. Near to Babylonia
+ the most common kind was limestone; but about Had-disah on the Euphrates
+ there was also a gritty, silicious rock alternating with iron-stone, and
+ in the Arabian Desert were sandstone and granite. Such stone as was used
+ in Babylon itself, and in the other cities of the low country, probably
+ either came down the Euphrates, or was brought by canals from the adjacent
+ part of Arabia. The quantity, however, thus consumed was small, the
+ Babylonians being content for most uses with the brick, of which their own
+ territory gave them a supply practically inexhaustible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The principal wild animals known to have inhabited the Empire in ancient
+ times are the following: the lion, the panther or large leopard, the
+ hunting leopard, the bear, the hyena, the wild ox, the buffalo (?), the
+ wild ass, the stag, the antelope, the ibex or wild goat, the wild sheep,
+ the wild boar, the wolf, the jackal, the fox, the hare, and the rabbit. Of
+ these, the lion, leopard, bear, stag, wolf, jackal, and fox seem to have
+ been very widely diffused, while the remainder were rarer, and, generally
+ speaking, confined to certain localities. The wild ass was met with only
+ in the dry parts of Mesopotamia, and perhaps of Syria, the buffalo and
+ wild boar only in moist regions, along the banks of rivers or among
+ marshes. The wild ox was altogether scarce; the wild sheep, the rabbit,
+ and the hare, were probably not common.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this list may be added as present denizens of the region, and therefore
+ probably belonging to it in ancient times, the lynx, the wildcat, the
+ ratel, the sable, the genet, the badger, the otter, the beaver, the
+ polecat, the jerboa, the rat, the mouse, the marmot, the porcupine, the
+ squirrel, and perhaps the alligator. Of these the commonest at the present
+ day are porcupines, badgers, otters, rats, mice, and jerboas. The ratel,
+ sable, and genet belong only to the north; the beaver is found nowhere but
+ in the Khabour and middle Euphrates; the alligator, if a denizen of the
+ region at all exists only in the Euphrates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief birds of the region are eagles, vultures, falcons, owls, hawks,
+ many kinds of crows, magpies, jackdaws, thrushes, blackbirds,
+ nightingales, larks, sparrows, goldfinches, swallows, doves of fourteen
+ kinds, francolins, rock partridges, gray partridges, black partridges,
+ quails, pheasants, capercailzies, bustards, flamingoes, pelicans,
+ cormorants, storks, herons, cranes, wild-geese, ducks, teal, kingfishers,
+ snipes, woodcocks, the sand-grouse, the hoopoe, the green parrot, the
+ becafico, the locust-bird, the humming-bird (?), and the bee-eater. The
+ eagle, pheasant, capercailzie, quail, parrot, locust-bird, becafico, and
+ humming-bird are rare; the remainder are all tolerably common. Besides
+ these, we know that in ancient times ostriches wore found within the
+ limits of the Empire, though now they have retreated further south into
+ the Great Desert of Arabia. Perhaps bitterns may also formerly have
+ frequented some of the countries belonging to it, though they are not
+ mentioned among the birds of the region by modern writers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a bird of the heron species, or rather of a species between the
+ heron and the stork, which seems to deserve a few words of special
+ description. It is found chiefly in Northern Syria, in the plain of Aleppo
+ and the districts watered by the Koweik and Sajur rivers. The Arabs call
+ it Tair-el-Raouf, or &ldquo;the magnificent.&rdquo; This bird is of a grayish-white,
+ the breast white, the joints of the wings tipped with scarlet, and the
+ under part of the beak scarlet, the upper part being of a blackish-gray.
+ The beak is nearly five inches long, and two thirds of an inch thick. The
+ circumference of the eye is red; the feet are of a deep yellow; and the
+ bird in its general form strongly resembles the stork; but its color is
+ darker. It is four feet high, and covers a breadth of nine feet when the
+ wings are spread. The birds of this species are wont to collect in large
+ flocks on the North Syrian rivers, and to arrange themselves in several
+ rows across the streams where they are shallowest. Here they squat side by
+ side, as close to one another as possible, and spread out their tails
+ against the current, thus forming a temporary dam. The water drains off
+ below them, and when it has reached its lowest point, at a signal from one
+ of their number who from the bank watches the proceedings, they rise and
+ swoop upon the fish, frogs, etc., which the lowering of the water has
+ exposed to view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fish are abundant in the Chaldaean marshes, and in almost all the
+ fresh-water lakes and rivers. <a href="#linkimage-0003">[PLATE. VIII.,
+ Fig.]</a> The Tigris and Euphrates yield chiefly barbel and carp; but the
+ former stream has also eels, trout, chub, shad-fish, siluruses, and many
+ kinds which have no English names. The Koweik contains the Aleppo eel (<i>Ophidium
+ masbacambahis</i>), a very rare variety; and in other streams of Northern
+ Syria are found lampreys, bream, dace, and the black-fish (<i>Macroptero-notus
+ niger</i>), besides carp, trout, chub, and barbel. Chub, bream, and the
+ silurus are taken in the Sea of Galilee. The black-fish is extremely
+ abundant in the Bahr-el-Taka and the Lake of Antioch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among reptiles may be noticed, besides snakes, lizards, and frogs, which
+ are numerous, the following less common species&mdash;iguanoes, tortoises
+ of two kinds, chameleons, and monitors. Bats also were common in Babylonia
+ Proper, where they grew to a great size. Of insects the most remarkable
+ are scorpions, tarantulas, and locusts. These last come suddenly in
+ countless myriads with the wind, and, settling on the crops, rapidly
+ destroy all the hopes of the husbandman, after which they strip the shrubs
+ and trees of their leaves, reducing rich districts in an incredibly short
+ space of time to the condition of howling wildernesses. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0003">[PLATE. VIII., Fig. 3.]</a> If it were not for the
+ locust-bird, which is constantly keeping down their numbers, these
+ destructive insects would probably increase so as to ruin utterly the
+ various regions exposed to their ravages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The domestic animals employed in the countries which composed the Empire
+ were, camels, horses, mules, asses, buffaloes, cows and oxen, goats,
+ sheep, and dogs. Mules as well as horses seem to have been anciently used
+ in war by the people of the more southern regions-by the Susianians at any
+ rate, if not also by the Babylonians. Sometimes they were ridden;
+ sometimes they were employed to draw carts or chariots. They were spirited
+ and active animals, evidently of a fine breed, such as that for which
+ Khuzistan is famous at the present day. <a href="#linkimage-0003">[PLATE.
+ VIII., Fig. 4.]</a> The asses from which these mules were produced must
+ also have been of superior quality, like the breed for which Baghdad is
+ even now famous, The Babylonian horses are not likely to have been nearly
+ so good; for this animal does not flourish in a climate which is at once
+ moist and hot. Still, at any rate under the Persians, Babylonia seems to
+ have been a great breeding-place for horses, since the stud of a single
+ satrap consisted of 800 stallions and 16,000 mares. If we may judge of the
+ character of Babylonian from that of Susianian steeds, we may consider the
+ breed to have, been strong and large limbed, but not very handsome, the
+ head being too large and the legs too short for beauty. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE IX., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate009.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Ix. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians were also from very early times famous for their breed of
+ dogs. The tablet engraved in a former volume, which gives a representation
+ of a Babylonian hound, is probably of a high antiquity, not later than the
+ period or the Empire. Dogs are also not unfrequently represented on
+ ancient Babylonian stones and cylinders. It would seem that, as in
+ Assyria, there were two principal breeds, one somewhat clumsy and heavy,
+ of a character not unlike that of our mastiff, the other of a much lighter
+ make, nearly resembling our greyhound. The former kind is probably the
+ breed known as Indian, which was kept up by continual importations from
+ the country whence it was originally derived.<a href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE.
+ IX., Fig. 2.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have no evidence that camels were employed in the time of the Empire,
+ either by the Babylonians themselves or by their neighbors, the
+ Susianians; but in Upper Mesopotamia, in Syria, and in Palestine they had
+ been in use from a very early date. The Amalekitos and the Midianites
+ found them serviceable in war; and the latter people employed them also as
+ beasts of burden in their caravan trade. The Syrians of Upper Mesopotamia
+ rode upon them in their journeys. It appears that they were also sometimes
+ yoked to chariots, though from their size and clumsiness they would be but
+ ill fitted for beasts of draught.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buffaloes were, it is probable, domesticated by the Babylonians at an
+ early date. The animal seems to have been indigenous in the country, and
+ it is far better suited for the marshy regions of Lower Babylonia and
+ Susiana than cattle of the ordinary kind. It is perhaps a buffalo which is
+ represented on an ancient tablet already referred to, where a lion is
+ disturbed in the middle of his feast off a prostrate animal by a man armed
+ with a hatchet. Cows and oxen, however, of the common kind are
+ occasionally represented on the cylinders <a href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE
+ IX., Fig. 4.]</a>, where they seem sometimes to represent animals about to
+ be offered to the gods. Goats also appear frequently in this capacity; and
+ they were probably more common than sheep, at any rate in the more
+ southern districts. Of Babylonian sheep we have no representations at all
+ on the monuments; but it is scarcely likely that a country which used wool
+ so largely was content to be without them. At any rate they abounded in
+ the provinces, forming the chief wealth of the more northern nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTEE III. THE PEOPLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Chaldaeans, that bitter and hasty nation.&rdquo;&mdash;Habak. 1. 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians, who, under Nabopolassar and Nebuchadnezzar, held the
+ second place among the nations of the East, were emphatically a mixed
+ race. The ancient people from whom they were in the main descended&mdash;the
+ Chaldaeans of the First Empire&mdash;possessed this character to a
+ considerable extent, since they united Cusbite with Turanian blood, and
+ contained moreover a slight Semitic and probably a slight Arian element.
+ But the Babylonians of later times&mdash;the Chaldaeans of the Hebrew
+ prophets&mdash;must have been very much more a mixed race than their
+ earlier namesakes&mdash;partly in consequence of the policy of
+ colonization pursued systematically by the later Assyrian kings, partly
+ from the direct influence exerted upon them by conquerors. Whatever may
+ have been the case with the Arab dynasty, which bore sway in the country
+ from about B.C. 1546 till B.C. 1300, it is certain that the Assyrians
+ conquered Babylon about B.C. 1300, and almost certain that they
+ established an Assyrian family upon the throne of Nimrod, which held for
+ some considerable time the actual sovereignty of the country. It was
+ natural that under a dynasty of Semites, Semitic blood should flow freely
+ into the lower region, Semitic usages and modes of thought become
+ prevalent, and the spoken language of the country pass from a Turanian or
+ Turano-Cushite to a Semitic type. The previous Chaldaean race blended,
+ apparently, with the new comers, and people was produced in which the
+ three elements&mdash;the Semitic, the Turanian, and the Cushite&mdash;held
+ about equal shares. The colonization of the Sargonid kings added probably
+ other elements in small proportions, and the result was that among all the
+ nations inhabiting Western Asia there can have been none so thoroughly
+ deserving the title of a &ldquo;mingled people&rdquo; as the Babylonians of the later
+ Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In mixtures of this kind it is almost always found that some one element
+ practically preponderates, and assumes to itself the right of fashioning
+ and forming the general character of the race. It is not at all necessary
+ that this formative element should be larger than any other; on the
+ contrary, it may be and sometimes is extremely small; for it does not work
+ by its mass, but by its innate force and strong vital energy. In
+ Babylonia, the element which showed itself to possess this superior
+ vitality, which practically asserted its pre-eminence and proceeded to
+ mold the national character, was the Semitic. There is abundant evidence
+ that by the time of the later Empire the Babylonians had become thoroughly
+ Semitized; so much so, that ordinary observers scarcely distinguished them
+ from their purely Semitic neighbors, the Assyrians. No doubt there were
+ differences which a Hippocrates or an Aristotle could have detected&mdash;differences
+ resulting from mixed descent, as well as differences arising from climate
+ and physical geography; but, speaking broadly, it must be said that the
+ Semitic element, introduced into Babylonia from the north, had so
+ prevailed by the time of the establishment of the Empire that the race was
+ no longer one sui generis, but was a mere variety of the well-known and
+ widely spread Semitic type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We possess but few notices, and fewer assured representations, from which
+ to form an opinion of the physical characteristics of the Babylonians.
+ Except upon the cylinders, there are extant only three or four
+ representations of the human forms by Babylonian artists, and in the few
+ cases where this form occurs we cannot always feel at all certain that the
+ intention is to portray a human being. A few Assyrian bas-reliefs probably
+ represent campaigns in Babylonia; but the Assyrians vary their human type
+ so little that these sculptures must not be regarded as conveying to us
+ very exact information. Tho cylinders are too rudely executed to be of
+ much service, and they seem to preserve an archaic type which originated
+ with the Proto-Chaldaeans. If we might trust the figures upon them as at
+ all nearly representing the truth, we should have to regard the
+ Babylonians as of much slighter and sparer frames than their northern
+ neighbors, of a physique in fact approaching to meagreness. The Assyrian
+ sculptures, however, are far from bearing out this idea; from them it
+ would seem that the frames of the Babylonians were as brawny and massive
+ as those of the Assyrians themselves, while in feature there was not much
+ difference between the nations. <a href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE IX., Fig.
+ 3.]</a> Foreheads straight but not high, noses well formed but somewhat
+ depressed, full lips, and a well-marked rounded chin, constitute the
+ physiognomy of the Babylonians as it appears upon the sculptures of their
+ neighbors. This representation is not contradicted by the few specimens of
+ actual sculpture left by themselves. In these the type approaches nearly
+ to the Assyrian, while there is still, such an amount of difference as
+ renders it tolerably easy to distinguish between the productions of the
+ two nations. The eye is larger, and not so decidedly almond-shaped; the
+ nose is shorter, and its depression is still more marked; while the
+ general expression of the countenance is altogether more commonplace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These differences may be probably referred to the influence which was
+ exercised upon the physical form of the race by the primitive or
+ Proto-Chaldaean element, an influence which appears to have been
+ considerable. This element, as has been already observed, was
+ predominantly Cushite; and there is reason to believe that the Cushite
+ race was connected not very remotely with the negro. In Susiana, where the
+ Cushite blood was maintained in tolerable purity&mdash;Elymseans and
+ Kissians existing side by side, instead of blending together&mdash;there
+ was, if we may trust the Assyrian remains, a very decided prevalency of a
+ negro type of countenance, as the accompanying specimens, carefully copied
+ from the sculptures, will render evident. <a href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE
+ IX., Fig. 6.]</a> The head was covered with short crisp curls; the eye was
+ large, the nose and mouth nearly in the same line, the lips thick. Such a
+ physiognomy as the Babylonian appears to have been would naturally arise
+ from an intermixture of a race like the Assyrian with one resembling that
+ which the later sculptures represent as the main race inhabiting Susiana.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herodotus remarks that the Babylonians wore their hair long; and this
+ remark is confirmed to some extent by the native remains. These in general
+ represent the hair as forming a single stiff and heavy curl at the back of
+ the head (No. 3). Sometimes, however, they make it take the shape of long
+ flowing locks, which depend over the back (No. 1), or over the back and
+ shoulders (No. 4), reaching nearly to the waist. Occasionally, in lieu of
+ these commoner types, wo have one which closely resembles the Assyrian,
+ the hair forming a round mass behind the head (No. 2), on which we can
+ sometimes trace indications of a slight wave. <a href="#linkimage-0005">[PLATE
+ X., Fig. 1.]</a> The national fashion, that to which Herodotus alludes,
+ seems to be represented by the three commoner modes. Where the round mass
+ is worn, we have probably an Assyrian fashion, which the Babylonians aped
+ during the time of that people&rsquo;s pre-eminence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate010.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate X. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Besides their flowing hair, the Babylonians are represented frequently
+ with a large beard. This is generally longer than the Assyrian, descending
+ nearly to the waist. Sometimes it curls crisply upon the face, but below
+ the chin depends over the breast in long, straight locks. At other times
+ it droops perpendicularly from the cheeks and the under lip.15 Frequently,
+ however, the beard is shaven off, and the whole face is smooth and
+ hairless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chaldaean females, as represented by the Assyrians, are tall and
+ large-limbed. Their physiognomy is Assyrian, their hair not very abundant.
+ The Babylonian cylinders, on the other hand, make the hair long and
+ conspicuous, while the forms are quite as spare and meagre as those of the
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole, it is most probable that the physical type of the later
+ Babylonians was nearly that of their northern neighbors. A somewhat sparer
+ form, longer and more flowing hair, and features less stern and strong,
+ may perhaps have characterized them. They were also, it is probable, of a
+ darker complexion than the Assyrians, being to some extent Ethiopians by
+ descent, and inhabiting a region which lies four degrees nearer to the
+ tropics than Assyria. The Cha&rsquo;ab Arabs, the present possessors of the more
+ southern parts of Babylonia, are nearly black; and the &ldquo;black Syrians,&rdquo; of
+ whom Strabo speaks, seem intended to represent the Babylonians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the moral and mental characteristics of the people, the first place
+ is due to their intellectual ability. Inheriting a legacy of scientific
+ knowledge, astronomical and arithmetical, from the Proto-Chaldaeans, they
+ seem to have not only maintained but considerably advanced these sciences
+ by their own efforts. Their &ldquo;wisdom and learning&rdquo; are celebrated by the
+ Jewish prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Daniel; the Father of History
+ records their valuable inventions; and an Aristotle was not ashamed to be
+ beholden to them for scientific data. They were good observers of
+ astronomical phenomena, careful recorders of such observations, and
+ mathematicians of no small repute. Unfortunately, they mixed with their
+ really scientific studies those occult pursuits which, in ages and
+ countries where the limits of true science are not known, are always apt
+ to seduce students from the right path, having attractions against which
+ few men are proof, so long as it is believed that they can really
+ accomplish the end that they propose to themselves. The Babylonians were
+ astrologers no less than astronomers; they professed to cast nativities,
+ to expound dreams, and to foretell events by means of the stars; and
+ though there were always a certain number who kept within the legitimate
+ bounds of science, and repudiated the astrological pretensions of their
+ brethren, yet on the whole it must be allowed that their astronomy was
+ fatally tinged with a mystic and unscientific element.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In close connection with the intellectual ability of the Babylonians was
+ the spirit of enterprise which led them to engage in traffic and to
+ adventure themselves upon the ocean in ships. In a future chapter we shall
+ have to consider the extent and probable direction of this commerce. It is
+ sufficient to observe in the present place that the same turn of mind
+ which made the Phoenicians anciently the great carriers between the East
+ and West, and which in modern times has rendered the Jews so successful in
+ various branches of trade, seems to have characterized the Semitized
+ Babylonians, whose land was emphatically &ldquo;a land of traffic,&rdquo; and their
+ chief city &ldquo;a city of merchants.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trading spirit which was thus strongly developed in the Babylonian
+ people led naturally to the two somewhat opposite vices of avarice and
+ over-luxuriousness. Not content with honorable gains, the Babylonians
+ &ldquo;coveted an evil covetousness,&rdquo; as we learn both from Habakkuk and
+ Jeremiah. The &ldquo;shameful custom&rdquo; mentioned by Herodotus, which required as
+ a religious duty that every Babylonian woman, rich or poor, highborn or
+ humble, should once in her life prostitute herself in the temple of
+ Beltis, was probably based on the desire of attracting strangers to the
+ capital, who would either bring with them valuable commodities or purchase
+ the productions of the country. The public auction of marriageable virgins
+ had most likely a similar intention. If we may believe Curtius, strangers
+ might at any time purchase the gratification of any passion they might
+ feel, from the avarice of parents or husbands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The luxury of the Babylonians is a constant theme with both sacred and
+ profane writers. The &ldquo;daughter of the Chaldaeans&rdquo; was &ldquo;tender and
+ delicate,&rdquo; &ldquo;given to pleasures,&rdquo; apt to &ldquo;dwell carelessly.&rdquo; Her young men
+ made themselves &ldquo;as princes to look at&mdash;exceeding in dyed attire upon
+ their heads,&rdquo;&mdash;painting their faces, wearing earrings, and clothing
+ themselves in robes of soft and rich material. Extensive polygamy
+ prevailed. The pleasures of the table were carried to excess. Drunkenness
+ was common. Rich unguents were invented. The tables groaned under the
+ weight of gold and silver plate. In every possible way the Babylonians
+ practised luxuriousness of living, and in respect of softness and
+ self-indulgence they certainly did not fall short of any nation of
+ antiquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was, however, a harder and sterner side to the Babylonian character.
+ Despite their love of luxury, they were at all times brave and skilful in
+ war; and, during the period of their greatest strength, they were one of
+ the most formidable of all the nations of the East. Habakkuk describes
+ them, drawing evidently from the life, as &ldquo;bitter and hasty,&rdquo; and again as
+ &ldquo;terrible and dreadful&mdash;their horses&rsquo; hoofs swifter than the
+ leopard&rsquo;s, and more fierce than the evening wolves.&rdquo; Hence they &ldquo;smote the
+ people in wrath with a continual stroke&rdquo;&mdash;they &ldquo;made the earth to
+ tremble, and did shake kingdoms&rdquo;&mdash;they carried all before them in
+ their great enterprises, seldom allowing themselves to be foiled by
+ resistance, or turned from their course by pity. Exercised for centuries
+ in long and fierce wars with the well-armed and well-disciplined
+ Assyrians, they were no sooner quit of this enemy, and able to take an
+ aggressive attitude, than they showed themselves no unworthy successors of
+ that long-dominant nation, so far as energy, valor, and military skill
+ constitute desert. They carried their victorious arms from the shores of
+ the Persian Gulf to the banks of the Nile; wherever they went, they
+ rapidly established their power, crushing all resistance, and fully
+ meriting the remarkable title, which they seem to have received from those
+ who had felt their attacks, of &ldquo;the hammer of the whole earth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The military successes of the Babylonians were accompanied with needless
+ violence, and with outrages not unusual in the East, which the historian
+ must nevertheless regard as at once crimes and follies. The
+ transplantation of conquered races&mdash;a part of the policy of Assyria
+ which the Chaldaeans adopted&mdash;may perhaps have been morally
+ defensible, notwithstanding the sufferings which it involved. But the
+ mutilations of prisoners, the weary imprisonments, the massacre of
+ non-combatants, the refinement of cruelty shown in the execution of
+ children before the eyes of their fathers&mdash;these and similar
+ atrocities, which are recorded of the Babylonians, are wholly without
+ excuse, since they did not so much terrify as exasperate the conquered
+ nations, and thus rather endangered than added strength or security to the
+ empire. A savage and inhuman temper is betrayed by these harsh punishments&mdash;a
+ temper common in Asiatics, but none the less reprehensible on that account&mdash;one
+ that led its possessors to sacrifice interest to vengeance, and the peace
+ of a kingdom to a tiger-like thirst for blood. Nor was this cruel temper
+ shown only towards the subject nations and captives taken in war.
+ Babylonian nobles trembled for their heads if they incurred by a slight
+ fault the displeasure of the monarch; and even the most powerful class in
+ the kingdom, the learned and venerable &ldquo;Chaldaeans,&rdquo; ran on one occasion
+ the risk of being exterminated, because they could not expound a dream
+ which the king had forgotten. If a monarch displeased his court, and was
+ regarded as having a bad disposition, it was not thought enough simply to
+ make away with him, but he was put to death by torture. Among recognized
+ punishments were cutting to pieces and casting into a heated furnace. The
+ houses of offenders were pulled down and made into dunghills. These
+ practices imply a &ldquo;violence&rdquo; and cruelty beyond the ordinary Oriental
+ limit; and we cannot be surprised that when final judgment was denounced
+ against Babylon, it was declared to be sent, in a great measure, &ldquo;because
+ of men&rsquo;s blood, and for the violence of the land-of the city, and all that
+ dwelt therein.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is scarcely necessary to add that the Babylonians were a proud people.
+ Pride is unfortunately the invariable accompaniment of success, in the
+ nation, if not in the individual; and the sudden elevation of Babylon from
+ a subject to a dominant power must have been peculiarly trying, more
+ especially to the Oriental temperament. The spirit which culminated in
+ Nebuchadnezzar, when, walking in the palace of his kingdom, and surveying
+ the magnificent buildings which he had raided on every side from the
+ plunder of the conquered nations, and by the labor of their captive bands,
+ he exclaimed, &ldquo;Is not the great Babylon which I have built by the might of
+ my power and for the honor of my majesty?&rdquo;&mdash;was rife in the people
+ generally, who, naturally enough, believed themselves superior to every
+ other nation upon the earth. &ldquo;I am, and there is none else beside me,&rdquo; was
+ the thought, if not the speech, of the people, whose arrogancy was perhaps
+ somewhat less offensive than that of the Assyrians, but was quite as
+ intense and as deep-seated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians, notwithstanding their pride, their cruelty, their
+ covetousness, and their love of luxury, must be pronounced to have been,
+ according to their lights, a religious people. The temple in Babylonia is
+ not a mere adjunct of the palace, but has almost the same pre-eminence
+ over other buildings which it claims in Egypt. The vast mass of the
+ Birs-i-Nimrud is sufficient to show that an enormous amount of labor was
+ expended in the erection of sacred edifices; and the costly ornamentation
+ lavished on such buildings is, as we shall hereafter find, even more
+ remarkable than their size. Vast sums wore also expended on images of the
+ gods, necessary adjuncts of the religion; and the whole paraphernalia of
+ worship exhibited a rare splendor and magnificence. The monarchs were
+ devout worshippers of the various deities, and gave much of their
+ attention to the building and repair of temples, the erection of images,
+ and the like. They bestowed on their children names indicative of
+ religious feeling, and implying real faith in the power of the gods to
+ protect their votaries. The people generally affected similar names&mdash;names
+ containing, in almost every case, a god&rsquo;s name as one of their elements.
+ The seals or signets which formed almost a necessary part of each man&rsquo;s
+ costume were, except in rare instances, of a religious character. Even in
+ banquets, where we might have expected that thoughts of religion would be
+ laid aside, it seems to have been the practice during the drinking to
+ rehearse the praises of the deities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told by Nicolas of Damascus that the Babylonians cultivated two
+ virtues especially, honesty and calmness. Honesty is the natural, almost
+ the necessary virtue of traders, who soon find that it is the best policy
+ to be fair and just in their dealings. We may well believe that this
+ intelligent people had the wisdom to see their true interests, and to
+ understand that trade can never prosper unless conducted with integrity
+ and straightforwardness. The very fact that their trade did prosper, that
+ their goods were everywhere in request, is sufficient proof of their
+ commercial honesty, and of their superiority to those tricks which
+ speedily ruin a commerce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calmness is not a common Oriental virtue. It is not even in general very
+ highly appreciated, being apt to strike the lively, sensitive, and
+ passionate Eastern as mere dulness and apathy. In China, however, it is a
+ point of honor that the outward demeanor should be calm and placid under
+ any amount of provocation; and indignation, fierceness, even haste, are
+ regarded as signs of incomplete civilization, which the disciples of
+ Confucius love to note in their would-be rivals of the West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may conceive that some similar notion was entertained by the proud
+ Babylonians, who no doubt regarded themselves as infinitely superior in
+ manners and culture, no less than in scientific attainments, to the
+ &ldquo;barbarians&rdquo; of Persia and Greece. While rage boiled in their hearts, and
+ commands to torture and destroy fell from their tongues, etiquette may
+ have required that the countenance should be unmoved, the eye serene, the
+ voice low and gentle. Such contrasts are not uncommonly seen in the polite
+ Mandarin, whose apparent calmness drives his European antagonist to
+ despair; and it may well be that the Babylonians of the sixth and seventh
+ centuries before our era had attained to an equal power of restraining the
+ expression of feeling. But real gentleness, meekness, and placability were
+ certainly not the attributes of a people who were so fierce in their wars
+ and so cruel in their punishments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTEE IV. THE CAPITAL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Babylon, the capital of the Fourth Monarchy, was probably the largest and
+ most magnificent city of the ancient world. A dim tradition current in the
+ East gave, it is true, a greater extent, if not a greater splendor, to the
+ metropolis of Assyria; but this tradition first appears in ages subsequent
+ to the complete destruction of the more northern city; and it is
+ contradicted by the testimony of facts. The walls of Nineveh have been
+ completely traced, and indicate a city three miles in length, by less than
+ a mile and a half in breadth, containing an area of about 1800 English
+ acres. Of this area less than one tenth is occupied by ruins of any
+ pretension. On the admitted site of Babylon striking masses of ruin cover
+ a space considerably larger than that which at Nineveh constitutes the
+ whole area of the town. Beyond this space in every direction, north, east,
+ south and west, are detached mounds indicating the former existence of
+ edifices of some size, while the intermediate ground between these mounds
+ and the main ruins shows distinct traces of its having been built upon in
+ former days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the actual size of the town, modern research gives us no clear and
+ definite notion. One explorer only has come away from the country with an
+ idea that the general position of the detached mounds, by which the plain
+ around Hillah is dotted, enables him to draw the lines of the ancient
+ walls, and mark out the exact position of the city. But the very maps and
+ plans which are put forward in support of this view show that it rests
+ mainly on hypothesis; nor is complete confidence placed in the surveys on
+ which the maps and plans have been constructed. The English surveys, which
+ have been unfortunately lost, are said not to have placed the detached
+ mounds in any such decided lines as M. Oppert believes them to occupy, and
+ the general impression of the British officers who were employed on the
+ service is that &ldquo;no vestige of the walls of Babylon has been as yet
+ discovered.&rdquo; <a href="#linkimage-0006">[PLATE XI.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate011.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xi. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ For the size and plan of the city we are thus of necessity thrown back
+ upon the reports of ancient authors. It is not pretended that such reports
+ are in this, or in any other case, deserving of implicit credence. The
+ ancient historians, even the more trustworthy of them, are in the habit of
+ exaggerating in their numbers; and on such subjects as measurements they
+ were apt to take on trust the declarations of their native guides, who
+ would be sure to make over-statements. Still in this instance we have so
+ many distinct authorities&mdash;eyewitnesses of the facts&mdash;and some
+ of them belonging to times when scientific accuracy had begun to be
+ appreciated, that we must be very in credulous if we do not accept their
+ witness, so far as it is consentient, and not intrinsically very
+ improbable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Herodotus, an eye-witness, and the earliest authority on the
+ subject the <i>enceinte</i> of Babylon was a square, 120 stades (about 14
+ miles) each way&mdash;the entire circuit of the wall being thus 56 miles,
+ and the area enclosed within them falling little short of 200 square
+ miles. Ctesias, also an eyewitness, and the next writer on the subject,
+ reduced the circuit of the walls to 360 stades, or 41 miles, and made the
+ area consequently little more than 100 square miles. These two estimates
+ are respectively the greatest and the least that have come down to us. The
+ historians of Alexander, while conforming nearly to the statements of
+ Ctesias, a little enlarge his dimensions, making the circuit 365, 368, or
+ 385 stades. The differences here are inconsiderable; and it seems to be
+ established, on a weight of testimony which we rarely possess in such a
+ matter, that the walls of this great town were about forty miles in
+ circumference, and enclosed an area as large as that of the Landgraviat of
+ Hesse-Homburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult to suppose that the real city&mdash;the streets and
+ squares&mdash;can at any time have occupied one half of this enormous
+ area, A clear space, we are told, was left for a considerable distance
+ inside the wall&mdash;like the <i>pomaerium</i> of the Romans&mdash;upon
+ which no houses were allowed to be built. When houses began, they were far
+ from being continuous; gardens, orchards, even fields, were interspersed
+ among the buildings; and it was supposed that the inhabitants, when
+ besieged, could grow sufficient corn for their own consumption within the
+ walls. Still the whole area was laid out with straight streets, or perhaps
+ one should say with roads (for the houses cannot have been continuous
+ along them), which cut one another everywhere at right angles, like the
+ streets of some German towns. The wall of the town was pierced with a
+ hundred gates, twenty-five (we may suppose) in each face, and the roads
+ led straight to these portals, the whole area being thus cut up into
+ square blocks. The houses were in general lofty, being three or even four
+ stories high. They are said to have had vaulted roofs, which were not
+ protected externally with any tiling, since the climate was so dry as to
+ render such a protection unnecessary. The beams used in the houses were of
+ palm-wood, all other timber being scarce in the country; and such pillars
+ as the houses could boast were of the same material. The construction of
+ these last was very rude. Around posts of palm-wood were twisted wisps of
+ rushes, which were covered with plaster, and then colored according the
+ taste of the owner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Euphrates ran through the town, dividing it nearly in half. Its banks
+ were lined throughout with quays of brick laid in bitumen, and were
+ further guarded by two walls of brick, which skirted them along their
+ whole length. In each of these walls were twenty-five gates, corresponding
+ to the number of the streets which gave upon the river; and outside each
+ gate was a sloped landing place, by which you could descend to the water&rsquo;s
+ edge, if you had occasion to cross the river. Boats were kept ready at
+ these landing-places to convey passengers from side to side; while for
+ those who disliked this method of conveyance a bridge was provided of a
+ somewhat peculiar construction. A number of stone piers were erected in
+ the bed of the stream, firmly clamped together with fastenings of iron and
+ lead; wooden drawbridges connected pier with pier during the day, and on
+ these passengers passed over; but at night they were withdrawn, in order
+ that the bridge might not be used during the dark. Diodorus declares that
+ besides this bridge, to which he assigns a length of five stades (about
+ 1000 yards) and a breadth of 30 feet, the two sides of the river were
+ joined together by a tunnel, which was fifteen feet wide and twelve high
+ to the spring of its arched roof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most remarkable buildings which the city contained were the two
+ palaces, one on either side of the river, and the great temple of Belus.
+ Herodotus describes the great temple as contained within a square
+ enclosure, two stades (nearly a quarter of a mile) both in length and
+ breadth. Its chief feature was the <i>ziggurat</i> or tower, a huge solid
+ mass of brick-work, built (like all Babylonian temple-towers) in stages,
+ square being emplaced on square, and a sort of rude pyramid being thus
+ formed, at the top of which was the main shrine of the god. The basement
+ platform of the Belus tower was, Herodotus tells us, a stade, or rather
+ more than 200 yards, each way. The number of stages was eight. The ascent
+ to the highest stage, which contained the shrine of the god, was on the
+ outside, and consisted either of steps, or of an inclined plane, carried
+ round the four sides of the building, and in this way conducting to the
+ top. According to Strabo the tower was a stado (606 feet 9 inches) in
+ height; but this estimate, if it is anything more than a conjecture, must
+ represent rather the length of the winding ascent than the real altitude
+ of the building. The great pyramid itself was only 480 feet high; and it
+ is very questionable whether any Babylonian building ever equalled it.
+ About half-way up the ascent was a resting-place with seats, where persons
+ commonly sat a while on their way to the summit. The shrine which crowned
+ the edifice was large and rich. In the time of Herodotus it contained no
+ image; but only a golden table and a large couch, covered with a handsome
+ drapery. This, however, was after the Persian conquest and the plunder of
+ its principal treasures. Previously, if we may believe Diodorus, the
+ shrine was occupied by three colossal images of gold&mdash;one of Bel, one
+ of Beltis, and the third of Rhea or Ishtar. Before the image of Beltis
+ were two golden lions, and near them two enormous serpents of silver, each
+ thirty talents in weight. The golden table&mdash;forty feet long and
+ fifteen broad&mdash;was in front of these statues, and upon it stood two
+ huge drinking-cups, of the same weight as the serpents. The shrine also
+ contained two enormous censers and three golden bowls, one for each of the
+ three deities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the base of the tower was a second shrine or chapel, which in the time
+ of Herodotus contained a sitting image of Bel, made of gold, with a golden
+ table in front of it, and a stand for the image, of the same precious
+ metal. Here, too, Persian avarice had been busy; for anciently this shrine
+ had possessed a second statue, which was a human figure twelve cubits
+ high, made of solid gold. The shrine was also rich in private offerings.
+ Outside the building, but within the sacred enclosure, were two altars, a
+ smaller one of gold, on which it was customary to offer sucklings, and a
+ larger one, probably of stone, where the worshippers sacrificed full-grown
+ victims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great palace was a building of still larger dimensions than the great
+ temple. According to Diodorus, it was situated within a triple enclosure,
+ the innermost wall being twenty stades, the second forty stades, and the
+ outermost sixty stades (nearly seven miles), in circumference. The outer
+ wall was built entirely of plain baked brick. The middle and inner walls
+ were of the same material, fronted with enamelled bricks representing
+ hunting scenes. The figures, according to this author, were larger than
+ the life, and consisted chiefly of a great variety of animal forms. There
+ were not wanting, however, a certain number of human forms to enliven the
+ scene; and among these were two&mdash;a man thrusting his spear through a
+ lion, and a woman on horseback aiming at a leopard with her javelin&mdash;which
+ the later Greeks believed to represent the mythic Ninus and Semiramis. Of
+ the character of the apartments we hear nothing; but we are told that the
+ palace had three gates, two of which were of bronze, and that these had to
+ be opened and shut by a machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the main glory of the palace was its pleasure-ground&mdash;the
+ &ldquo;Hanging Gardens,&rdquo; which the Greeks regarded as one of the seven wonders
+ of the world. This extraordinary construction, which owed its erection to
+ the whim of a woman, was a square, each side of which measured 400 Greek
+ feet. It was supported upon several tiers of open arches, built one over
+ the other, like the walls of a classic theatre, and sustaining at each
+ stage, or story, a solid platform, from which the piers of the next tier
+ of arches rose. The building towered into the air to the height of at
+ least seventy-five feet, and was covered at the top with a great mass of
+ earth, in which there grew not merely flowers and shrubs, but tress also
+ of the largest size. Water was supplied from the Euphrates through pipes,
+ and was raised (it is said) by a screw, working on the principal of
+ Archimedes. To prevent the moisture from penetrating into the brick-work
+ and gradually destroying the building, there were interposed between the
+ bricks and the mass of soil, first a layer of reeds mixed with bitumen,
+ then a double layer of burnt brick cemented with gypsum, and thirdly a
+ coating of sheet lead. The ascent to the garden was by steps. On the way
+ up, among the arches which sustained the building, were stately
+ apartments, which, must have been pleasant from their coolness. There was
+ also a chamber within the structure containing the machinery by which the
+ water was raised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the smaller palace, which was opposite to the larger one, on the other
+ side the river, but few details have come down to us. Like the larger
+ palace, it was guarded by a triple enclosure, the entire circuit of which
+ measured (it is said) thirty stades. It contained a number of bronze
+ statues, which the Greeks believed to represent the god Belus, and the
+ sovereigns Ninus and Semiramis, together with their officers. The walls
+ were covered with battle scenes and hunting scenes, vividly represented by
+ means of bricks painted and enamelled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the general character of the town and its chief edifices, if we
+ may believe the descriptions of eye-witnesses. The walls which enclosed
+ and guarded the whole&mdash;or which, perhaps one should rather say,
+ guarded the district within which Babylon was placed&mdash;have been
+ already mentioned as remarkable for their great extent, but cannot be
+ dismissed without a more special and minute description. Like the &ldquo;Hanging
+ Gardens,&rdquo; they were included among the &ldquo;world&rsquo;s seven wonders,&rdquo; and,
+ according to every account given of them, their magnitude and construction
+ were remarkable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been already noticed that, according to the lowest of the ancient
+ estimates, the entire length of the walls was 360 stades, or more than
+ forty-one miles. With respect to the width we have two very different
+ statements, one by Herodotus and the other by Clitarchus and Strabo.
+ Herodotus makes the width 50 royal cubits, or about 85 English feet,
+ Strabo and Q. Curtius reduced the estimate to 32 feet. There is still
+ greater discrepancy with respect to the height of the walls. Herodotus
+ says that the height was 200 royal cubits, or 300 royal feet (about 335
+ English feet); Ctesias made it 50 fathoms, or 300 ordinary Greek feet;
+ Pliny and Solinus, substituting feet for the royal cubits of Herodotus,
+ made the altitude 235 feet; Philostratus and Q. Curtius, following perhaps
+ some one of Alexander&rsquo;s historians, gave for the height 150 feet; finally
+ Clitarchus, as reported by Diodorus Siculus, and Strabo, who probably
+ followed him, have left us the very moderate estimate of 75 feet. It is
+ impossible to reconcile these numbers. The supposition that some of them
+ belong properly to the outer, and others to the inner wall, will not
+ explain the discrepancies&mdash;for the measurements cannot by any
+ ingenuity be reduced to two sets of dimensions. The only conclusion which
+ it seems possible to draw from the conflicting testimony is that the
+ numbers were either rough guesses made by very unskilful travellers, or
+ else were (in most cases) intentional exaggerations palmed upon them by
+ the native ciceroni. Still the broad facts remain&mdash;first, that the
+ walls enclosed an enormous space, which was very partially occupied by
+ buildings; secondly, that they were of great and unusual thickness; and
+ thirdly, that they were of a vast height&mdash;seventy or eighty feet at
+ least in the time of Alexander, after the wear and tear of centuries and
+ the violence of at least three conquerors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general character of the construction is open to but little doubt. The
+ wall was made of bricks, either baked in kilns, or (more probably) dried
+ in the sun, and laid in a cement of bitumen, with occasional layers of
+ reeds between the courses. Externally it was protected by a wide and deep
+ moat. On the summit were low towers, rising above the wall to the height
+ of some ten or fifteen feet, and probably serving as guardrooms for the
+ defenders. These towers are said to have been 250 in number; they were
+ least numerous on the western face of the city, where the wall ran along
+ the marshes. They were probably angular, not round; and instead of
+ extending through the whole thickness of the wall, they were placed along
+ its outer and inner edge, tower facing tower, with a wide space between
+ them&mdash;&ldquo;enough,&rdquo; Herodotus says, &ldquo;for a four-horse chariot to turn
+ in.&rdquo; The wall did not depend on them for its strength, but on its own
+ height and thickness, which were such as to render scaling and mining
+ equally hopeless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was Babylon, according to the descriptions of the ancients&mdash;a
+ great city, built on a very regular plan, surrounded by populous suburbs
+ interspersed among fields and gardens, the whole being included within a
+ large square strongly fortified enceinte. When we turn from this picture
+ of the past to contemplate the present condition of the localities, we are
+ at first struck with astonishment at the small traces which remain of so
+ vast and wonderful a metropolis. &ldquo;The broad walls of Babylon&rdquo; are &ldquo;utterly
+ broken&rdquo; down, and her &ldquo;high gates burned with fire.&rdquo; &ldquo;The golden city hath
+ ceased.&rdquo; God has &ldquo;swept it with the bosom of destruction.&rdquo; &ldquo;The glory of
+ the kingdoms, the beauty of the Chaldees&rsquo; excellency,&rdquo; is become &ldquo;as when
+ God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrha.&rdquo; The traveller who passes through the
+ land is at first inclined to say that there are no ruins, no remains, of
+ the mighty city which once lorded it over the earth. By and by, however,
+ he begins to see that though ruins, in the common acceptation of the term,
+ scarcely exist&mdash;though there are no arches, no pillars, but one or
+ two appearances of masonry even yet the whole country is covered with
+ traces of exactly that kind which it was prophesied Babylon should leave.
+ Vast &ldquo;heaps&rdquo; or mounds, shapeless and unsightly, are scattered at
+ intervals over the entire region where it is certain that Babylon
+ anciently stood, and between the &ldquo;heaps&rdquo; the soil is in many places
+ composed of fragments of pottery and bricks, and deeply impregnated with
+ nitre, infallible indications of its having once been covered with
+ buildings. As the traveller descends southward from Baghdad he finds these
+ indications increase, until, on nearing the Euphrates, a few miles beyond
+ Mohawil, he notes that they have become continuous, and finds himself in a
+ region of mounds, some of which are of enormous size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These mounds begin about five miles above Hillah, and extend for a
+ distance of about three miles from north to south along the course of the
+ river, lying principally on its left or eastern bank. The ruins on this
+ side consist chiefly of three great masses of building. The most northern,
+ to which the Arabs of the present day apply the name of BABIL&mdash;the
+ true native appellation of the ancient citys&mdash;is a vast pile of
+ brick-work of an irregular quadrilateral shape, with precipitous sides
+ furrowed by ravines, and with a flat top. <a href="#linkimage-0005">[PLATE
+ X., Fig.,3.]</a> Of the four faces of the ruin the southern seems to be
+ the most perfect. It extends a distance of about 200 yards, or almost
+ exactly a stade, and runs nearly in a straight line from west to east. At
+ its eastern extremity it forms a right angle with the east face, which
+ runs nearly due north for about 180 yards, also almost in a straight line.
+ The western and northern faces are apparently much worn away. Here are the
+ chief ravines, and here is the greatest seeming deviation from the
+ original lines of the building. The greatest height of the Babil mound is
+ 130 or 140 feet. It is mainly composed of sun-dried brick, but shows signs
+ of having been faced with fire-burnt brick, carefully cemented with an
+ excellent white mortar. The bricks of this outer facing bear the name and
+ titles of Nebuchadnezzar. A very small portion of the original structure
+ has been laid bare enough however to show that the lines of the building
+ did not slope like those of a pyramid, but were perpendicular, and that
+ the side walls had, at intervals, the support of buttresses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This vast building, whatever it was, stood within a square enclosure, two
+ sides of which, the northern and eastern, are still very distinctly
+ marked. A long low line of rampart runs for 400 yards parallel to the east
+ face of the building, at a distance of 120 or 130 yards, and a similar but
+ somewhat longer line of mound runs parallel to the north face at rather a
+ greater distance from it. On the west a third line could be traced in the
+ early part of the present century; but it appears to be now obliterated.
+ Here and on the south are the remains of an ancient canal, the
+ construction of which may have caused the disappearance of the southern,
+ and of the lower part of the western line. <a href="#linkimage-0007">[PLATE
+ XII., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate012.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Below the Babil mound, which stands isolated from the rest of the ruins,
+ are two principal masses&mdash;the more northern known to the Arabs as EL
+ KASR, &ldquo;the Palace,&rdquo; and the more southern as &ldquo;the mound of Amran,&rdquo; from
+ the tomb of a reputed prophet Amran-ibn-Ali, which crowns its summit. The
+ Kasr mound is an oblong square, about 700 yards long by 600 broad, with
+ the sides facing the cardinal points. <a href="#linkimage-0007">[PLATE
+ XII., Fig. 2.]</a> Its height above the plain is 70 feet. Its longer
+ direction is from north to south. As far as it has been penetrated, it
+ consists mainly of rubbish-loose bricks, tiles, and fragments of stone. In
+ a few places only are there undisturbed remains of building. One such
+ relic is a subterranean passage, seven feet in height, floored and walled
+ with baked brick, and covered in at the top with great blocks of
+ sandstone, which may either have been a secret exit or more probably an
+ enormous drain. Another is the Kasr, or &ldquo;palace&rdquo; proper, whence the mound
+ has its name. This is a fragment of excellent brick masonry in a wonderful
+ state of preservation, consisting of walls, piers, and buttresses, and in
+ places ornamented with pilasters, but of too fragmentary a character to
+ furnish the modern inquirer with any clue to the original plan of the
+ building. The bricks are of a pale yellow color and of the best possible
+ quality, nearly resembling our fire-bricks. They are stamped, one and all,
+ with the name and titles of Nebuchadnezzar. The mortar in which they are
+ laid is a fine lime cement, which adheres so closely to the bricks that it
+ is difficult to obtain a specimen entire. In the dust at the foot of the
+ walls are numerous fragments of brick, painted, and covered with a thick
+ enamel or glaze. Here, too, have been found a few fragments of sculptured
+ stone, and slabs containing an account of the erection of a palatial
+ edifice by Nebuchadnezzar. Near the northern edge of the mound, and about
+ midway in its breadth, is a colossal figure of a lion, rudely carved in
+ black basalt, standing over the prostrate figure of a man with arms
+ outstretched. A single tree grows on the huge ruin, which the Arabs
+ declare to be of a species not known elsewhere, and regard as a remnant of
+ the hanging garden of Bokht-i-nazar. It is a tamarisk of no rare kind, but
+ of very great ago, in consequence of which, and of its exposed position,
+ the growth and foliage are somewhat peculiar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ South of the Kasr mound, at the distance of about 800 yards, is the
+ remaining great mass of ruins, the mound of Jumjuma, or of Amran. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0007">[PLATE XII., Fig. 3.]</a> The general shape of this
+ mound is triangular,107 but it is very irregular and ill-defined, so as
+ scarcely to admit of accurate description. Its three sides face
+ respectively a little east of north, a little south of east, and a little
+ south of west. The south-western side, which runs nearly parallel with the
+ Euphrates, and seems to have been once washed by the river, is longer than
+ either of the others, extending a distance of above a thousand yards,
+ while the south-eastern may be 800 yards, and the north-eastern 700.
+ Innumerable ravines traverse the mound on every side, penetrating it
+ nearly to its centre. The surface is a series of undulations. Neither
+ masonry nor sculpture is anywhere apparent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All that meets the eye is a mass of debris; and the researches hitherto
+ made have failed to bring to light any distinct traces of building.
+ Occasionally bricks are found, generally of poor material, and bearing the
+ names and titles of some of the earlier Babylonian monarchs; but the
+ trenches opened in the pile have in no case laid bare even the smallest
+ fragment of a wall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the remains which have been already described, the most remarkable
+ are certain long lines of rampart on both sides of the river, which lie
+ outside of the other ruins, enclosing them all, except the mound of Babil.
+ On the left bank of the stream there is to be traced, in the first place,
+ a double line of wall or rampart, having a direction nearly due north and
+ south, which lies east of the Kasr and Amran mounds, at the distance from
+ them of about 1000 yards. Beyond this is a single line of rampart to the
+ north-east, traceable for about two miles, the direction of which is
+ nearly from north-west to south-east, and a double line of rampart to the
+ south-east, traceable for a mile and a half, with a direction from
+ northeast to south-west. The two lines in this last case are from 600 to
+ 700 yards apart, and diverge from one another as they run out to the
+ north-east. The inner of the two meets the north-eastern rampart nearly at
+ a right angle, and is clearly a part of the same work. It is questioned,
+ however, whether this line of fortification is ancient, and not rather a
+ construction belonging to Parthian times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A low line of mounds is traceable between the western face of the Amran
+ and Kasr hills, and the present eastern bank of the river, bounding a sort
+ of narrow valley, in which either the main stream of the Euphrates, or at
+ any rate a branch from it, seems anciently to have flowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the right bank of the stream the chief remains are of the same kind.
+ West of the river, a rampart, twenty feet high, runs for nearly a mile
+ parallel with the general line of the Amran mound, at the distance of
+ about 1000 yards from the old course of the stream. At either extremity
+ the line of the rampart turns at a right angle, running down towards the
+ river, and being traceable towards the north for 400 yards and towards the
+ south for fifty or sixty. It is evident that there was once, before the
+ stream flowed in its present channel, a rectangular enclosure, a mile long
+ and 1000 yards broad, opposite to the Amran mound; and there are
+ indications that within this <i>enceinte</i> was at least one important
+ building, which was situated near the south-east angle of the enclosure,
+ on the banks of the old course of the river. The bricks found at this
+ point bear the name of Neriglissar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are also, besides the ramparts and the great masses of ruin above
+ described, a vast number of scattered and irregular heaps of hillocks on
+ both sides of the river, chiefly, however, upon the eastern bank. Of these
+ one only seems to deserve distinct mention. This is the mound called El
+ Homeira, &ldquo;the Red,&rdquo; which lies due east of the Kasr, distant from it about
+ 800 yards&mdash;a mound said to be 300 yards long by 100 wide, and to
+ attain an elevation of 60 or 70 feet. It is composed of baked brick of a
+ bright red color, and must have been a building of a very considerable
+ height resting upon a somewhat confined base. Its bricks are inscribed
+ along their edges, not (as is the usual practice) on their lower face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only other ancient work of any importance of which some remains are
+ still to be traced is a brick embankment on the left bank of the stream
+ between the Kasr and the Babil mounds, extending for a distance of a
+ thousand yards in a line which has a slight curve and a general direction
+ of S.S.W. The bricks of this embankment are of a bright red color, and of
+ great hardness. They are laid wholly in bitumen. The legend which they
+ bear shows that the quay was constructed by Nabonidus. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0008">[PLATE XIII.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008">
+ <!-- IMG --></a> <a href="images/plate013.jpg">ENLARGE TO FULL SIZE</a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="plate013th (220K)" src="images/plate013th.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Such then are the ruins of Babylon&mdash;the whole that can now with
+ certainty be assigned to the &ldquo;beauty of the Chaldees&rsquo; excellency&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ &ldquo;great Babylon&rdquo; of Nebuchadnezzar. Within a space little more than three
+ miles long and a mile and three quarters broad are contained all the
+ undoubted remains of the greatest city of the old world. These remains,
+ however, do not serve in any way to define the ancient limits of the
+ place. They are surrounded on every side by nitrous soil, and by low heaps
+ which it has not been thought worth while to excavate, but which the best
+ judges assign to the same era as the great mounds, and believe to mark the
+ sites of the lesser temples and the other public buildings of the ancient
+ city. Masses of this kind are most frequent to the north and east.
+ Sometimes they are almost continuous for miles; and if we take the Kasr
+ mound as a centre, and mark about it an area extending five miles in each
+ direction (which would give a city of the size described by Ctesias and
+ the historians of Alexander), we shall scarcely find a single square mile
+ of the hundred without some indications of ancient buildings upon its
+ surface. The case is not like that of Nineveh, where outside the walls the
+ country is for a considerable distance singularly bare of ruins. The mass
+ of Babylonian remains extending from Babil to Amran does not correspond to
+ the whole <i>enceinte</i> of Nineveh, but to the mound of Koyunjik. It has
+ every appearance of being, not the city, but &ldquo;the heart of the city&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ &ldquo;Royal quarter&rdquo; outside of which were the streets and squares, and still
+ further off, the vanished walls. It may seem strange that the southern
+ capital should have so greatly exceeded the dimensions of the northern
+ one. But, if we follow the indications presented by the respective sites,
+ we are obliged to conclude that there was really this remarkable
+ difference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has to be considered in conclusion how far we can identify the various
+ ruins above described with the known buildings of the ancient capital, and
+ to what extent it is possible to reconstruct upon the existing remains the
+ true plan of the city. Fancy, if it discards the guidance of fact, may of
+ course with the greatest ease compose plans of a charming completeness. A
+ rigid adherence to existing data will produce, it is to be feared, a
+ somewhat meagre and fragmentary result; but most persons will feel that
+ this is one of the cases where the maxim of Hesiod applies&mdash;&ldquo;the half
+ is preferable to the whole:&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/page_insert0182.jpg" height="50" width="404"
+ alt="Page 182 " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The one identification which may be made upon certain and indeed
+ indisputable evidence is that of the Kasr mound with the palace built by
+ Nebuchadnezzar. The tradition which has attached the name of Kasr or
+ &ldquo;Palace&rdquo; to this heap is confirmed by inscriptions upon slabs found on the
+ spot, wherein Nebuchadnezzar declares the building to be his &ldquo;Grand
+ Palace.&rdquo; The bricks of that part of the ruin which remains uncovered bear,
+ one and all, the name of this king; and it is thus clear that here stood
+ in ancient times the great work of which Berosus speaks as remarkable for
+ its height and splendor. If a confirmation of the fact were needed after
+ evidence of so decisive a character, it would be found in the
+ correspondence between the remains found on the mound and the description
+ left us of the &ldquo;greater palace&rdquo; by Diodorus. Diodorus relates that the
+ walls of this edifice were adorned with colored representations of hunting
+ scenes; and modern explorers find that the whole soil of the mound, and
+ especially the part on which the fragment of ruin stands, is full of
+ broken pieces of enamelled brick, varied in hue, and evidently containing
+ portions of human and animal forms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if the Kasr represents the palace built by Nebuchadnezzar, as is
+ generally allowed by those who have devoted their attention to the
+ subject, it seems to follow almost as a certainty that the Amran mound is
+ the site of that old palatial edifice to which the erection of
+ Nebuchadnezzar was an addition. Berosus expressly states that
+ Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s building &ldquo;adjoined upon&rdquo; the former palace, a description
+ which is fairly applicable to the Amran mound by means of a certain
+ latitude of interpretation, but which is wholly inapplicable to any of the
+ other ruins. This argument would be conclusive, even if it stood alone. It
+ has, however, received an important corroboration in the course of recent
+ researches. From the Amran mound, and from this part of Babylon only, have
+ monuments been recovered of an earlier date than Nebuchadnezzar. Here and
+ here alone did the early kings leave memorials of their presence in
+ Babylon; and here consequently, we may presume, stood the ancient royal
+ residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, then, all the principal ruins on the east bank of the river, with the
+ exception of the Babil mound and the long lines marking walls or
+ embankments, be accepted as representing the &ldquo;great palace&rdquo; or &ldquo;citadel&rdquo;
+ of the classical writers we must recognize in the remains west of the
+ ancient course of the river-the oblong square enclosure and the important
+ building at its south-east angle&mdash;the second or &ldquo;smaller palace&rdquo; of
+ Ctesias, which was joined to the larger one, according to that writer, by
+ a bridge and a tunnel. This edifice, built or at any rate repaired by
+ Neriglissar, lay directly opposite the more ancient part of the eastern
+ palace, being separated from it by the river, which anciently flowed along
+ the western face of the Kasr and Amran mounds. The exact position of the
+ bridge cannot be fixed. With regard to the tunnel, it is extremely
+ unlikely that any such construction was ever made. The &ldquo;Father of History&rdquo;
+ is wholly silent on the subject, while he carefully describes the bridge,
+ a work far less extraordinary. The tunnel rests on the authority of two
+ writers only&mdash;Diodorus and Philostratus&mdash;who both wrote after
+ Babylon was completely ruined. It was probably one of the imaginations of
+ the inventive Ctesias, from whom Diodorus evidently derived all the main
+ points of his description.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far there is no great difficulty in identifying the existing remains
+ with buildings mentioned by ancient authors; but, at the point to which we
+ are now come, the subject grows exceedingly obscure, and it is impossible
+ to offer more than reasonable conjectures upon the true character of the
+ remaining ruins. The descriptions of ancient writers would lead us to
+ expect that we should find among the ruins unmistakable traces of the
+ great temple of Belus, and at least some indication of the position
+ occupied by the Hanging Gardens. These two famous constructions can
+ scarcely, one would think, have wholly perished. More especially, the
+ Belus temple, which was a stade square, and (according to some) a stade in
+ height, must almost of necessity have a representative among the existing
+ remains. This, indeed, is admitted on all hands; and the controversy is
+ thereby narrowed to the question, which of two great ruins&mdash;the only
+ two entitled by their size and situation to attention&mdash;has the better
+ right to be regarded as the great and celebrated sanctuary of the ancient
+ Babylon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the mound of Babil is the <i>ziggurat</i> or tower of a Babylonian
+ temple scarcely admits of a doubt. Its square shape, its solid
+ construction, its isolated grandeur, its careful emplacement with the
+ sides facing the cardinal points, and its close resemblance to other known
+ Babylonian temple-towers, sufficiently mark it for a building of this
+ character, or at any rate raise a presumption which it would require very
+ strong reasons indeed to overcome. Its size moreover corresponds well with
+ the accounts which have come down to us of the dimensions of the Belus
+ temple, and its name and proximity to the other main ruins show that it
+ belonged certainly to the ancient capital. Against its claim to be
+ regarded as the remains of the temple of Bolus two objections only can be
+ argued: these are the absence of any appearance of stages, or even of a
+ pyramidical shape, from the present ruin, and its position on the same
+ side of the Euphrates with the palace. Herodotus expressly declares that
+ the temple of Belus and the royal palace were upon opposite sides of the
+ river, and states, moreover, that the temple was built in stages, which
+ rose one above the other to the number of eight. Now these two
+ circumstances, which do not belong at present to the Babil mound, attach
+ to a ruin distant from it about eleven or twelve miles&mdash;a ruin which
+ is certainly one of the most remarkable in the whole country, and which,
+ if Babylon had really been of the size asserted by Herodotus, might
+ possibly have been included within the walls. The Birs-i-Nimrud had
+ certainly seven, probably eight stages, and it is the only ruin on the
+ present western bank of the Euphrates which is at once sufficiently grand
+ to answer to the descriptions of the Belus temple, and sufficiently near
+ to the other ruin to make its original inclusion within the walls not
+ absolutely impossible. Hence, ever since the attention of scholars was
+ first directed to the subject of Babylonian topography, opinion has been
+ divided on the question before us, and there have not been wanting persons
+ to maintain that the Birs-i-Nimrud is the true temple of Belus, if not
+ also the actual tower of Babel, whose erection led to the confusion of
+ tongues and general dispersion of the sons of Adam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this latter identification we are not in the present place concerned.
+ With respect to the view that the Birs is the sanctury of Belus, it may be
+ observed in the first place that the size of the building is very much
+ smaller than that ascribed to the Belus temple; secondly, that it was
+ dedicated to Kebo, who cannot be identified with Bel; and thirdly, that it
+ is not really any part of the remains of the ancient capital, but belongs
+ to an entirely distinct town. The cylinders found in the ruin by Sir Henry
+ Eawlinson declare the building to have been &ldquo;the wonder of Borsippa;&rdquo; and
+ Borsippa, according to all the ancient authorities, was a town by itself&mdash;an
+ entirely distinct place from Babylon. To include Borsippa within the outer
+ wall of Babylon is to run counter to all the authorities on the subject,
+ the inscriptions, the native writer, Berosus, and the classical
+ geographers generally. Nor is the position thus assigned to the Belus
+ temple in harmony with the statement of Herodotus, which alone causes
+ explorers to seek for the temple on the west side of the river. For,
+ though the expression which this writer uses does not necessarily mean
+ that the temple was in the exact centre of one of the two divisions of the
+ town, it certainly implies that it lay towards the middle of one division&mdash;well
+ within it&mdash;and not upon its outskirts. It is indeed inconceivable
+ that the main sanctuary of the place, where the kings constantly offered
+ their worship, should have been nine or ten miles from the palace! The
+ distance between the Amran mound and Babil, which is about two miles, is
+ quite as great as probability will allow us to believe existed between the
+ old residence of the kings and the sacred shrine to which they were in the
+ constant habit of resorting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still there remain as objections to the identification of the great temple
+ with the Babil mound the two arguments already noticed. The Babil mound
+ has no appearance of stages such as the Birs presents, nor has it even a
+ pyramidical shape. It is a huge platform with a nearly level top, and
+ sinks, rather than rises, in the centre. What has become, it is asked, of
+ the seven upper stages of the great Belus tower, if this ruin represents
+ it? Whither have they vanished? How is it that in crumbling down they have
+ not left something like a heap towards the middle? To this it may be
+ replied that the destruction of the Belus tower has not been the mere work
+ of the elements&mdash;it was violently broken down either by Xerxes, or by
+ some later king, who may have completely removed all the upper stages.
+ Again, it has served as a quarry to the hunters after bricks for more than
+ twenty centuries; so that it is only surprising that it still retains so
+ much of its original shape. Further, when Alexander entered Babylon more
+ than 2000 years ago 10,000 men were employed for several weeks in clearing
+ away the rubbish and laying bare the foundations of the building. It is
+ quite possible that a conical mass of crumbled brick may have been removed
+ from the top of the mound at this time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The difficulty remains that the Babil mound is on the same side of the
+ Euphrates with the ruins of the Great Palace, whereas Herodotus makes the
+ two buildings balance each other, one on the right and the other on the
+ left bank of the stream. Now here it is in the first place to be observed
+ that Herodotus is the only writer who does this. No other ancient author
+ tells us anything of the relative situation of the two buildings. We have
+ thus nothing to explain but the bald statement of a single writer&mdash;a
+ writer no doubt of great authority, but still one not wholly infallible.
+ We might say, then, that Herodotus probably made a mistake&mdash;that his
+ memory failed him in this instance, or that he mistook his notes on the
+ subject. Or we may explain his error by supposing that he confounded a
+ canal from the Euphrates, which seems to have anciently passed between the
+ Babil mound and the Kasr (called Shebil by Nebuchadnezzar) with the main
+ stream. Or, finally, we may conceive that at the time of his visit the old
+ palace lay in ruins, and that the palace of Nerig-lissar on the west bank
+ of the stream was that of which he spoke. It is at any rate remarkable,
+ considering how his authority is quoted as fixing the site of the Belus
+ tower to the west bank, that, in the only place where he gives us any
+ intimation of the side of the river on which he would have placed the
+ tower, it is the east and not the west bank to which his words point. He
+ makes those who saw the treachery of Zopyrus at the Belian and Kissian
+ gates, which must have been to the east of the city, at once take refuge
+ in the famous sanctuary, which he implies was in the vicinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole, therefore, it seems best to regard the Babil mound as the
+ ziggurat of the great temple of Bel (called by some &ldquo;the tomb of Belus&rdquo;)
+ which the Persians destroyed and which Alexander intended to restore. With
+ regard to the &ldquo;hanging gardens,&rdquo; as they were an erection of less than
+ half the size of the tower, it is not so necessary to suppose that
+ distinct traces must remain of them. Their debris may be confused with
+ those of the Kasr mound, on which one writer places them. Or they may have
+ stood between the Kasr and Amran ruins, where are now some mounds of no
+ great height. Or, possibly, their true site is in the modern El Homeira,
+ the remarkable red mound which lies east of the Kasr at the distance of
+ about 800 yards, and attains an elevation of sixty-five feet. Though this
+ building is not situated upon the banks of the Euphrates, where Strabo and
+ Diodorus place the gardens, it abuts upon a long low valley into which the
+ Euphrates water seems formerly to have been introduced, and which may
+ therefore have been given the name of the river. This identification is,
+ however, it must be allowed, very doubtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two lines of mounds which enclose the long low valley above mentioned
+ are probably the remains of an embankment which here confined the waters
+ of a great reservoir. Nebuchadnezzar relates that he constructed a large
+ reservoir, which he calls the Yapur-Shapu, in Babylon, and led water into
+ it by means of an &ldquo;eastern canal&rdquo;&mdash;the Shebil. The Shebil canal, it
+ is probable, left the Euphrates at some point between Babil and the Kasr,
+ and ran across with a course nearly from west to east to the top of the
+ Yapur-Shapu. This reservoir seems to have been a long and somewhat narrow
+ parallelogram, running nearly from north to south, which shut in the great
+ palace on the east and protected it like a huge moat. Most likely it
+ communicated with the Euphrates towards the south by a second canal, the
+ exact line of which cannot be determined. Thus the palatial residence of
+ the Babylonian kings looked in both directions upon broad sheets of water,
+ an agreeable prospect in so hot a climate; while, at the same time, by the
+ assignment of a double channel to the Euphrates, its floods were the more
+ readily controlled, and the city was preserved from those terrible
+ inundations which in modern times have often threatened the existence of
+ Baghdad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other lines of mound upon the east side of the river may either be
+ Parthian works, or (possibly) they may be the remains of some of those
+ lofty walls whereby, according to Diodorus, the greater palace was
+ surrounded and defended. The fragments of them which remain are so placed
+ that if the lines were produced they would include all the principal ruins
+ on the left bank except the Babil tower. They may therefore be the old
+ defences of the Eastern palace; though, if so, it is strange that they run
+ in lines which are neither straight nor parallel to those of the buildings
+ enclosed by them. The irregularity of these ramparts is certainly a very
+ strong argument in favor of their having been the work of a people
+ considerably more barbarous and ignorant than the Babylonians. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0010">[PLATE XIV.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate014.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xiv. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. ARTS AND SCIENCES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That the Babylonians were among the most ingenious of all the nations of
+ antiquity, and had made considerable progress in the arts and sciences
+ before their conquest by the Persians, is generally admitted. The
+ classical writers commonly parallel them with the Egyptians; and though,
+ from their habit of confusing Babylon with Assyria, it is not always quite
+ certain that the inhabitants of the more southern country&mdash;the real
+ Babylonians&mdash;are meant, still there is sufficient reason to believe
+ that, in the estimation of the Greeks and Romans, the people of the lower
+ Euphrates were regarded as at least equally advanced in civilization with
+ those of the Nile valley and the Delta. The branches of knowledge wherein
+ by general consent the Babylonians principally excelled were architecture
+ and astronomy. Of their architectural works two at least were reckoned
+ among the &ldquo;Seven Wonders,&rdquo; while others, not elevated to this exalted
+ rank, were yet considered to be among the most curious and admirable of
+ Oriental constructions. In astronomical science they were thought to have
+ far excelled all other nations, and the first Greeks who made much
+ progress in the subject confessed themselves the humble disciples of
+ Babylonian teachers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the account, which it is proposed to give, in this place, of Babylonian
+ art and science, so far as they are respectively known to us, the priority
+ will be assigned to art, which is an earlier product of the human mind
+ than science; and among the arts the first place will be given to
+ architecture, as at once the most fundamental of all the fine arts, and
+ the one in which the Babylonians attained their greatest excellence. It is
+ as builders that the primitive Chaldaean people, the progenitors of the
+ Babylonians, first appear before us in history; and it was on his
+ buildings that the great king of the later Empire, Nebuchadnezzar,
+ specially prided himself. When Herodotus visited Babylon he was struck
+ chiefly by its extraordinary edifices; and it is the account which the
+ Greek writers gave of these erections that has, more than anything else,
+ procured for the Babylonians the fame that they possess and the position
+ that they hold among the six or seven leading nations of the old world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The architecture of the Babylonians seems to have culminated in the
+ Temple. While their palaces, their bridges, their walls, even their
+ private houses were remarkable, their grandest works, their most elaborate
+ efforts, were dedicated to the honor and service, not of man, but of God.
+ The Temple takes in Babylonia the same sort of rank which it has in Egypt
+ and in Greece. It is not, as in Assyria, a mere adjunct of the palace. It
+ stands by itself, in proud independence, as the great building of a city,
+ or a part of a city; it is, if not absolutely larger, at any rate loftier
+ and more conspicuous than any other edifice: it often boasts a magnificent
+ adornment: the value of the offerings which are deposited in it is
+ enormous: in every respect it rivals the palace, while in some it has a
+ decided preeminence. It draws all eyes by its superior height and
+ sometimes by its costly ornamentation; it inspires awe by the religious
+ associations which belong to it; finally, it is a stronghold as well as a
+ place of worship, and may furnish a refuge to thousands in the time of
+ danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Babylonian temple seems to have stood commonly within a walled
+ enclosure. In the case of the great temple of Belus at Babylon, the
+ enclosure is said to have been a square of two stades each way, or, in
+ other words, to have contained an area of thirty acres. The temple itself
+ ordinarily consisted of two parts. Its most essential feature was a <i>ziggurat</i>,
+ or tower, which was either square, or at any rate rectangular, and built
+ in stages, the smallest number of such stages being two, and the largest
+ known number seven. At the summit of the tower was probably in every case
+ a shrine, or chapel, of greater or less size, containing altars and
+ images. The ascent to this was on the outside of the towers, which were
+ entirely solid; and it generally wound round the different faces of the
+ towers, ascending them either by means of steps or by an inclined plane.
+ Special care was taken with regard to the emplacement of the tower, either
+ its sides or its angles being made exactly to confront the cardinal
+ points. It is said that the temple-towers were used not merely for
+ religious purposes but also as observatories, a use with a view to which
+ this arrangement of their position would have been serviceable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the shrine at the summit of the temple-tower or ziggurat, there
+ was commonly at the base of the tower, or at any rate somewhere within the
+ enclosure, a second shrine or chapel, in which the ordinary worshipper,
+ who wished to spare himself the long ascent, made his offerings. Here
+ again the ornamentation was most costly, lavish use being made of the
+ precious metals for images and other furniture. Altars of different sizes
+ were placed in the open air in the vicinity of this lower shrine, on which
+ were sacrificed different classes of victims, gold being used occasionally
+ as the material of the altar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general appearance of a Babylonian temple, or at any rate of its chief
+ feature, the tower or <i>ziggurat</i>, will be best gathered from a more
+ particular description of a single building of the kind; and the building
+ which it will be most convenient to take for that purpose is that
+ remarkable edifice which strikes moderns with more admiration than any
+ other now existing in the country, and which has also been more completely
+ and more carefully examined than any other Babylonian ruins&mdash;the
+ Birs-i-Nimrud, or ancient temple of Nebo at Borsippa. The plan of this
+ tower has been almost completely made out from data still existing on the
+ spot; and a restoration of the original building may be given with a near
+ approach to certainty. <a href="#linkimage-0011">[PLATE XV., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate015.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xv. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Upon a platform of crude brick, raised a few feet above the level of the
+ alluvial plain, was built the first or basement stage of the great
+ edifice, an exact square, 272 feet each way, and and probably twenty-six
+ feet in perpendicular height. On this was erected a second stage of
+ exactly the same height, but a square of only 230 feet; which however was
+ not placed exactly in the middle of the first, but further from its
+ northeastern than its south-western edge, twelve feet only from the one
+ and thirty feet from the other. The third stage, which was imposed in the
+ same way upon the second, was also twenty-six feet high, and was a square
+ of 188 feet. Thus far the plan had been uniform and without any variety;
+ but at this point an alteration took place. The height of the fourth
+ stage, instead of being twenty-six, was only fifteen feet. In other
+ respects however the old numbers were maintained; the fourth stage was
+ diminished equally with the others, and was consequently a square of 146
+ feet. It was emplaced upon the stage below it exactly as the former stages
+ had been. The remaining stages probably followed the same rule of
+ diminution&mdash;the fifth being a square of 104, the sixth one of 24, and
+ the seventh one of 20 feet. Each of these stages had a height of fifteen
+ feet. Upon the seventh or final stage was erected the shrine or
+ tabernacle, which was probably also fifteen feet high, and about the same
+ length and breadth. Thus the entire height of the building, allowing three
+ feet for the crude brick platform, was 150 feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ornamentation of the edifice was chiefly by means of color. The seven
+ stages represented the Seven Spheres, in which moved (according to ancient
+ Chaldaean astronomy) the seven planets. To each planet fancy, partly
+ grounding itself upon fact, had from of old assigned a peculiar tint or
+ hue. The Sun was golden, the Moon silver; the distant Saturn, almost
+ beyond the region of light, was black; Jupiter was orange the fiery Mars
+ was red; Venus was a pale Naples yellow; Mercury a deep blue. The seven
+ stages of the tower, like the seven walls of Ecbatana, gave a visible
+ embodiment to these fancies. The basement stage, assigned to Saturn, was
+ blackened by means of a coating of bitumen spread over the face of the
+ masonry; the second stage, assigned to Jupiter, obtained the appropriate
+ orange color by means of a facing of burnt bricks of that hue; the third
+ stage, that of Mars, was made blood-red by the use of half-burnt bricks
+ formed of a bright red clay; the fourth stage, assigned to the Sun,
+ appears to have been actually covered with thin plates of gold; the fifth,
+ the stage of Venus, received a pale yellow tint from the employment of
+ bricks of that hue; the sixth, the sphere of Mercury, was given an azure
+ tint by vitrifaction, the whole stage having been subjected to an intense
+ heat after it was erected, whereby the bricks composing it were converted
+ into a mass of blue slag; the seventh stage, that of the Moon, was
+ probably, like the fourth, coated with actual plates of metal. Thus the
+ building rose up in stripes of varied color, arranged almost as nature&rsquo;s
+ cunning arranges hues in the rainbow, tones of red coming first, succeeded
+ by a broad stripe of yellow, the yellow being followed by blue. Above this
+ the glowing silvery summit melted into the bright sheen of the sky. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0012">[PLATE XVI.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate016.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xvi. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The faces of the various stages were, as a general rule, flat and
+ unbroken, unless it were by a stair or ascent, of which however there has
+ been found no trace. But there were two exceptions to this general
+ plainness. The basement stage was indented with a number of shallow
+ squared recesses, which seem to have been intended for a decoration. The
+ face of the third stage was weak on account of its material, which was
+ brick but half-burnt. Here then the builders, not for ornament&rsquo;s sake, but
+ to strengthen their work, gave to the wall the support of a number of
+ shallow buttresses. They also departed from their usual practice, by
+ substituting for the rigid perpendicular of the other faces a slight slope
+ outwards for some distance from the base. These arrangements, which are
+ apparently part of the original work, and not remedies applied
+ subsequently, imply considerable knowledge of architectural principles on
+ the part of the builders, and no little ingenuity in turning architectural
+ resources to account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the shrine which was emplaced upon the topmost, or silver
+ stage, little is definitely known. It appears to have been of brick; and
+ we may perhaps conclude from the analogy of the old Chaldaean shrines at
+ the summits of towers, as well as from that of the Belus shrine at
+ Babylon, that it was richly ornamented both within and without; but it is
+ impossible to state anything as to the exact character of the
+ ornamentation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tower is to be regarded as fronting to the north-east, the coolest
+ side and that least exposed to the sun&rsquo;s rays from the time that they
+ become oppressive in Babylonia. On this side was the ascent, which
+ consisted probably of abroad staircase extending along the whole front of
+ the building. The side platforms (those towards the south-east and
+ north-west)&mdash;at any rate of the first and second stages, probably of
+ all&mdash;were occupied by a series of chambers abutting upon the
+ perpendicular wall, as the priests&rsquo; chambers of Solomon&rsquo;s temple abutted
+ upon the side walls of that building. In these were doubtless lodged the
+ priests and other attendants upon the temple service. The side chambers
+ seem sometimes to have communicated with vaulted apartments within the
+ solid mass of the structure, like those of which we hear in the structure
+ supporting the &ldquo;hanging gardens.&rdquo; It is possible that there may have been
+ internal stair-cases, connecting the vaulted apartments of one stage with
+ those of another; but the ruin has not yet been sufficiently explored for
+ us to determine whether or not there was such communication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great Tower is thought to have been approached through a vestibule of
+ considerable size. Towards the north-east the existing ruin is prolonged
+ in an irregular manner and it is imagined that this prolongation marks the
+ site of a vestibule or propylaeum, originally distinct from the tower, but
+ now, through the crumbling down of both buildings, confused with its
+ ruins. As no scientific examination has been made of this part of the
+ mound, the above supposition can only be regarded as a conjecture.
+ Possibly the excrescence does not so much mark a vestibule as a second
+ shrine, like that which is said to have existed at the foot of the Belus
+ Tower at Babylon. Till, however, additional researches have been made, it
+ is in vain to think of restoring the plan or elevation of this part of the
+ temple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the temples of the Babylonians we may now pass to their palaces&mdash;constructions
+ inferior in height and grandeur, but covering a greater space, involving a
+ larger amount of labor, and admitting of more architectural variety.
+ Unfortunately the palaces have suffered from the ravages of time even more
+ than the temples, and in considering their plan and character we obtain
+ little help from the existing remains. Still, something may be learnt of
+ them from this source, and where it fails we may perhaps be allowed to eke
+ out the scantiness of our materials by drawing from the elaborate
+ descriptions of Diodorus such points as have probability in their favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonian palace, like the Assyrian, and the Susianian, stood upon a
+ lofty mound or platform. This arrangement provided at once for safety, for
+ enjoyment, and for health. It secured a pure air, freedom from the
+ molestation of insects, and a position only assailable at a few points.
+ The ordinary shape of the palace mound appears to have been square; its
+ elevation was probably not less than fifty or sixty feet. It was composed
+ mainly of sun-dried bricks, which however were almost certainly enclosed
+ externally by a facing of burnt brick, and may have been further
+ strengthened within by walls of the same material, which perhaps traversed
+ the whole mound. The entire mass seems to have been carefully drained, and
+ the collected waters were conveyed through subterranean channels to the
+ level of the plain at the mound&rsquo;s base. The summit of the platform was no
+ doubt paved, either with stone or burnt brick&mdash;mainly, it is
+ probable, with the latter; since the former material was scarce, and
+ though a certain number of stone pavement slabs have been found, they are
+ too rare and scattered to imply anything like the general use of stone
+ paving. Upon the platform, most likely towards the centre, rose the actual
+ palace, not built (like the Assyrian palaces) of crude brick faced with a
+ better material, but constructed wholly of the finest and hardest burnt
+ brick laid in a mortar of extreme tenacity, with walls of enormous
+ thickness, parallel to the sides of the mound, and meeting each other at
+ right angles. Neither the ground-plan nor the elevation of a Babylonian
+ palace can be given; nor can even a conjectural restoration of such a
+ building be made, since the small fragment of Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s palace
+ which remains has defied all attempts to reduce it to system. We can only
+ say that the lines of the building were straight; that the walls rose, at
+ any rate to a considerable height, without windows; and that the flatness
+ of the straight line was broken by numerous buttressses and pilasters. We
+ have also evidence that occasionally there was an ornamentation of the
+ building, either within or without, by means of sculptured stone slabs, on
+ which were represented figures of a small size, carefully wrought. The
+ general ornamentation, however, external as well as internal, we may well
+ believe to have been such as Diodorus states, colored representations on
+ brick of war-scenes, and hunting-scenes, the counterparts in a certain
+ sense of those magnificent bas-reliefs which everywhere clothed the walls
+ of palaces in Assyria. It has been already noticed that abundant remains
+ of such representations have been found upon the Kasr mound. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0011">[PLATE XV., Fig. 2.]</a> They seem to have
+ alternated with cuneiform inscriptions, in white on a blue ground, or else
+ with a patterning of rosettes in the same colors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the general arrangement of the royal palaces, of their height, their
+ number of stories, their roofing, and their lighting, we know absolutely
+ nothing. The statement made by Herodotus, that many of the private houses
+ in the town had three or four stories, would naturally lead us to suppose
+ that the palaces were built similarly; but no ancient author tells us that
+ this was so. The fact that the walls which exist, though of considerable
+ height, show no traces of windows, would seem to imply that the lighting,
+ as in Assyria, was from the top of the apartment, either from the ceiling,
+ or from apertures in the part of the walls adjoining the ceiling.
+ Altogether, such evidence as exists favors the notion that the Babylonian
+ palace, in its character and general arrangements, resembled the Assyrian,
+ with only the two differences, that Babylonian was wholly constructed of
+ burnt brick, while in the Assyrian the sun-dried material was employed to
+ a large extent; and, further, that in Babylonia the decoration of the
+ walls was made, not by slabs of alabaster, which did not exist in the
+ country, but mainly&mdash;almost entirely&mdash;by colored representations
+ upon the brickwork.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the adjuncts of the principal palace at Babylon was the remarkable
+ construction known to the Greeks and Romans as &ldquo;the Hanging Garden.&rdquo; The
+ accounts which, Diodorus, Strabo, and Q. Curtius give of this structure
+ are not perhaps altogether trustworthy; still, it is probable that they
+ are in the main at least founded on fact. We may safely believe that a
+ lofty structure was raised at Babylon on several tiers of arches, which
+ supported at the top a mass of earth, wherein grew, not merely flowers and
+ shrubs, but trees of a considerable size. The Assyrians had been in the
+ habit of erecting structures of a somewhat similar kind, artificial
+ elevations to support a growth of trees and shrubs; but they were content
+ to place their garden at the summit of a single row of pillars or arches,
+ and thus to give it a very moderate height. At Babylon the object was to
+ produce an artificial imitation of a mountain. For this purpose several
+ tiers of arches were necessary; and these appear to have been constructed
+ in the manner of a Roman amphitheatre, one directly over another so that
+ the outer wall formed from summit to base a single perpendicular line. Of
+ the height of the structure various accounts are given, while no writer
+ reports the number of the tiers of arches. Hence there are no sufficient
+ data for a reconstruction of the edifice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the walls and bridge of Babylon, and of the ordinary houses of the
+ people, little more is known than has been already reported in the general
+ description of the capital. It does not appear that they possessed any
+ very great architectural merit. Some skill was shown in constructing the
+ piers of the bridge, which presented an angle to the current and then a
+ curved line, along which the water slid gently. <a href="#linkimage-0011">[PLATE
+ XV., Fig. 3.]</a> The loftiness of the houses, which were of three or four
+ stories, is certainly surprising, since Oriental houses have very rarely
+ more than two stories. Their construction, however, seems to have been
+ rude; and the pillars especially&mdash;posts of palm, surrounded with
+ wisps of rushes, and then plastered and painted&mdash;indicate a low
+ condition of taste and a poor and coarse style of domestic architecture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The material used by the Babylonians in their constructions seems to have
+ been almost entirely brick. Like the early Chaldaeans, they employed
+ bricks of two kinds, both the ruder sun-dried sort, and the very superior
+ kiln-baked article. The former, however, was only applied to platforms,
+ and to the interior of palace mounds and of very thick walls, and was
+ never made by the later people the sole material of a building. In every
+ case there was at least a revetement of kiln-dried brick, while the
+ grander buildings were wholly constructed of it. The baked bricks used
+ were of several different qualities, and (within rather narrow limits) of
+ different sizes. The finest quality of brick was yellow, approaching to
+ our Stourbridge or fire-brick; another very hard kind was blue,
+ approaching to black; the commoner and coarser sorts were pink or red, and
+ these were sometimes, though rarely, but half-baked, in which case they
+ were weak and friable. The shape was always square; and the dimensions
+ varied between twelve and fourteen inches for the length and breadth, and
+ between three and four inches for the thickness. <a href="#linkimage-0013">[PLATE
+ XVII., Fig. 1.]</a> At the corners of buildings, half-bricks were used in
+ the alternate rows, since otherwise the joinings must have been all one
+ exactly over another. The bricks were always made with a mold, and were
+ commonly stamped on one face with an inscription. They were, of course,
+ ordinarily laid horizontally. Sometimes, however, there was a departure
+ from this practice. Rows of bricks were placed vertically, separated from
+ one another by single horizontal layers. This arrangement seems to have
+ been regarded as conducing to strength, since it occurs only where there
+ is an evident intention of supporting a weak construction by the use of
+ special architectural expedients.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate017.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xvii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="plate017a (98K)" src="images/plate017a.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonian builders made use of three different kinds of cement. The
+ most indifferent was crude clay, or mud, which was mixed with chopped
+ straw, to give it greater tenacity, and was applied in layers of
+ extraordinary thickness. This was (it is probable) employed only where it
+ was requisite that the face of the building should have a certain color. A
+ cement superior to clay, but not of any very high value, unless as a
+ preventive against damp, was bitumen, which was very generally used in
+ basements and in other structures exposed to the action of water. Mortar,
+ however, or lime cement was far more commonly employed than either of the
+ others, and was of very excellent quality, equal indeed to the best Roman
+ material.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There can be no doubt that the general effect of the more ambitious
+ efforts of the Babylonian architects was grand and imposing. Even now, in
+ their desolation and ruin, their great size renders them impressive; and
+ there are times and states of atmosphere under which they fill the
+ beholder with a sort of admiring awe, akin to the feeling which is called
+ forth by the contemplation of the great works of nature. Rude and
+ inartificial in their idea and general construction, without architectural
+ embellishment, without variety, without any beauty of form, they yet
+ affect men by their mere mass, producing a direct impression of sublimity,
+ and at the same time arousing a sentiment of wonder at the indomitable
+ perseverance which from materials so unpromising could produce such
+ gigantic results. In their original condition, when they were adorned with
+ color, with a lavish display of the precious metals, with pictured
+ representations of human life, and perhaps with statuary of a rough kind,
+ they must have added to the impression produced by size a sense of
+ richness and barbaric magnificence. The African spirit, which loves gaudy
+ hues and costly ornament, was still strong among the Babylonians, even
+ after they had been Semitized; and by the side of Assyria, her colder and
+ more correct northern sister, Babylonia showed herself a true child of the
+ south&mdash;rich, glowing, careless of the laws of taste, bent on
+ provoking admiration by the dazzling brilliancy of her appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult to form a decided opinion as to the character of
+ Babylonian mimetic art. The specimens discovered are so few, so
+ fragmentary, and in some instances so worn by time and exposure, that we
+ have scarcely the means of doing justice to the people in respect of this
+ portion of their civilization. Setting aside the intaglios on seals and
+ gems, which have such a general character of quaintness and grotesqueness,
+ or at any rate of formality, that we can scarcely look upon many of them
+ as the serious efforts of artists doing their best, we possess not half a
+ dozen specimens of the mimetic art of the people in question. We have one
+ sculpture in the round, one or two modelled clay figures, a few
+ bas-reliefs, one figure of a king engraved on stone, and a few animal
+ forms represented the same material. Nothing more has reached us but
+ fragments of pictorial representations too small for criticism to
+ pronounce upon, and descriptions of ancient writers too incomplete to be
+ of any great value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The single Babylonian sculpture in the round which has come down to our
+ times is the colossal lion standing over the prostrate figure of a man,
+ which is still to be seen on the Kasr mound, as has been already
+ mentioned. The accounts of travellers uniformly state that it is a work of
+ no merit&mdash;either barbarously executed, or left unfinished by the
+ sculptor&mdash;and probably much worn by exposure to the weather. A sketch
+ made by a recent visitor and kindly communicated to the author, seems to
+ show that, while the general form of the animal was tolerably well hit
+ off, the proportions were in some respects misconceived, and the details
+ not only rudely but incorrectly rendered. The extreme shortness of the
+ legs and the extreme thickness of the tail are the most prominent errors;
+ there is also great awkwardness in the whole representation of the beast&rsquo;s
+ shoulder. The head is so mutilated that it is impossible to do more than
+ conjecture its contour. Still the whole figure is not without a certain
+ air of grandeur and majesty. <a href="#linkimage-0013">[PLATE XVII., Fig.
+ 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The human appears to be inferior to the animal form. The prostrate man is
+ altogether shapeless, and can never, it would seem, have been very much
+ better than it is at the present time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Modelled figures in clay are of rare occurrence. The best is one figured
+ by Ker Porter, which represents a mother with a child in her arms. The
+ mother is seated in a natural and not ungraceful attitude on a rough
+ square pedestal. She is naked except for a hood, or mantilla, which covers
+ the head, shoulders, and back, and a narrow apron which hangs down in
+ front. She wears earrings and a bracelet. The child, which sleeps on her
+ left shoulder, wears a shirt open in front, and a short but full tunic,
+ which is gathered into plaits. Both figures are in simple and natural
+ taste, but the limbs of the infant are somewhat too thin and delicate. The
+ statuette is about three inches and a half high, and shows signs of having
+ been covered with a tinted glaze. <a href="#linkimage-0013">[PLATE XVII.,
+ Fig. 2.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The single figure of a king which we possess is clumsy and ungraceful. It
+ is chiefly remarkable for the elaborate ornamentation of the head-dress
+ and the robes, which have a finish equal to that of the best Assyrian
+ specimens. The general proportions are not bad; but the form is stiff, and
+ the drawing of the right hand is peculiarly faulty, since it would be
+ scarcely possible to hold arrows in the manner represented. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0014">[PLATE XVIII., Fig. 2.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0014" id="linkimage-0014">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate018.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Vxiii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The engraved animal forms have a certain amount of merit. The figure of a
+ dog sitting, which is common on the &ldquo;black stones,&rdquo; is drawn with spirit;
+ <a href="#linkimage-0014">[PLATE XVIII., Fig. 1.]</a> and a bird,
+ sometimes regarded as a cock, but more resembling a bustard, is touched
+ with a delicate hand, and may be pronounced superior to any Assyrian
+ representation of the feathered tribe. <a href="#linkimage-0014">[PLATE
+ XVIII., Fig. 3.]</a> The hound on a bas-relief, given in the first volume
+ of this work, is also good; and the cylinders exhibit figures of goats,
+ cows, deer, and even monkeys, which are truthful and meritorious. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0015">[PLATE XIX., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0015" id="linkimage-0015">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate019.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xix. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It has been observed that the main characteristic of the engravings on
+ gems and cylinders, considered as works of mimetic art, is their
+ quaintness and grotesqueness. A few specimens, taken almost at random from
+ the admirable collection of M. Felix Lajard, will sufficiently illustrate
+ this feature. In one the central position is occupied by a human figure
+ whose left arm has two elbow-joints, while towards the right two sitting
+ figures threaten one another with their fists, in the upper quarter, and
+ in the lower two nondescript animals do the same with their jaws. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0014">[PLATE XVIII., Fig. 4.]</a> The entire drawing of
+ this design seems to be intentionally rude. The faces of the main figures
+ are evidently intended to be ridiculous; and the heads of the two animals
+ are extravagantly grotesque. On another cylinder three nondescript animals
+ play the principal part. One of them is on the point of taking into his
+ mouth the head of a man who vainly tries to escape by flight. Another,
+ with the head of a pike, tries to devour the third, which has the head of
+ a bird and the body of a goat. This kind intention seems to be disputed by
+ a naked man with a long beard, who seizes the fish-headed monster with his
+ right hand, and at the same time administers from behind a severe kick
+ with his right foot. The heads of the three main monsters, the tail and
+ trousers of the principal one, and the whole of the small figure in front
+ of the flying man, are exceedingly quaint, and remind one of the pencil of
+ Fuseli. <a href="#linkimage-0015">[PLATE XIX., Fig. 3.]</a> The third of
+ the designs approaches nearly to the modern caricature. It is a drawing in
+ two portions. The upper line of figures represents a procession of
+ worshippers who bear in solemn state their offerings to a god. In the
+ lower line this occupation is turned to a jest. Nondescript animals bring
+ with a serio-comic air offerings which consist chiefly of game, while a
+ man in a mask seeks to steal away the sacred tree from the temple wherein
+ the scene is enacted. <a href="#linkimage-0015">[PLATE XIX., Fig. 4.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is probable that the most elaborate and most artistic of the Babylonian
+ works of art were of a kind which has almost wholly perished. What
+ bas-relief was to the Assyrian, what painting is to moderns, that
+ enamelling upon brick appears to have been to the people of Babylon. The
+ mimetic power, which delights in representing to itself the forms and
+ actions of men, found a vent in this curious byway of the graphic art; and
+ the images of the Chaldaeans, portrayed upon the wall, with vermilion, and
+ other hues, formed the favorite adornment of palaces and public buildings,
+ at once employing the artist, gratifying the taste of the native
+ connoisseur, and attracting the admiration of the foreigner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The artistic merit of these works can only be conjectured. The admiration
+ of the Jews, or even that of Diodorus, who must be viewed here as the echo
+ of Ctesias, is no sure test; for the Jews were a people very devoid of
+ true artistic appreciation; and Ctesias was bent on exaggerating the
+ wonders of foreign countries to the Greeks. The fact of the excellence of
+ Assyrian art at a somewhat earlier date lends however support to the view
+ that the wall-painting of the Babylonians had some real artistic
+ excellence. We can scarcely suppose that there was any very material
+ difference, in respect of taste and aesthetic power, between the two
+ cognate nations, or that the Babylonians under Nebuchadnezzar fell very
+ greatly short of the Assyrians under Asshur-bani-pal. It is evident that
+ the same subjects&mdash;war scenes and hunting scenes&mdash;approved
+ themselves to both people; and it is likely that their treatment was not
+ very different. Even in the matter of color, the contrast was not sharp
+ nor strong; for the Assyrians partially colored their bas-reliefs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tho tints chiefly employed by the Babylonians in their colored
+ representations were white, blue, yellow, brown, and black. The blue was
+ of different shades, sometimes bright and deep, sometimes exceedingly
+ pale. The yellow was somewhat dull, resembling our yellow ochre. The brown
+ was this same hue darkened. In comparatively rare instances the
+ Babylonians made use of a red, which they probably obtained with some
+ difficulty. Objects were colored, as nearly as possible, according to
+ their natural tints&mdash;water a light blue, ground yellow, the shafts of
+ spears black, lions a tawny brown, etc. No attempt was made to shade the
+ figures or the landscape, much less to produce any general effect by means
+ of <i>chiaroscuro</i>; but the artist trusted for his effect to a careful
+ delineation of forms, and a judicious arrangement of simple hues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considerable metallurgic knowledge and skill were shown in the composition
+ of the pigments, and the preparation and application of the glaze
+ wherewith they are covered. The red used was a sub-oxide of copper; the
+ yellow was sometimes oxide of iron, sometimes antimoniate of lead&mdash;the
+ Naples yellow of modern artists; the blue was either cobalt or oxide of
+ copper; the white was oxide of tin. Oxide of load was added in some cases,
+ not as a coloring matter, but as a flux, to facilitate the fusion of the
+ glaze. In other cases the pigment used was covered with a vitreous coat of
+ an alkaline silicate of alumina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pigments were not applied to an entirely flat surface. Prior to the
+ reception of the coloring matter and the glaze, each brick was modelled by
+ the hand, the figures being carefully traced out, and a slight elevation
+ given to the more important objects. A very low bas-relief was thus
+ produced, to which the colors were subsequently applied, and the brick was
+ then baked in the furnace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is conjectured that the bricks were not modelled singly and separately.
+ A large mass of clay was (it is thought) taken, sufficient to contain a
+ whole subject, or at any rate a considerable portion of a subject. On this
+ the modeller made out his design in low relief. The mass of clay was then
+ cut up into bricks, and each brick was taken and painted separately with
+ the proper colors, after which they were all placed in the furnace and
+ baked. When baked, they were restored to their original places in the
+ design, a thin layer of the finest mortar serving to keep them in place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the mimetic art of the Babylonians, and the branches of knowledge
+ connected with it, we may now pass to the purely mechanical arts&mdash;as
+ the art by which hard stones were cut, and those of agriculture,
+ metallurgy, pottery, weaving, carpet-making, embroidery, and the like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stones shaped, bored, and engraved by Babylonian artisans were not
+ merely the softer and more easily worked kinds, as alabaster, serpentine,
+ and lapis-lazuli, but also the harder sorts-cornelian, agate, quartz,
+ jasper, sienite, loadstone, and green felspar or amazon-stone. These can
+ certainly not have been cut without emery, and scarcely without such
+ devices as rapidly revolving points, or discs, of the kind used by modern
+ lapidaries. Though the devices are in general rude, the work is sometimes
+ exceedingly delicate, and implies a complete mastery over tools and
+ materials, as well as a good deal of artistic power. As far as the
+ mechanical part of the art goes, the Babylonians may challenge comparison
+ with the most advanced of the nations of antiquity; they decidedly excel
+ the Egyptians, and fall little, if at all, short of the Greeks and Romans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extreme minuteness of the work in some of the Babylonian seals and
+ gems raises a suspicion that they must have been engraved by the help of a
+ powerful magnifying-glass. A lens has been found in Assyria; and there is
+ much reason to believe that the convenience was at least as well known in
+ the lower country. Glass was certainly in use, and was cut into such
+ shapes as were required. It is at any rate exceedingly likely that
+ magnifying-glasses, which were undoubtedly known to the Greeks in the time
+ of Aristophanes, were employed by the artisans of Babylon during the most
+ flourishing period of the Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Babylonian metal-work we have scarcely any direct means of judging. The
+ accounts of ancient authors imply that the Babylonians dealt freely with
+ the material, using gold and silver for statues, furniture, and utensils,
+ bronze for gates and images, and iron sometimes for the latter. We may
+ assume that they likewise employed bronze and iron for tools and weapons,
+ since those metals were certainly so used by the Assyrians. Lead was made
+ of service in building; where iron was also employed, if great strength
+ was needed. The golden images are said to have been sometimes solid, in
+ which case we must suppose them to have been cast in a mold; but
+ undoubtedly in most cases the gold was a mere external covering, and was
+ applied in plates, which were hammered into shape upon some cheaper
+ substance below. Silver was no doubt used also in plates, more especially
+ when applied externally to walls, or internally to the woodwork of
+ palaces; but the silver images, ornamental figures, and utensils of which
+ we hear, were most probably solid. The bronze works must have been
+ remarkable. We are told that both the town and the palace gates were of
+ this material, and it is implied that the latter were too heavy to be
+ opened in the ordinary manner. Castings on an enormous scale would be
+ requisite for such purposes; and the Babylonians must thus have possessed
+ the art of running into a single mold vast masses of metal. Probably the
+ gates here mentioned were solid; but occasionally, it would seem, the
+ Babylonians had gates of a different kind, composed of a number of
+ perpendicular bars, united by horizontal ones above and below [as in PLATE
+ XIX., Fig. 2.]. They had also, it would appear, metal gateways of a
+ similar character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The metal-work of personal ornaments, such as bracelets and armlets, and
+ again that of dagger handles, seems to have resembled the work of the
+ Assyrians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Small figures in bronze were occasionally cast by the Babylonians, which
+ were sometimes probably used as amulets, while perhaps more generally they
+ wore mere ornaments of houses, furniture, and the like. Among these may be
+ noticed figures of dogs in a sitting posture, much resembling the dog
+ represented among the constellations, figures of men, grotesque in
+ character, and figures of monsters. An interesting specimen, which
+ combines a man and a monster, was found by Sir R. Ker Porter at Babylon.
+ <a href="#linkimage-0016">[PLATE XX., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0016" id="linkimage-0016">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate020.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xx. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The pottery of the Babylonians was of excellent quality, and is scarcely
+ to be distinguished from the Assyrian, which it resembles alike in form
+ and in material. The bricks of the best period were on the whole better
+ than any used in the sister country, and may compare for hardness and
+ fineness with the best Roman. The earthenware is of a fine terra-cotta,
+ generally of a light red color, and slightly baked, but occasionally of a
+ yellow hue, with a tinge of green. It consists of cups, jars, vases, and
+ other vessels. They appear to have been made upon the wheel, and are in
+ general unornamented. From representations upon the cylinders, it appears
+ that the shapes were often elegant. Long and narrow vases with thin necks
+ seem to have been used for water vessels; these had rounded or pointed
+ bases, and required therefore the support of a stand. Thin jugs were also
+ in use, with slight elegant handles. It is conjectured that sometimes
+ modelled figures may have been introduced at the sides as handles to the
+ vases; but neither the cylinders nor the extant remains confirm this
+ supposition. The only ornamentation hitherto observed consists in a double
+ band which seems to have been carried round some of the vases in an
+ incomplete spiral. The vases sometimes have two handles; but they are
+ plain and small, adding nothing to the beauty of the vessels. Occasionally
+ the whole vessel is glazed with a rich blue color. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0016">[PLATE XX., Fig. 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians certainly employed glass for vessels for a small size.
+ They appear not to have been very skilful blowers, since their bottles are
+ not unfrequently misshappen. <a href="#linkimage-0016">[PLATE XX., Fig. 3.]</a>
+ They generally stained their glass with, some coloring matter, and
+ occasionally ornamented it with a ribbing. Whether they were able to form
+ masses of glass of any considerable size, whether they used it, like the
+ Egyptians, for beads and bugles, or for mosaics, is uncertain. If we
+ suppose a foundation in fact for Pliny&rsquo;s story of the great emerald (?)
+ presented by a king of Babylon to an Egyptian Pharaoh, we must conclude
+ that very considerable masses of glass were produced by the Babylonians,
+ at least occasionally; for the said emerald, which can scarcely have been
+ of any other material, was four cubits (or six feet) long and three cubits
+ (or four and a half feet) broad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the productions of the Babylonians none obtained such, high repute
+ in ancient times as their textile fabrics. Their carpets especially were
+ of great celebrity, and were largely exported to foreign countries. They
+ were dyed of various colors, and represented objects similar to those
+ found on the gems, as griffins and such like monsters. Their position in
+ the ancient world may be compared to that which is now borne by the
+ fabrics of Turkey and Persia, which are deservedly preferred to those of
+ all other countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next to their carpets, the highest, character was borne by their muslins.
+ Formed of the finest cotton, and dyed of the most brilliant colors, they
+ seemed to the Oriental the very best possible material for dress. The
+ Persian kings preferred them for their own wear; and they had an early
+ fame in foreign countries at a considerable distance from Babylonia. It is
+ probable that they were sometimes embroidered with delicate patterns, such
+ as those which may be seen on the garments of the early Babylonian kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides woollen and cotton fabrics, the Babylonians also manufactured a
+ good deal of linen cloth, the principal seat of the manufacture being
+ Borsippa. This material was produced, it is probable, chiefly for home
+ consumption, long linen robes being generally worn by the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the arts of the Babylonians we may now pass to their science&mdash;an
+ obscure subject, but one which possesses more than common interest. If the
+ classical writers were correct in their belief that Chaldaea was the
+ birthplace of Astronomy, and that their own astronomical science was
+ derived mainly from this quarter, it must be well worth inquiry what the
+ amount of knowledge was which the Babylonians attained on the subject, and
+ what were the means whereby they made their discoveries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the broad flat plains of Chaldsea, where the entire celestial
+ hemisphere is continually visible to every eye, and the clear transparent
+ atmosphere shows night after night the heavens gemmed with countless
+ stars, each shining with a brilliancy unknown in our moist northern
+ climes, the attention of man was naturally turned earlier than elsewhere
+ to these luminous bodies, and attempts were made to grasp, and reduce to
+ scientific form, the array of facts which nature presented to the eye in a
+ confused and tangled mass. It required no very long course of observation
+ to acquaint men with a truth, which at first sight none would have
+ suspected&mdash;namely, that the luminous points whereof the sky was full
+ were of two kinds, some always maintaining the same position relatively to
+ one another, while others were constantly changing their places, and as it
+ were wandering about the sky. It is certain that the Babylonians at a very
+ early date distinguished from the fixed stars those remarkable five,
+ which, from their wandering propensities, the Greeks called the &ldquo;planets,&rdquo;
+ and which are the only erratic stars that the naked eye, or that even the
+ telescope, except at a very high power, can discern. With these five they
+ were soon led to class the Moon, which was easily observed to be a
+ wandering luminary, changing her place among the fixed stars with
+ remarkable rapidity. Ultimately, it came to be perceived that the Sun too
+ rose and set at different parts of the year in the neighborhood of
+ different constellations, and that consequently the great luminary was
+ itself also a wanderer, having a path in the sky which it was possible, by
+ means of careful observation, to mark out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to do this, to mark out with accuracy the courses of the Sun and Moon
+ among the fixed stars, it was necessary, or at least convenient, to
+ arrange the stars themselves into groups. Thus, too, and thus only, was it
+ possible to give form and order to the chaotic confusion in which the
+ stars seem at first sight to lie, owing to the irregularity of their
+ intervals, the difference in their magnitude, and their apparent
+ countlessness. The most uneducated eye, when raised to the starry heavens
+ on a clear night, fixes here and there upon groups of stars: in the north,
+ Cassiopeia, the Great Bear, the Pleiades&mdash;below the Equator, the
+ Southern Cross&mdash;must at all times have impressed those who beheld
+ them with a certain sense of unity. Thus the idea of a &ldquo;constellation&rdquo; is
+ formed; and this once done, the mind naturally progresses in the same
+ direction, and little by little the whole sky is mapped out into certain
+ portions or districts to which names are given&mdash;names taken from some
+ resemblance, real or fancied, between the shapes of the several groups and
+ objects familiar to the early observers. This branch of practical
+ astronomy is termed &ldquo;uranography&rdquo; by moderns; its utility is very
+ considerable; thus and thus only can we particularize the individual stars
+ of which we wish to speak; thus and thus only can we retain in our memory
+ the general arrangement of the stars and their positions relatively to
+ each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is reason to believe that in the early Babylonian astronomy the
+ subject of uranography occupied a prominent place. The Chaldaean
+ astronomers not only seized on and named those natural groups which force
+ themselves upon the eye, but artificially arranged the whole heavens into
+ a certain number of constellations or asterisms. The very system of
+ uranography which maintains itself to the present day on our celestial
+ globes and maps, and which is still acknowledged&mdash;albeit under
+ protest&mdash;in the nomenclature of scientific astronomers, came in all
+ probability from this source, reaching us from the Arabians, who took it
+ from the Greeks who derived it from the Babylonians. The Zodiacal
+ constellations at any rate, or those through which the sun&rsquo;s course lies
+ would seem to have had this origin; and many of them may be distinctly
+ recognized on Babylonian monuments which are plainly of a stellar
+ character. The accompanying representation, taken from a conical black
+ stone in the British Museum <a href="#linkimage-0016">[PLATE XX., Fig. 2.]</a>,
+ and belonging to the twelfth century before our era, is not perhaps,
+ strictly speaking, a zodiac, but it is almost certainly an arrangement of
+ constellations according to the forms assigned them in Babylonian
+ uranography. <a href="#linkimage-0017">[PLATE XXI.]</a> The Ram, the Bull,
+ the Scorpion, the Serpent, the Dog, the Arrow, the Eagle or Vulture may
+ all be detected on the stone in question, as may similar forms variously
+ arranged on other similar monuments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0017" id="linkimage-0017">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate021.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xxi. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians called the Zodiacal constellations the &ldquo;Houses of the
+ Sun,&rdquo; and distinguished from them another set of asterisms, which they
+ denominated the &ldquo;Houses of the Moon.&rdquo; As the Sun and Moon both move
+ through the sky in nearly the same plane, the path of the Moon merely
+ crossing and recrossing that of the Sun, but never diverging from it
+ further than a few degrees, it would seem that these &ldquo;Houses of the Moon,&rdquo;
+ or lunar asterisms, must have been a division of the Zodiacal stars
+ different from that employed with respect to the sun, either in the number
+ of the &ldquo;Houses,&rdquo; or in the point of separation between &ldquo;House&rdquo; and
+ &ldquo;House.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians observed and calculated eclipses; but their power of
+ calculation does not seem to have been based on scientific knowledge, nor
+ to have necessarily implied sound views as to the nature of eclipses or as
+ to the size, distance, and real motions of the heavenly bodies. The
+ knowledge which they possessed was empirical. Their habits of observation
+ led them to discover the period of 223 lunations or 18 years 10 days,
+ after which eclipses&mdash;especially those of the the moon&mdash;recur
+ again in the same order. Their acquaintance with this cycle would enable
+ them to predict lunar eclipses with accuracy for many ages, and solar
+ eclipses without much inaccuracy for the next cycle or two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the Babylonians carefully noted and recorded eclipses is witnessed by
+ Ptolemy, who had access to a continuous series of such observations
+ reaching back from his own time to B.C. 747. Five of these&mdash;all
+ eclipses of the moon&mdash;were described by Hipparchus from Babylonian
+ sources, and are found to answer all the requirements of modern science.
+ They belong to the years B.C. 721, 720, 621, and 523. One of them, that of
+ B.C. 721, was total at Babylon. The others were partial, the portion of
+ the moon obscured varying from one digit to seven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no reason to think that the observation of eclipses by the
+ Babylonians commenced with Nabonassar. Ptolemy indeed implies that the
+ series extant in his day went no higher; but this is to be accounted for
+ by the fact, which Berosus mentioned, that Nabonassar destroyed, as far as
+ he was able, the previously existing observations, in order that exact
+ chronology might commence with his own reign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other astronomical achievements of the Babylonians were the following.
+ They accomplished a catalogue of the fixed stars, of which the Greeks made
+ use in compiling their stellar tables. They observed and recorded their
+ observations upon occultations of the planets by the sun and moon. They
+ invented the <i>gnomon</i> and the <i>polos</i>, two kinds of sundial, by
+ means of which they were able to measure time during the day, and to fix
+ the true length of the solar day, with sufficient accuracy. They
+ determined correctly within a small fraction the length of the synodic
+ revolution of the moon. They knew that the true length of the solar year
+ was 365 days and a quarter, nearly. They noticed comets, which they
+ believed to be permanent bodies, revolving in orbits like those of the
+ planets, only greater. They ascribed eclipses of the sun to the
+ interposition of the moon between the sun and the earth. They had notions
+ not far from the truth with respect to the relative distance from the
+ earth of the sun, moon, and planets. Adopting, as was natural, a
+ geocentric system, they decided that the Moon occupied the position
+ nearest to the earth; that beyond the Moon was Mercury, beyond Mercury
+ Venus, beyond Venus Mars, beyond Mars Jupiter, and beyond Jupiter, in the
+ remotest position of all, Saturn. This arrangement was probably based upon
+ a knowledge, more or less exact, of the periodic times which the several
+ bodies occupy in their (real or apparent) revolutions. From the difference
+ in the times the Babylonians assumed a corresponding difference in the
+ size of the orbits, and consequently a greater or less distance from the
+ common centre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far the astronomical achievements of the Babylonians rest upon the
+ express testimony of ancient writers&mdash;a testimony confirmed in many
+ respects by the monuments already deciphered. It is suspected that, when
+ the astronomical tablets which exist by hundreds in the British Museum
+ come to be thoroughly understood, it will be found that the acquaintance
+ of the Chaldaean sages with astronomical phenomena, if not also with
+ astronomical laws, went considerably beyond the point at which we should
+ place it upon the testimony of the Greek and Roman writers. There is said
+ to be distinct evidence that they observed the four satellites of Jupiter,
+ and strong reason to believe that they were acquainted likewise with the
+ seven satellites of Saturn. Moreover, the general laws of the movements of
+ the heavenly bodies seem to have been so far known to them that they could
+ state by anticipation the position of the various planets throughout the
+ year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to attain the astronomical knowledge which they seem to have
+ possessed, the Babylonians must undoubtedly have employed a certain number
+ of instruments. The invention of sun-dials, as already observed, is
+ distinctly assigned to them. Besides these contrivances for measuring time
+ during the day, it is almost certain that they must have possessed means
+ of measuring time during the night. The clepsydra, or water-clock, which
+ was in common use among the Greeks as early as the fifth century before
+ our era, was probably introduced into Greece from the East, and is likely
+ to have been a Babylonian invention. The astrolabe, an instrument for
+ measuring the altitude of stars above the horizon, which was known to
+ Ptolemy, may also reasonably be assigned to them. It has generally been
+ assumed that they were wholly ignorant of the telescope. But if the
+ satellites of Saturn are really mentioned, as it is thought that they are,
+ upon some of the tablets, it will follow&mdash;strange as it may seem to
+ us&mdash;that the Babylonians possessed optical instruments of the nature
+ of telescopes, since it is impossible, even in the clear and vapor-loss
+ sky of Chaldaea, to discern the faint moons of that distant planet without
+ lenses. A lens, it must be remembered, with a fair magnifying power, has
+ been discovered among the Mesopotamian ruins. A people ingenious enough to
+ discover the magnifying-glass would be naturally led on to the invention
+ of its opposite. When once lenses of the two contrary kinds existed, the
+ elements of a telescope were in being. We could not assume from these data
+ that the discovery was made; but if it shall ultimately be substantiated
+ that bodies invisible to the naked eye were observed by the Babylonians,
+ we need feel no difficulty in ascribing to them the possession of some
+ telescopic instrument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The astronomical zeal of the Babylonians was in general, it must be
+ confessed, no simple and pure love of an abstract science. A school of
+ pure astronomers existed among them; but the bulk of those who engaged in
+ the study undoubtedly pursued it in the belief that the heavenly bodies
+ had a mysterious influence, not only upon the seasons, but upon the lives
+ and actions of men&mdash;an influence which it was possible to discover
+ and to foretell by prolonged and careful observation. The ancient writers,
+ Biblical and other, state this fact in the strongest way; and the extant
+ astronomical remains distinctly confirm it. The great majority of the
+ tablets are of an astrological character, recording the supposed influence
+ of the heavenly bodies, singly, in conjunction, or in opposition, upon all
+ sublunary affairs, from the fate of empires to the washing of hands or the
+ paring of nails. The modern prophetical almanac is the legitimate
+ descendant and the sufficient representative of the ancient Chaldee
+ Ephemeris, which was just as silly, just as pretentious, and just as
+ worthless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chaldee astrology was, primarily and mainly, genethlialogical. It
+ inquired under what aspect of the heavens persons were born, or conceived,
+ and, from the position of the celestial bodies at one or other of these
+ moments, it professed to deduce the whole life and fortunes of the
+ individual. According to Diodorus, it was believed that a particular star
+ or constellation presided over the birth of each person, and thenceforward
+ exercised over his life a special malign or benignant influence. But his
+ lot depended, not on this star alone, but on the entire aspect of the
+ heavens at a certain moment. To cast the horoscope was to reproduce this
+ aspect, and then to read by means of it the individual&rsquo;s future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chaldee astrology, was not, however, limited to genethlialogy. The
+ Chaldaeans professed to predict from the stars such things as the changes
+ of the weather, high winds and storms, great heats, the appearance of
+ comets, eclipses, earthquakes, and the like. They published lists of luck
+ and unlucky days, and tables showing what aspect of the heavens portended
+ good or evil to particular countries. Curiously enough, it appears that
+ they regarded their art as locally limited to the regions inhabited by
+ themselves and their kinsmen, so that while they could boldly predict
+ storm, tempest, failing or abundant crops, war, famine, and the like, for
+ Syria, Babylonia, and Susiana, they could venture on no prophecies with
+ respect to other neighboring lands, as Persia, Media, Armenia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A certain amount of real meteorological knowledge was probably mixed up
+ with the Chaldaean astrology. Their calendars, like modern almanacs,
+ boldly predicted the weather for fixed days in the year. They must also
+ have been mathematicians to no inconsiderable extent, since their methods
+ appear to have been geometrical. It is said that the Greek mathematicians
+ often quoted with approval the works of their Chaldaean predecessors,
+ Ciden, Naburianus, and Sudinus. Of the nature and extent of their
+ mathematical acquirements, no account, however, can be given, since the
+ writers who mention them enter into no details on the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. MANNERS AND CUSTOMS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Girded with girdles upon their loins, exceeding in dyed attire upon their
+ heads, all of them princes to look to, after the manner of the Babylonians
+ of Chaldaea, the land of their nativity.&rdquo;&mdash;Ezek. xxiii. 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The manners and customs of the Babylonians, though not admitting of that
+ copious illustration from ancient monuments which was found possible in
+ the case of Assyria, are yet sufficiently known to us, either from the
+ extant remains or from the accounts of ancient writers of authority, to
+ furnish materials for a short chapter. Herodotus, Strabo, Diodorus, and
+ Nicolas of Damascus, present us with many interesting traits of this
+ somewhat singular people; the sacred writers contemporary with the acme of
+ the nation add numerous touches; while the remains, though scanty, put
+ distinctly and vividly before our eyes a certain number of curious
+ details.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herodotus describes with some elaboration the costume of the Babylonians
+ in his day. He tells us that they wore a long linen gown reaching down to
+ their feet, a woollen gown or tunic above this, a short cloak or cape of a
+ white color, and shoes like those of the Boeotians. Their hair they
+ allowed to grow long, but confined it by a head-band or a turban; and they
+ always carried a walking-stick with a carving of some kind on the handle.
+ This portraiture, it is probable, applies to the richer inhabitants of the
+ capital, and represents the Babylonian gentleman of the fifth century
+ before our era, as he made his appearance in the streets of the
+ metropolis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cylinders seem to show that the ordinary Babylonian dress was less
+ complicated. The worshipper who brings an offering to a god is frequently
+ represented with a bare head, and wears apparently but one garment, a
+ tunic generally ornamented with a diagonal fringe, and reaching from the
+ shoulder to a little above the knee. The tunic is confined round the waist
+ by a belt. <a href="#linkimage-0018">[PLATE XXII., Fig. 1.]</a> Richer
+ worshippers, who commonly present a goat, have a fillet or headband, not a
+ turban, round the head. They wear generally the same sort of tunic as the
+ others; but over it they have a long robe, shaped like a modern
+ dressing-gown, except that it has no sleeves, and does not cover the right
+ shoulder. <a href="#linkimage-0018">[PLATE XXII., Fig. 1.]</a> In a few
+ instances only we see underneath this open gown a long inner dress or
+ robe, such as that described by Herodotus. <a href="#linkimage-0018">[PLATE
+ XXII., Fig. 2.]</a> A cape or tippet of the kind which he describes is
+ worn sometimes by a god, but is never seen, it is believed, in any
+ representation of a mortal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0018" id="linkimage-0018">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate022.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xxii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The short tunic, worn by the poorer worshippers, is seen also in a
+ representation (hereafter to be given) of hunters attacking a lion. A
+ similar garment is worn by the man&mdash;probably a slave&mdash;who
+ accompanies the dog, supposed to represent an Indian hound; and also by a
+ warrior, who appears on one of the cylinders conducting six foreign
+ captives. <a href="#linkimage-0018">[PLATE XXII., Fig. 4.]</a> There is
+ consequently much reason to believe that such a tunic formed the ordinary
+ costume of the common people, as it does at present of the common Arab
+ inhabitants of the country. It left the arms and right shoulder bare,
+ covering only the left. Below the belt it was not made like a frock but
+ lapped over in front, being in fact not so much a garment as a piece of
+ cloth wrapped round the body. Occasionally it is represented as patterned;
+ but this is somewhat unusual. <a href="#linkimage-0018">[PLATE XXII., Fig.
+ 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In lieu of the long robe reaching to the feet, which seems to have been
+ the ordinary costume of the higher classes, we observe sometimes a
+ shorter, but still a similar garment&mdash;a sort of coat without sleeves,
+ fringed down both sides, and reaching only a little below the knee. The
+ worshippers who wear this robe have in most cases the head adorned with a
+ fillet. <a href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0019" id="linkimage-0019">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate023.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xxiii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It is unusual to find any trace of boots or shoes in the representations
+ of Babylonians. A shoe patterned with a sort of check work was worn by the
+ king; and soldiers seem to have worn a low boot in their expeditions. But
+ with rare exceptions the Babylonians are represented with bare feet on the
+ monuments; and if they commonly wore shoes in the time of Herodotus, we
+ may conjecture that they had adopted the practice from the example of the
+ Medes and Persians. A low boot, laced in front, was worn by the chiefs of
+ the Susianians. Perhaps the &ldquo;peculiar shoe&rdquo; of the Babylonians was not
+ very different. <a href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girdle was an essential feature of Babylonian costume, common to high
+ and low, to the king and to the peasant. It was a broad belt, probably of
+ leather, and encircled the waist rather high up. The warrior carried his
+ daggers in it; to the common man it served the purpose of keeping in place
+ the cloth which he wore round his body. According to Herodotus, it was
+ also universal in Babylonia to carry a seal and a walking-stick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Special costumes, differing considerably from those hitherto described,
+ distinguished the king and the priests. The king wore a long gown,
+ somewhat scantily made, but reaching down to the ankles, elaborately
+ patterned and fringed. Over this, apparently, he had a close-fitting
+ sleeved vest, which came down to the knees, and terminated in a set of
+ heavy tassels. The girdle was worn outside the outer vest, and in war the
+ monarch carried also two cross-belts, which perhaps supported his quiver.
+ The upper vest was, like the under one, richly adorned with embroidery.
+ From it, or from the girdle, depended in front a single heavy tassel
+ attached by a cord, similar to that worn by the early kings of Assyria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tho tiara of the monarch was very remarkable. It was of great height,
+ nearly cylindrical, but with a slight tendency to swell out toward the
+ crown, which was ornamented with a row of feathers round its entire
+ circumference. The space below was patterned with rosettes, sacred trees,
+ and mythological figures. From the centre of the crown there rose above
+ the feathers a projection resembling in some degree the projection which
+ distinguishes the tiara of the Assyrian kings, the rounded, and not
+ squared, at top. This head-dress, which has a heavy appearance, was worn
+ low on the brow, and covered nearly all the back of the head. It can
+ scarcely have been composed of a heaver material than cloth or felt.
+ Probably it was brilliantly colored.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monarch wore bracelets, but (apparently) neither necklaces nor
+ earrings. Those last are assigned by Nicolas of Damascus to a Babylonian
+ governor; and they were so commonly used by the Assyrians that we can
+ scarcely suppose them unknown to their kindred and neighbors. The
+ Babylonian monuments, however, contain no traces of earrings as worn by
+ men, and only a few doubtful ones of collars or necklaces; whence we may
+ at any rate conclude that neither were worn at all generally. The
+ bracelets which encircle the royal wrist resemble the most common bracelet
+ of the Assyrians, consisting of a plain band, probably of metal, with a
+ rosette in the centre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dress of the priests was a long robe or gown, flounced and striped,
+ over which they seem to have worn an open jacket of a similar character. A
+ long scarf or riband depended from behind down their backs. They carried
+ on their heads an elaborate crown or mitre, which is assigned also to many
+ of the gods. In lieu of this mitre, we find sometimes, though rarely, a
+ horned cap; and, in one or two instances, a mitre of a different kind. In
+ all sacrificial and ceremonial acts the priests seem to have worn their
+ heads covered. <a href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig. 6.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the subject of the Babylonian military costume our information is
+ scanty and imperfect. In the time of Herodotus the Chaldaeans seem to have
+ had the same armature as the Assyrians&mdash;namely, bronze helmets, linen
+ breastplates, shields, spears, daggers, and maces or clubs; and, at a
+ considerably earlier date, we find in Scripture much the same arms,
+ offensive and defensive, assigned them. There is, however, one remarkable
+ difference between the Biblical account and that given by Herodotus. The
+ Greek historian says nothing of the use of bows by the Chaldaeans; while
+ in Scripture the bow appears as their favorite weapon, that which
+ principally renders them formidable. The monuments are on this point
+ thoroughly in accordance with Scripture. The Babylonian king already
+ represented carries a bow and two arrows. The soldier conducting captives
+ has a bow an arrow, and a quiver. A monument of an earlier date, which is
+ perhaps rather Proto-Chaldaean than pure Babylonian, yet which has certain
+ Babylonian characteristics, makes the arms of a king a bow and arrow, a
+ club (?), and a dagger. In the marsh fights of the Assyrians, where their
+ enemies are probably Chaldaeans of the low country, the bow is the sole
+ weapon which we see in use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonian bow nearly resembles the ordinary curved bow of the
+ Assyrians. It has a knob at either extremity, over which the string
+ passes, and is thicker towards the middle than at the two ends; the bend
+ is slight, the length when strung less than four feet. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig. 2.]</a>The length of the arrow
+ is about three feet. It is carefully notched and feathered, and has a
+ barbed point. The quiver, as represented in the Assyrian sculptures, has
+ nothing remarkable about it; but the single extant Babylonian
+ representation makes it terminate curiously with a large ornament
+ resembling a spearhead. It is difficult to see the object of this
+ appendage, which must have formed no inconsiderable addition to the weight
+ of the quiver. <a href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig. 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Babylonian daggers were short, and shaped like the Assyrian; but their
+ handles were less elegant and less elaborately ornamented. They were worn
+ in the girdle (as they are at the present day in all eastern countries)
+ either in pairs or singly. <a href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig.
+ 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other weapons of the Babylonians, which we may be sure they used in war,
+ though the monuments do not furnish any proof of the fact, were the spear
+ and the bill or axe. These weapons are exhibited in combination upon one
+ of the most curious of the cylinders, where a lion is disturbed in his
+ meal off an ox by two rustics, one of whom attacks him in front with a
+ spear, while the other seizes his tail and assails him in the rear with an
+ axe. [PI. XXIII., Fig. 5.] With the axe here represented may be compared
+ another, which is found on a clay tablet brought from Sinkara, and
+ supposed to belong to the early Chaldaean period.30 The Sinkara axe has a
+ simple square blade: the axe upon the cylinder has a blade with long
+ curved sides and a curved edge; while, to balance the weight of the blade,
+ it has on the lower side three sharp spikes. The difference between the
+ two implements marks the advance of mechanical art in the country between
+ the time of the first and that of the fourth monarchy. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig. 4.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Babylonian armies seem to have been composed, like Assyrian, of three
+ elements&mdash;infantry, cavalry, and chariots. Of the chariots we appear
+ to have one or two representations upon the cylinders, but they are too
+ rudely carved to be of much value. It is not likely that the chariots
+ differed much either in shape or equipment from the Assyrian, unless they
+ were, like those of Susiana, ordinarily drawn by mules. A peculiar car,
+ four-wheeled, and drawn by four horses, with an elevated platform in front
+ and a seat behind for the driver, which the cylinders occasionally
+ exhibit, is probably not a war-chariot, but a sacred vehicle, like the
+ tensa or thensa of the Romans. <a href="#linkimage-0020">[PLATE XXIV.,
+ Fig. 2.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0020" id="linkimage-0020">
+ <!-- IMG --></a> <a href="images/plate024.jpg">ENLARGE TO FULL SIZE</a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="plate024th (112K)" src="images/plate024th.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The Prophet Habakkuk evidently considered the cavalry of the Babylonians
+ to be their most formidable arm. &ldquo;They are terrible and dreadful,&rdquo; he
+ said; &ldquo;from them shall proceed judgment and captivity; their horses also
+ are swifter than the leopards, and are more fierce than the evening
+ wolves; and their horsemen shall spread themselves, and their horsemen
+ shall come from far; they shall fly, as the eagle that hasteth to eat.&rdquo;
+ Similarly Ezekiel spoke of the &ldquo;desirable young men, captains and rulers,
+ great lords and renowned; all of them riding upon horses,&rdquo; Jeremiah
+ couples the horses with the chariots, as if he doubted whether the chariot
+ force or the cavalry were the more to be dreaded. &ldquo;Behold, he shall come
+ up as clouds, and his chariot shall be as a whirlwind; his horses are
+ swifter than eagles. Woe unto us! for we are spoiled.&rdquo; In the army of
+ Xerxes the Babylonians seem to have served only on foot, which would imply
+ that they were not considered in that king&rsquo;s time to furnish such good
+ cavalry as the Persians, Medes, Cissians, Indians, and others, who sent
+ contingents of horse. Darius, however, in the Behistun inscription, speaks
+ of Babylonian horsemen; and the armies which overran Syria, Palestine, and
+ Egypt, seem to have consisted mainly of horse. The Babylonian armies, like
+ the Persian, were vast hosts, poorly disciplined, composed not only of
+ native troops, but of contingents from the subject nations, Cissians,
+ Elamites, Shuhites, Assyrians, and others. They marched with vast noise
+ and tumult, spreading themselves far and wide over the country which they
+ were invading, plundering and destroying on all sides. If their enemy
+ would consent to a pitched battle, they were glad to engage with him; but,
+ more usually, their contests resolved themselves into a succession of
+ sieges, the bulk of the population attacked retreating to their
+ strongholds, and offering behind walls a more or less protracted
+ resistance. The weaker towns were assaulted with battering-rams; against
+ the stronger, mounds were raised, reaching nearly to the top of the walls,
+ which were then easily scaled or broken down. A determined persistence in
+ sieges seems to have characterized this people, who did not take Jerusalem
+ till the third, nor Tyre till the fourteenth year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In expeditions it sometimes happened that a question arose as to the
+ people or country next to be attacked. In such cases it appears that
+ recourse was had to divination, and the omens which were obtained decided
+ whither the next effort of the invader should be directed. Priests
+ doubtless accompanied the expeditions to superintend the sacrifices and
+ interpret them on such occasions. According to Diodorus, the priests in
+ Babylonia were a caste, devoted to the service of the native deities and
+ the pursuits of philosophy, and held in high honor by the people. It was
+ their business to guard the temples and serve at the altars of the gods,
+ to explain dreams and prodigies, to understand omens, to read the warnings
+ of the stars, and to instruct men how to escape the evils threatened in
+ those various ways, by purifications, incantations, and sacrifices. They
+ possessed a traditional knowledge which had come down from father to son,
+ and which none thought of questioning. The laity looked up to them as the
+ sole possessors of a recondite wisdom of the last importance to humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these statements of the lively but inaccurate Sicilian those of the
+ Book of Daniel are very fairly, if not entirely, in accordance. A class of
+ &ldquo;wise men&rdquo; is described as existing at Babylon, foremost among whom are
+ the Chaldaeans; they have a special &ldquo;learning,&rdquo; and (as it would seem) a
+ special &ldquo;tongue;&rdquo; their business is to expound dreams and prodigies; they
+ are in high favor with the monarch, and are often consulted by him. This
+ body of &ldquo;wise men&rdquo; is subdivided into four classes&mdash;&ldquo;Chaldaeans,
+ magicians, astrologers, and soothsayers&rdquo;&mdash;a subdivision which seems
+ to be based upon difference of occupation. It is not distinctly stated
+ that they are priests; nor does it seem that they were a caste; for Jews
+ are enrolled among their number, and Daniel himself is made chief of the
+ entire body. But they form a very distinct order, and constitute a
+ considerable power in the state; they have direct communication with the
+ monarch, and they are believed to possess, not merely human learning, but
+ a supernatural power of predicting future events. High civil office is
+ enjoyed by some of their number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notices agreeing with these, but of less importance, are contained in
+ Herodotus and Strabo. Herodotus speaks of the Chaldaeans as &ldquo;priests;&rdquo;
+ Strabo says that they were &ldquo;philosophers,&rdquo; who occupied themselves
+ principally in astronomy. The latter writer mentions that they were
+ divided into sects, who differed one from another in their doctrines. He
+ gives the names of several Chaldaeans whom the Greek mathematicians were
+ in the habit of quoting. Among them is a Seleucus, who by his name should
+ be a Greek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From these various authorities we may assume that there was in Babylon, as
+ in Egypt, and in later Persia, a distinct priest class, which enjoyed high
+ consideration. It was not, strictly speaking, a caste. Priests may have
+ generally brought up their sons to the occupation; but other persons, even
+ foreigners (and if foreigners, then <i>a fortiori</i> natives), could be
+ enrolled in the order, and attain its highest privileges. It was at once a
+ sacerdotal and a learned body. It had a literature, written in peculiar
+ language, which its members were bound to study. This language and this
+ literature were probably a legacy from the old times of the first
+ (Turano-Cushite) kingdom, since even in Assyria it is found that the
+ literature was in the main Turanian, down to the very close of the empire.
+ Astronomy, astrology, and mythology were no doubt the chief subjects which
+ the priests studied; but history, chronology, grammar, law, and natural
+ science most likely occupied some part of their attention. Conducting
+ everywhere the worship of the gods, they were of course scattered far and
+ wide through the country; but they had certain special seats of learning,
+ corresponding perhaps in some sort to our universities, the most famous of
+ which were Erech or Orchoe (Warka), and Borsippa, the town represented by
+ the modern Birs-i-Nimrud. They were diligent students, not wanting in
+ ingenuity, and not content merely to hand down the wisdom of their
+ ancestors. Schools arose among them; and a boldness of speculation
+ developed itself akin to that which we find among the Greeks. Astronomy,
+ in particular, was cultivated with a good deal of success; and stores were
+ accumulated of which the Greeks in later times understood and acknowledged
+ the value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In social position the priest class stood high. They had access to the
+ monarch: they were feared and respected by the people; the offerings of
+ the faithful made them wealthy; their position as interpreters of the
+ divine will secured them influence. Being regarded as capable of civil
+ employment, they naturally enough obtained frequently important offices,
+ which added to their wealth and consideration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mass of the people in Babylonia were employed in the two pursuits of
+ commerce and agriculture. The commerce was both foreign and domestic.
+ Great numbers of the Babylonians were engaged in the manufacture of those
+ textile fabrics, particularly carpets and muslins, which Babylonia
+ produced not only for her own use, but also for the consumption of foreign
+ countries. Many more must have been employed as lapidaries in the
+ execution of those delicate engravings on hard stone, wherewith the seal,
+ which every Babylonian carried, was as a matter of course adorned. The
+ ordinary trades and handicrafts practised in the East no doubt flourished
+ in the country. A brisk import and export trade was constantly kept up,
+ and promoted a healthful activity throughout the entire body politic.
+ Babylonia is called &ldquo;a land of traffic&rdquo; by Ezekiel, and Babylon &ldquo;a city of
+ merchants.&rdquo; Isaiah says &ldquo;theory of the Chaldaeans&rdquo; was &ldquo;in their ships.&rdquo;
+ The monuments show that from very early times the people of the low
+ country on the borders of the Persian Gulf were addicted to maritime
+ pursuits, and navigated the gulf freely, if they did not even venture on
+ the open ocean. And AEschylus is a witness that the nautical character
+ still attached to the people after their conquest by the Persians; for he
+ calls the Babylonians in the army of Xerxes &ldquo;navigators of ships.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonian import trade, so far as it was carried on by themselves,
+ seems to have been chiefly with Arabia, with the islands in the Persian
+ Gulf, and directly or indirectly with India. From Arabia they must have
+ imported the frankincense which they used largely in their religious
+ ceremonies; from the Persian Gulf they appear to have derived pearls,
+ cotton, and wood for walking sticks from India they obtained dogs and
+ several kinds of gems. If we may believe Strabo, they had a colony called
+ Gerrha, most favorably situated on the Arabian coast of the gulf, which
+ was a great emporium, and conducted not only the trade between Babylonia
+ and the regions to the south, but also that which passed through Babylonia
+ into the more nothern districts. The products of the various countries of
+ Western Asia flowed into Babylonia down the courses of the rivers. From
+ Armenia, or rather Upper Mesopotamia, came wine, gems, emery, and perhaps
+ stone for building; from Phoenicia, by way of Palmyra and Thapsacus, came
+ tin, perhaps copper, probably musical instruments, and other objects of
+ luxury; from Media and the countries towards the east came fine wool,
+ lapis-lazuli, perhaps silk, and probably gold and ivory. But these imports
+ seem to have been brought to Babylonia by foreign merchants rather than
+ imported by the exertions of native traders. The Armenians, the
+ Phoenicians, and perhaps the Greeks, used for the conveyance of their
+ goods the route of the Euphrates. The Assyrians, the Paretaceni, and the
+ Medes probably floated theirs down the Tigris and its tributaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A large-probably the largest-portion of the people must have been engaged
+ in the occupations of agriculture. Babylonia was, before all things, a
+ grain-producing country&mdash;noted for a fertility unexampled elsewhere,
+ and to moderns almost incredible. The soil was a deep and rich alluvium,
+ and was cultivated with the utmost care. It grew chiefly wheat, barley
+ millet, and sesame, which all nourished with wonderful luxuriance. By a
+ skilful management of the natural water supply, the indispensable fluid
+ was utilized to the utmost, and conveyed to every part of the country.
+ Date-groves spread widely over the land, and produced abundance of an
+ excellent fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the cultivation of the date nothing was needed but a proper water
+ supply, and a little attention at the time of fructification. The male and
+ female palm are distinct trees, and the female cannot produce fruit unless
+ the pollen from the male comes in contact with its blossoms. If the male
+ and the female trees are grown in proper proximity, natural causes will
+ always produce a certain amount of impregnation. But to obtain a good
+ crop, art may be serviceably applied. According to Herodotus, the
+ Babylonians were accustomed to tie the branches of the male to those of
+ the female palm. This was doubtless done at the blossoming time, when it
+ would have the effect he mentions, preventing the fruit of the female, or
+ date-producing palms, from falling off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The date palm was multiplied in Babylonia by artificial means. It was
+ commonly grown from seed, several stones being planted together for
+ greater security; But occasionally it was raised from suckers or cuttings.
+ It was important to plant the seeds and cuttings in a sandy soil; and if
+ nature had not sufficiently impregnated the ground with saline particles,
+ salt had to be applied artificially to the soil around as a dressing. The
+ young plants needed a good deal of attention. Plentiful watering was
+ required; and transplantation was desirable at the end of both the first
+ and second year. The Babylonians are said to have transplanted their young
+ trees in the height of summer; other nations preferred the springtime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the cultivation of grain the Babylonians broke up their land with the
+ plough; to draw which they seem to have employed two oxen, placed one
+ before the other, in the mode still common in many parts of England. The
+ plough had two handles, which the ploughman guided with his two hands. It
+ was apparently of somewhat slight construction. The tail rose from the
+ lower part of one of the handles, and was of unusual length. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0020">[PLATE XXIV., Fig. 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is certain that dates formed the main food of the inhabitants, The
+ dried fruit, being to them the staff of life, was regarded by the Greeks
+ as their &ldquo;bread.&rdquo; It was perhaps pressed into cakes, as is the common
+ practice in the country at the present day. On this and goat&rsquo;s milk, which
+ we know to have been in use, the poorer class, it is probable, almost
+ entirely subsisted. Palm-wine, the fermented sap of the tree, was an
+ esteemed, but no doubt only an occasional beverage. It was pleasant to the
+ taste, but apt to leave a headache behind it. Such vegetables as gourds,
+ melons, and cucumbers, must have been cheap, and may have entered into the
+ diet of the common people. They were also probably the consumers of the
+ &ldquo;pickled bats,&rdquo; which (according to Strabo) were eaten by the Babylonians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the marshy regions of the south there were certain tribes whose sole,
+ or at any rate whose chief, food was fish. Fish abound in these districts,
+ and are readily taken either with the hook or in nets. The mode of
+ preparing this food was to dry it in the sun, to pound it fine, strain it
+ through a sieve, and then make it up into cakes, or into a kind of bread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The diet of the richer classes was no doubt varied and luxurious. Wheaten
+ bread, meats of various kinds, luscious fruits, fish, game, loaded the
+ board; and wine, imported from abroad was the usual beverage. The wealthy
+ Babylonians were fond of drinking to excess; their banquets were
+ magnificent, but generally ended in drunkenness; they were not, however,
+ mere scenes of coarse indulgence, but had a certain refinement, which
+ distinguishes them from the riotous drinking-bouts of the less civilized
+ Modes. Music was in Babylonia a recognized accompaniment of the feast; and
+ bands of performers, entering with the wine, entertained the guests with
+ concerted pieces. A rich odor of perfume floated around, for the
+ Babylonians were connoisseurs in unguents. The eye was delighted with a
+ display of gold and silver plate. The splendid dresses of the guests, the
+ exquisite carpets and hangings, the numerous attendants, gave an air of
+ grandeur to the scene, and seemed half to excuse the excess of which too
+ many were guilty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A love of music appears to have characterized both the Babylonians and
+ their near neighbors and kinsmen, the Susianians. In the sculptured
+ representations of Assyria, the Susianians are shown to have possessed
+ numerous instruments, and to have organized large bands of performers. The
+ Prophet Daniel and the historian Ctesias similarly witness to the musical
+ taste of the Babylonians, which had much the same character. Ctesias said
+ that Annarus (or Nannarus), a Babylonian noble, entertained his guests at
+ a banquet with music performed by a company of 150 women. Of these a part
+ sang, while the rest played upon instruments, some using the pipe, others
+ the harp, and a certain number the psaltery. These same instruments are
+ assigned to the Babylonians by the prophet Daniel, who, however, adds to
+ them three more&mdash;viz., the horn, the sambuca, and an instrument
+ called the sumphonia, or &ldquo;symphony.&rdquo; It is uncertain whether the horn
+ intended was straight, like the Assyrian, or curved, like the Roman cornu
+ and lituus. The pipe was probably the double instrument, played at the
+ end, which was familiar to the Susianians and Assyrians. The harp would
+ seem to have resembled the later harp of the Assyrians; but it had fewer
+ strings, if we may judge from a representation upon a cylinder. Like the
+ Assyrian, it was carried under one arm, and was played by both hands, one
+ on either side of the strings. <a href="#linkimage-0021">[PLATE XXV., Fig.
+ 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0021" id="linkimage-0021">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate025.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xxv. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The character of the remaining instruments is more doubtful. The sambuca
+ seems to have been a large harp, which rested on the ground, like the
+ harps of the Egyptians. The psaltery was also a stringed instrument, and,
+ if its legitimate descendant is the modern santour, we may presume that it
+ is represented in the hands of a Susianian musician on the monument which
+ is our chief authority for the Oriental music of the period. The symphonia
+ is thought by some to be the bagpipe, which is called sampogna by the
+ modern Italians: by others it is regarded as a sort of organ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians used music, not merely in their private entertainments,
+ but also in their religious ceremonies. Daniel&rsquo;s account of their
+ instruments occurs casually in his mention of Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s dedication
+ of a colossal idol of gold. The worshippers were to prostrate themselves
+ before the idol as soon as they heard the music commence, and were
+ probably to continue in the attitude of worship until the sound ceased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seclusion of women seems scarcely to have been practised in Babylonia
+ with as much strictness as in most Oriental countries. The two peculiar
+ customs on which Herodotus descants at length&mdash;the public auction of
+ the marriageable virgins in all the towns of the empire, and the religious
+ prostitution authorized in the worship of Beltis&mdash;were wholly
+ incompatible with the restraints to which the sex has commonly submitted
+ in the Eastern world. Much modesty can scarcely have belonged to those
+ whose virgin charms were originally offered in the public market to the
+ best bidder, and who were required by their religion, at least once in
+ their lives, openly to submit to the embraces of a man other than their
+ husband. It would certainly seem that the sex had in Babylonia a freedom&mdash;and
+ not only a freedom, but also a consideration&mdash;unusual in the ancient
+ world, and especially rare in Asia. The stories of Semiramis and Nitocris
+ may have in them no great amount of truth; but they sufficiently indicate
+ the belief of the Greeks as to the comparative publicity allowed to their
+ women by the Babylonians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monuments accord with the view of Babylonian manners thus opened to
+ us. The female form is not eschewed by the Chaldaean artists. Besides
+ images of a goddess (Beltis or Ish-tar) suckling a child, which are
+ frequent, we find on the cylinders numerous representations of women,
+ engaged in various employments. Sometimes they are represented in a
+ procession, visiting the shrine of a goddess, to whom they offer their
+ petitions, by the mouth of one of their number, or to whom they bring
+ their children for the purpose, probably, of placing them under her
+ protection <a href="#linkimage-0021">[PLATE XXV., Fig. 5.]</a>, sometimes
+ they may be seen amusing themselves among birds and flowers in a garden,
+ plucking the fruit from dwarf palms, and politely handing it to one
+ another. <a href="#linkimage-0021">[PLATE XXV., Fig. 4.]</a> Their attire
+ is in every case nearly the same; they wear a long but scanty robe,
+ reaching to the ankles, ornamented at the bottom with a fringe and
+ apparently opening in front. The upper part of the dress passes over only
+ one shoulder. It is trimmed round the top with a fringe which runs
+ diagonally across the chest, and a similar fringe edges the dress down the
+ front where it opens. A band or fillet is worn round the head, confining
+ the hair, which is turned back behind the head, and tied by a riband, or
+ else held up by the fillet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Female ornaments are not perceptible on the small figures of the
+ cylinders; but from the modelled image in clay, of which a representation
+ has been already given, we learn that bracelets and earrings of a simple
+ character were worn by Babylonian women, if they were not by the men. On
+ the whole, however, female dress seems to have been plain and wanting in
+ variety, though we may perhaps suspect that the artists do not trouble
+ themselves to represent very accurately such diversities of apparel as
+ actually existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a single representation of a priestess it would seem that women of
+ that class wore nothing but a petticoat, thus exposing not only the arms,
+ but the whole of the body as far as the waist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monuments throw a little further light on the daily life of the
+ Babylonians. A few of their implements, as saws and hatchets, are
+ represented. <a href="#linkimage-0021">[PLATE XXV., Fig. 2]</a>; and from
+ the stools, the chairs, the tables, and stands for holding water-jars
+ which occur occasionally on the cylinders, we may gather that the fashion
+ of their furniture much resembled that of their northern neighbors, the
+ Assyrians. It is needless to dwell on this subject, which presents no
+ novel features, and has been anticipated by the discussion on Assyrian
+ furniture in the first volume. The only touch that can be added to what
+ was there said is that in Babylonia, the chief&mdash;almost the
+ sole-material employed for furniture was the wood of the palm-tree, a soft
+ and light fabric which could be easily worked, and which had considerable
+ strength, but did not admit of a high finish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. RELIGION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Religion of the later Babylonians differed in so few respects from
+ that of the early Chaldaeans, their predecessors in the same country, that
+ it will be unnecessary to detain the reader with many observations on the
+ subject. The same gods were worshipped in the same temples and with the
+ same rites&mdash;the same cosmogony was taught and held&mdash;the same
+ symbols were objects of religious regard&mdash;even the very dress of the
+ priests was maintained unaltered; and, could Urukh or Chedorlaomer have
+ risen from the grave and revisited the shrines wherein they sacrificed
+ fourteen centuries earlier, they would have found but little to
+ distinguish the ceremonies of their own day from those in vogue under the
+ successors of Nabopolassar. Some additional splendor in the buildings, the
+ idols, and perhaps the offerings, some increased use of music as a part of
+ the ceremonial, some advance of corruption with respect to priestly
+ impostures and popular religious customs might probably have been noticed;
+ but otherwise the religion of Nabonidus and Belshazzar was that of Urukh
+ and Ilgi, alike in the objects and the mode of worship, in the theological
+ notions entertained and the ceremonial observances taught and practised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The identity of the gods worshipped during the entire period is
+ sufficiently proved by the repair and restoration of the ancient temples
+ under Nebuchadnezzar, and their re-dedication (as a general rule) to the
+ same deities. It appears also from the names of the later kings and
+ nobles, which embrace among their elements the old divine appellations.
+ Still, together with this general uniformity, we seem to see a certain
+ amount of fluctuation&mdash;a sort of fashion in the religion, whereby
+ particular gods were at different times exalted to a higher rank in the
+ Pantheon, and were sometimes even confounded with other deities commonly
+ regarded as wholly distinct from them. Thus Nebuchadnezzar devoted himself
+ in an especial way to Merodach, and not only assigned him titles of honor
+ which implied his supremacy over all the remaining gods, but even
+ identified him with the great Bel, the ancient tutelary god of the
+ capital. Nabonidus, on the other hand, seems to have restored Bel to his
+ old position, re-establishing the distinction between him and Merodach,
+ and preferring to devote himself to the former.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A similar confusion occurs between the goddesses Beltis and Nana or
+ Ishtar, though this is not peculiar to the later kingdom. It may perhaps
+ be suspected from such instances of connection and quasi-convertibility,
+ that an esoteric doctrine, known to the priests and communicated by them
+ to the kings, taught the real identity of the several gods and goddesses,
+ who may have been understood by the better instructed to represent, not
+ distinct and separate beings, but the several phases of the Divine Nature.
+ Ancient polytheism had, it may be surmised, to a great extent this origin,
+ the various names and titles of the Supreme, which designated His
+ different attributes or the different spheres of His operation, coming by
+ degrees to be misunderstood, and to pass, first with the vulgar, and at
+ last with all but the most enlightened, for the appellations of a number
+ of gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief objects of Babylonian worship were Bel, Merodach, and Nebo.
+ Nebo, the special deity of Borsippa, seems to have been regarded as a sort
+ of powerful patron-saint under whose protection it was important to place
+ individuals. During the period of the later kingdom, no divine element is
+ so common in names. Of the seven kings who form the entire list, three
+ certainly, four probably, had appellations composed with it. The usage
+ extended from the royal house to the courtiers; and such names as
+ Nebu-zar-adan, Samgar-Nebo, and Nebushazban, show the respect which the
+ upper class of citizens paid to this god. It may even be suspected that
+ when Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s Master of the Eunuchs had to give Babylonian names
+ to the young Jewish princes whom he was educating, he designed to secure
+ for one of them this powerful patron, and consequently called him
+ Abed-Nebo&mdash;the servant of Nebo&mdash;a name which the later Jews,
+ either disdaining or not understanding, have corrupted into the Abed-nogo
+ of the existing text.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another god held in peculiar honor by the Babylonians was Nergal.
+ Worshipped at Cutha as the tutelary divinity of the town, he was also held
+ in repute by the people generally. No name is more common on the cylinder
+ seals. It is sometimes, though not often, an element in the names of men,
+ as in &ldquo;Nergal-shar-ezer, the Eab-mag,&rdquo; and (if he be a different person)
+ in Neriglissar, the king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Altogether, there was a strong local element in the religion of the
+ Babylonians. Bel and Merodach were in a peculiar way the gods of Babylon,
+ Nebo of Borsippa, Nergal of Cutha, the Moon of Ur or Hur, Beltis of
+ Niffer, Hea or Hoa of Hit, Ana of Erech, the Sun of Sippara. Without being
+ exclusively honored at a single site, the deities in question held the
+ foremost place each in his own town. There especially was worship offered
+ to them; there was the most magnificent of their shrines. Out of his own
+ city a god was not greatly respected, unless by those who regarded him as
+ their special personal protector.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians worshipped their gods indirectly, through images. Each
+ shrine had at least one idol, which was held in the most pious reverence,
+ and was in the minds of the vulgar identified with the god. It seems to
+ have been believed by some that the actual idol ate and drank the
+ offerings. Others distinguished between the idol and the god, regarding
+ the latter as only occasionally visiting the shrine where he was
+ worshipped. Even these last, however, held gross anthropomorphic views,
+ since they considered the god to descend from heaven in order to hold
+ commerce with the chief priestess. Such notions were encouraged by the
+ priests, who furnished the inner shrine in the temple of Bel with a
+ magnificent couch and a golden table, and made the principal priestess
+ pass the night in the shrine on certain occasions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The images of the gods were of various materials. Some were of wood,
+ others of stone, others again of metal; and these last were either solid
+ or plated. The metals employed were gold, silver, brass, or rather bronze,
+ and iron. Occasionally the metal was laid over a clay model. Sometimes
+ images of one metal were overlaid with plates of another, as was the case
+ with one of the great images of Bel, which was originally of silver but
+ was coated with gold by Nebuchadnezzar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The worship of the Babylonians appears to have been conducted with much
+ pomp and magnificence. A description has been already given of their
+ temples. Attached to these imposing structures was, in every case, a body
+ of priests; to whom the conduct of the ceremonies and the custody of the
+ treasures were intrusted. The priests were married, and lived with their
+ wives and children, either in the sacred structure itself, or in its
+ immediate neighborhood. They were supported either by lands belonging to
+ the temple, or by the offerings of the faithful. These consisted in
+ general of animals, chiefly oxen and goats; but other valuables were no
+ doubt received when tendered. The priest always intervened between the
+ worshipper and the deities, presenting him to them and interceding with
+ uplifted hands on his behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the temple of Bel at Babylon, and probably in most of the other temples
+ both there and elsewhere throughout the country, a great festival was
+ celebrated once in the course of each year. We know little of the
+ ceremonies with which these festivals were accompanied; but we may presume
+ from the analogy of other nations that there were magnificent processions
+ on these occasions, accompanied probably with music and dancing. The
+ images of the gods were perhaps exhibited either on frames or on sacred
+ vehicles. Numerous victims were sacrificed; and at Babylon it was
+ customary to burn on the great altar in the precinct of Bel a thousand
+ talents&rsquo; weight of frankincense. The priests no doubt wore their most
+ splendid dresses; the multitude was in holiday costume; the city was given
+ up to merry-making. Everywhere banquets were held. In the palace the king
+ entertained his lords; in private houses there was dancing and revelling.
+ Wine was freely drunk; passion Was excited; and the day, it must be
+ feared, too often terminated in wild orgies, wherein the sanctions of
+ religion were claimed for the free indulgence of the worst sensual
+ appetites. In the temples of one deity excesses of this description,
+ instead of being confined to rare occasions, seem to have been of
+ every-day occurrence. Each woman was required once in her life to visit a
+ shrine of Beltis, and there remain till some stranger cast money in her
+ lap and took her away with him. Herodotus, who seems to have visited the
+ disgraceful scene, describes it as follows. &ldquo;Many women of the wealthier
+ sort, who are too proud to mix with the others, drive in covered carriages
+ to the precinct, followed by a goodly train of attendants, and there take
+ their station. But the larger number seat themselves within the holy
+ inclosure with wreaths of string about their heads&mdash;and here there is
+ always a great crowd, some coming and others going. Lines of cord mark out
+ paths in all directions among the woman; and the strangers pass along them
+ to make their choice. A women who has once taken her seat is not allowed
+ to return home till one of the strangers throws a silver coin into her
+ lap, and takes her with him beyond the holy ground. When he throws the
+ coin, he says these words&mdash;&lsquo;The goddess Mylitta (Beltis) prosper
+ thee.&rsquo; The silver coin may be of any size; it cannot be refused; for that
+ is forbidden by the law, since once thrown it is sacred. The woman goes
+ with the first man who throws her money, and rejects no one. When she has
+ gone with him, and so satisfied the goddess, she returns home; and from
+ that time forth no gift, however great, will prevail with her. Such of the
+ women as are tall and beautiful are soon released; but others, who are
+ ugly, have to stay a long time before they can fulfil the law. Some have
+ even waited three or four years in the precinct.&rdquo; The demoralizing
+ tendency of this religious prostitution can scarcely be overrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notions of legal cleanliness and uncleanliness, akin to those prevalent
+ among the Jews, are found to some extent in the religious system of the
+ Babylonians. The consummation of the marriage rite made both the man and
+ the woman impure, as did every subsequent act of the same kind. The
+ impurity was communicated to any vessel that either might touch. To remove
+ it, the pair were required first to sit down before a censer of burning
+ incense, and then to wash themselves thoroughly. Thus only could they
+ re-enter into the state of legal cleanness. A similar impurity attached to
+ those who came into contact with a human corpse. The Babylonians are
+ remarkable for the extent to which they affected symbolism in religion. In
+ the first place they attached to each god a special mystic number, which
+ is used as his emblem and may even stand for his name in an inscription.
+ To the gods of the First Triad-Ami, Bel, and Hea or Hoa&mdash;were
+ assigned respectively the numbers 60, 50, and 40; to those of the Second
+ Triad&mdash;the Moon, the Sun and the Atmosphere&mdash;were given the
+ other integers, 30, 20, and 10 (or perhaps six). To Beltis was attached
+ the number 15, to Nergal 12, to Bar or Nin (apparently) 40, as to Hoa; but
+ this is perhaps doubtful. It is probable that every god, or at any rate
+ all the principle deities, had in a similar way some numerical emblem.
+ Many of these are, however, as yet undiscovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Further, each god seems to have had one or more emblematic signs by which
+ he could be pictorially symbolized. The cylinders are full of such forms,
+ which are often crowded into every vacant space where room could be found
+ for them. A certain number can be assigned definitely to particular
+ divinities. Thus a circle, plain or crossed, designates the Sun-god, San
+ or Shamas; a six-rayed or eight-rayed star the Sun-goddess, Gula or
+ Anunit; a double or triple thunderbolt the Atmospheric god, Vul; a serpent
+ probably Hoa; a naked female form Nana or Ishtar; a fish Bar or Nin-ip.
+ But besides these assignable symbols, there are a vast number with regard
+ to which we are still wholly in the dark. Among these may
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0022" id="linkimage-0022">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/page0229.jpg" width="100%" alt="Page 229 " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ tree, an ox, a bee, a spearhead. A study of the inscribed cylinders shows
+ these emblems to have no reference to the god or goddess named in the
+ inscription upon them. Each, apparently, represents a distinct deity; and
+ the object of placing them upon a cylinder is to imply the devotion of the
+ man whose seal it is to other deities besides those whose special servant
+ he considers himself. A single cylinder sometimes contains as many as
+ eight or ten such emblems. The principal temples of the gods had special
+ sacred appellations. The great temple of Bel at Babylon was known as
+ Bit-Saggath, that of the same god at Niffer as Kharris-Nipra. that of
+ Beltis at Warka (Erech) as Bit-Ana, that of the sun at Sippara as
+ Bit-Parra, that of Anunit at the same place as Bit-Ulmis, that of Nebo at
+ Borsippa as Bit-Tsida, etc. It is seldom that these names admit of
+ explanation. They had come down apparently from the old Chaldaean times,
+ and belonged to the ancient (Turanian) form of speech; which is still
+ almost unintelligible. The Babylonians themselves probably in few cases
+ understood their meaning. They used the words simply as proper names,
+ without regarding them as significative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. HISTORY AND CHRONOLOGY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The history of the Babylonian Empire commences with Nabopolassar, who
+ appears to have mounted the throne in the year B.C. 625; but to understand
+ the true character of the kingdom which he set up, its traditions and its
+ national spirit, we must begin at a far earlier date. We must examine, in
+ however incomplete and cursory a manner, the middle period of Babylonian
+ history, the time of obscurity and comparative insignificance, when the
+ country was as a general rule, subject to Assyria, or at any rate played
+ but a secondary part in the affairs of the East. We shall thus prepare the
+ way for our proper subject, while at the same time we shall link on the
+ history of the Fourth to that of the First Monarchy, and obtain a second
+ line of continuous narrative, connecting the brilliant era of Cyaxares and
+ Nebuchadnezzar with the obscure period of the first Cushite kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been observed that the original Chaldaean monarchy lasted, under
+ various dynasties from about B.C. 2400 to B.C. 1300, when it was destroyed
+ by the Assyrians, who became masters of Babylonia under the first
+ Tiglathi-Nin, and governed it for a short time from their own capital.
+ Unable, however, to maintain this unity very long, they appear to have set
+ up in the country an Assyrian dynasty, over which they claimed and
+ sometimes exercised a kind of suzerainty, but which was practically
+ independent and managed both the external and internal affairs of the
+ kingdom at its pleasure. The first king of this dynasty concerning whom we
+ have any information is a Nebuchadnezzar, who was contemporary with the
+ Assyrian monarch Asshur-ris-ilim, and made two attacks upon his
+ territories. The first of these was by the way of the Diyaleh and the
+ outlying Zagros hills, the line taken by the great Persian military road
+ in later times. The second was directly across the plain. If we are to
+ believe the Assyrian historian who gives an account of the campaigns, both
+ attacks were repulsed, and after his second failure the Babylonian monarch
+ fled away into his own country hastily. We may perhaps suspect that a
+ Babylonian writer would have told a different story. At any rate
+ Asshur-ris-ilim was content to defend his own territories and did not
+ attempt to retaliate upon his assailant. It was not till late in the reign
+ of his son and successor, Tiglath-Pileser I., that any attempt was made to
+ punish the Babylonians for their audacity. Then, however, that monarch
+ invaded the southern kingdom, which had passed into the hands of a king
+ named Merodach-iddin-akhi, probably a son of Nebuchadnezzar. After two
+ years of fighting, in which he took Eurri-Galzu (Akkerkuf), the two
+ Sipparas, Opis, and even Babylon itself, Tiglath-Pileser retired,
+ satisfied apparently with his victories; but the Babylonian monarch was
+ neither subdued nor daunted. Hanging on the rear of the retreating force,
+ he harassed it by cutting off its baggage, and in this way he became
+ possessed of certain Assyrian idols, which he carried away as trophies to
+ Babylon. War continued between the two countries during the ensuing reigns
+ of Merodach-shapik-ziri in Babylon and Asshur-bil-kala in Assyria, but
+ with no important successes, so far as appears, on either side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The century during which these wars took place between Assyria and
+ Babylonia, which corresponds with the period of the later Judges in
+ Israel, is followed by an obscure interval, during which but little is
+ known of either country. Assyria seems to have been at this time in a
+ state of great depression. Babylonia, it may be suspected, was
+ flourishing; but as our knowledge of its condition comes to us almost
+ entirely through the records of the sister country, which here fail us, we
+ can only obtain a dim and indistinct vision of the greatness now achieved
+ by the southern kingdom. A notice of Asshur-izir-pal&rsquo;s seems to imply that
+ Babylon, during the period in question, enlarged her territories at the
+ expense of Assyria, and another in Macrobius, makes it probable that she
+ held communications with Egypt. Perhaps these two powers, fearing the
+ growing strength of Assyria, united against her, and so checked for a
+ while that development of her resources which they justly dreaded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, after two centuries of comparative depression, Assyria once more
+ started forward, and Babylonia was among the first of her neighbors whom
+ she proceeded to chastise and despoil. About the year B.C. 880
+ Asshur-izir-pal led an expedition to the south-east and recovered the
+ territory which, had been occupied by the Babylonians during the period of
+ weakness. Thirty years later, his son, the Black-Obelisk king, made the
+ power of Assyria still more sensibly felt. Taking advantage of the
+ circumstance that a civil war was raging in Babylonia between the
+ legitimate monarch Merodach-sum-adin, and his young brother, he marched
+ into the country, took a number of the towns, and having defeated and
+ slain the pretender, was admitted into Babylon itself. From thence he
+ proceeded to overrun Chaldaea, or the district upon the coast, which
+ appears at this time to have been independent of Babylon, and governed by
+ a number of petty kings. The Babylonian monarch probably admitted the
+ suzerainty of the invader, but was not put to any tribute. The Chaldaean
+ chiefs, however, had to submit to this indignity. The Assyrian monarch
+ returned to his capital, having &ldquo;struck terror as far as the sea.&rdquo; Thus
+ Assyrian influence was once more extended over the whole of the southern
+ country, and Babylonia resumed her position of a secondary power,
+ dependent on the great monarchy of the north.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she was not long allowed to retain even the shadow of an autonomous
+ rule. In or about the year B.C. 821 the son and successor of the
+ Black-Obelisk king, apparently without any pretext, made a fresh invasion
+ of the country. Mero-dach-belatzu-ikm, the Babylonian monarch, boldly met
+ him in the field, but was defeated in two pitched battles (in the latter
+ of which he had the assistance of powerful allies) and was forced to
+ submit to his antagonist. Babylon, it is probable, became at once an
+ Assyrian tributary, and in this condition she remained till the troubles
+ which came upon Assyria towards the middle of the eighth century B.C. gave
+ an opportunity for shaking off the hated yoke. Perhaps the first successes
+ were obtained by Pul, who, taking advantage of Assyria&rsquo;s weakness under
+ Asshur-dayan III. (ab. B.C. 770), seems to have established a dominion
+ over the Euphrates valley and Western Mesopotamia, from which he proceeded
+ to carry his arms into Syria and Palestine. Or perhaps Pul&rsquo;s efforts
+ merely, by still further weakening Assyria, paved the way for Babylon to
+ revolt, and Nabonassar, who became king of Babylon in B.C. 747, is to be
+ regarded as the re-establisher of her independence. In either case it is
+ apparent that the recovery of independence was accompanied, or rapidly
+ followed, by a disintegration of the country, which was of evil omen for
+ its future greatness. While Nabonassar established himself at the head of
+ affairs in Babylon, a certain Yakin, the father of Merodach-Baladan,
+ became master of the tract upon the coast; and various princes, Nadina,
+ Zakiru, and others, at the same time obtained governments, which they
+ administered in their own name towards the north. The old Babylonian
+ kingdom was broken up; and the way was prepared for that final subjugation
+ which was ultimately affected by the Sargonids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, the Babylonians seemed to have looked with complacency on this
+ period, and they certainly made it an era from which to date their later
+ history. Perhaps, however, they had not much choice in this matter.
+ Nabonassar was a man of energy and determination. Bent probably on
+ obliterating the memory of the preceding period of subjugation, he
+ &ldquo;destroyed the acts of the kings who had preceded him;&rdquo; and the result was
+ that the war of his accession became almost necessarily the era from which
+ subsequent events had to be dated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nabonassar appears to have lived on friendly terms with Tiglath-Pileser,
+ the contemporary monarch of Assyria, who early in his reign invaded the
+ southern country, reduced several princes of the districts about Babylon
+ to subjection, and forced Merodach-Baladan, who had succeeded his father,
+ Yakin, in the low region, to become his tributary. No war seems to have
+ been waged between Tiglath-Pileser and Nabonassar. The king of Babylon may
+ have seen with satisfaction the humiliation of his immediate neighbors and
+ rivals, and may have felt that their subjugation rather improved than
+ weakened his own position. At any rate it tended to place him before the
+ nation as their only hope and champion&mdash;the sole barrier which
+ protected their country from a return of the old servitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nabonassar held the throne of Babylon for fourteen years, from B.C. 747 to
+ B.C. 733. It has generally been supposed that this period is the same with
+ that regarded by Herodotus as constituting the reign of Semiramis. As the
+ wife or as the mother of Nabonassar, that lady (according to many)
+ directed the affairs of the Babylonian state on behalf of her husband or
+ her son. The theory is not devoid of a certain plausibility, and it is no
+ doubt possible that it may be true; but at present it is a mere
+ conjecture, wholly unconfirmed by the native records; and we may question
+ whether on the whole it is not more probable that the Semiramis of
+ Herodotus is misplaced. In a former volume it was shown that a Semiramis
+ flourished in Assyria towards the end of the ninth and the beginning of
+ the eighth centuries B.C.&mdash;-during the period, that is, of Babylonian
+ subjection to Assyria. She may have been a Babylonian princess, and have
+ exercised an authority in the southern capital. It would seem therefore to
+ be more probable that she is the individual whom Herodotus intends, though
+ he has placed her about half a century too late, than that there were two
+ persons of the same name within so short a time, both queens, and both
+ ruling in Mesopotamia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nabonassar was succeeded in the year B.C. 733 by a certain Nadius, who is
+ suspected to have been among the independent princes reduced to subjection
+ by Tiglath-Pileser in his Babylonian expedition. Nadius reigned only two
+ years&mdash;from B.C. 733 to B.C. 731&mdash;when he was succeeded by
+ Ghinzinus and Porus, two princes whose joint rule lasted from B.C. 731 to
+ B.C. 726. They were followed by an Elulseus, who has been identified with
+ the king of that name called by Menander king of Tyre&mdash;the Luliya of
+ the cuneiform inscriptions; but it is in the highest degree improbable
+ that one and the same monarch should have borne sway both in Phoenicia and
+ Chaldaea at a time when Assyria was paramount over the whole of the
+ intervening country. Elulseus therefore must be assigned to the same class
+ of utterly obscure monarchs with his predecessors, Porus, Chinzinus, and
+ Nadius; and it is only with Merodach-Baladan, his successor, that the
+ darkness becomes a little dispelled, and we once more see the Babylonian
+ throne occupied by a prince of some reputation and indeed celebrity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Merodach-Baladan was the son of a monarch, who in the troublous times that
+ preceded, or closely followed, the era of Nabonassar appears to have made
+ himself master of the lower Babylonian territory&mdash;the true Chaldaea&mdash;and
+ to have there founded a capital city, which he called after his own name,
+ Bit-Yakin. On the death of his father Merodach-Baladan inherited this
+ dominion; and it is here that we first find him, when, during the reign of
+ Nabonassar, the Assyrians under Tiglath-Pileser II. invade the country.
+ Forced to accept the position of Assyrian tributary under this monarch, to
+ whom he probably looked for protection against the Babylonian king,
+ Nabonassar, Merodach-Baladan patiently bided his time, remaining in
+ comparative obscurity during the two reigns of Tiglath-Pileser and
+ Shalmaneser his successor, and only emerging contemporaneously with the
+ troubles which ushered in the dynasty of the Sargonids. In B.C. 721&mdash;the
+ year in which Sargon made himself master of Nineveh&mdash;Merodach-Baladan
+ extended his authority over the upper country, and was recognized as king
+ of Babylon. Here he maintained himself for twelve years; and it was
+ probably at some point of time within this space that he sent embassadors
+ to Hezekiah at Jerusalem, with orders to inquire into the particulars of
+ the curious astronomical marvel, or miracle, which had accompanied the
+ sickness and recovery of that monarch. It is not unlikely that the
+ embassy, whereof this was the pretext, had a further political object.
+ Morodach-Baladan, aware of his inability to withstand singly the forces of
+ Assyria, was probably anxious to form a powerful league against the
+ conquering state, which threatened to absorb the whole of Western Asia
+ into its dominion. Hezekiah received his advances favorably, as appears by
+ the fact that he exhibited to him all his treasures. Egypt, we may
+ presume, was cognizant of the proceedings, and gave them her support. An
+ alliance, defensive if not also offensive, was probably concluded between
+ Egypt and Judaea on the one hand, Babylon, Susiana, and the Aramaean
+ tribes of the middle Euphrates on the other. The league would have been
+ formidable but for one circumstance&mdash;Assyria lay midway between the
+ allied states, and could attack either moiety of the confederates
+ separately at her pleasure. And the Assyrian king was not slow to take
+ advantage of his situation. In two successive years Sargon marched his
+ troops against Egypt and against Babylonia, and in both directions carried
+ all before him. In Egypt he forced Sabaco to sue for peace. In Babylonia
+ (B.C. 710) he gained a great victory over Merodach-Baladan and his allies,
+ the Aramaeans and Susianians, took Bit-Yakin, into which the defeated
+ monarch had thrown himself, and gained possession of his treasures and his
+ person. Upon this the whole country submitted; Merodach-Baladan was
+ carried away captive into Assyria; and Sargon himself, mounting the
+ throne, assumed the title-rarely taken by an Assyrian monarch of &ldquo;King of
+ Babylon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this state of things did not continue long. Sargon died in the year
+ B.C. 704, and coincident with his death we find a renewal of troubles in
+ Babylonia. Assyria&rsquo;s yoke was shaken off; various pretenders started up; a
+ son of Sargon and brother of Sennacherib re-established Assyrian influence
+ for a brief space; but fresh revolts followed. A certain Hagisa became
+ king of Babylon for a month. Finally, Merodach-Baladan, again appeared
+ upon the scene, having escaped from his Assyrian prison, murdered Hagisa,
+ and remounted the throne from which he had been deposed seven years
+ previously. But the brave effort to recover independence failed.
+ Sennacherib in his second year, B.C. 703, descended upon Babylonia,
+ defeated the army which Merodach-Baladan brought against him, drove that
+ monarch himself into exile, after a reign of six months, and re-attached
+ his country to the Assyrian crown. From this time to the revolt of
+ Nabopolassar&mdash;a period of above three quarters of a century&mdash;Babylonia
+ with few and brief intervals of revolt, continued an Assyrian fief. The
+ assyrian kings governed her either by means of viceroys, such as Belibus,
+ Regibelus, Mesesimordachus, and Saos-duchinus, or directly in their own
+ persons, as was the case during the reign of Esarhaddon, and during the
+ later years of Asshur-bani-pal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The revolts of Babylon during this period have been described at length in
+ the history of Assyria. Two fall into the reign of Sennacherib, one into
+ that of Asshur-bani-pal, his grandson. In the former, Merodach-Baladan,
+ who had not yet given up his pretensions to the lower country, and a
+ certain Susub, who was acknowledged as king at Babylon, were the leaders.
+ In the latter, Saos-duchinus, the Assyrian viceroy, and brother of
+ Asshur-bani-pal, the Assyrian king, seduced from his allegiance by the
+ hope of making himself independent headed the insurrection. In each case
+ the struggle was brief, being begun and ended within the year. The power
+ of Assyria at this time so vastly preponderated over that of her ancient
+ rival that a single campaign sufficed on each occasion of revolt to crush
+ the nascent insurrection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A tabular view of the chronology of this period is appended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0023" id="linkimage-0023">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/page0237.jpg" width="100%" alt="Page 237 " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Having thus briefly sketched the history of the kingdom of Babylon from
+ its conquest by Tiglathi-Nin to the close of the long period of Assyrian
+ predominance in Western Asia, we may proceed to the consideration of the
+ &ldquo;Empire.&rdquo; And first, as to the circumstances of its foundation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Medes first assumed an aggressive attitude towards Assyria, and
+ threatened the capital with a siege, Babylonia apparently remained
+ unshaken in her allegiance. When the Scythian hordes spread themselves
+ over Upper Mesopotamia and wasted with fire and sword the fairest regions
+ under Assyrian rule, there was still no defection in this quarter. It was
+ not till the Scythic ravages were over, and the Medes for the second time
+ poured across Zagros into Adiabene, resuming the enterprise from which
+ they had desisted at the time of the Scythic invasion, that the fidelity
+ of the Southern people wavered. Simultaneously with the advance of the
+ Medes against the Assyrian capital from the east, we hear of a force
+ threatening it from the south, a force which can only have consisted of
+ Susianians, of Babylonians, or of both combined. It is probable that the
+ emissaries of Cyaxares had been busy in this region for some time before
+ his second attack took place, and that by a concerted plan while the Medes
+ debouched from the Zagros passes, the south rose in revolt and sent its
+ hasty levies along the valley of the Tigris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this strait the Assyrian king deemed it necessary to divide his forces
+ and to send a portion against the enemy which was advancing from the
+ south, while with the remainder he himself awaited the coming of the
+ Medes. The troops detached for the former service he placed under the
+ command of a certain Nabopolassar? (Nabu-pal-uzur), who was probably an
+ Assyrian nobleman of high rank and known capacity. Nabopolassar had orders
+ to proceed to Babylon, of which he was probably made viceroy, and to
+ defend the southern capital against the rebels. We may conclude that he
+ obeyed these orders so far as to enter Babylon and install himself in
+ office; but shortly afterwards he seems to have made up his mind to break
+ faith with his sovereign, and aim at obtaining for himself an independent
+ kingdom out of the ruins of the Assyrian power. Having formed this
+ resolve, his first step was to send an embassy to Cyaxares, and to propose
+ terms of alliance, while at the same time he arranged a marriage between
+ his own son, Nebuchadnezzar, and Amuhia, or Amyitis (for the name is
+ written both ways), the daughter of the Median monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyaxares gladly accepted the terms offered; the young persons were
+ betrothed; and Nabopolassar immediately led, or sent, a contingent of
+ troops to join the Medes, who took an active part in the great siege which
+ resulted in the capture and destruction of the Assyrian capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A division of the Assyrian Empire between the allied monarchs followed.
+ While Cyaxares claimed for his own share Assyria Proper and the various
+ countries dependent on Assyria towards the north and the north-west,
+ Nabopolassar was rewarded by his timely defection, not merely by
+ independence but by the transfer to his government of Susiana on the one
+ hand and of the valley of the Euphrates, Syria, and Palestine on the
+ other. The transfer appears to have been effected quietly, the Babylonian
+ yoke being peacefully accepted in lieu of the Assyrian without the
+ necessity arising for any application of force. Probably it appeared to
+ the subjects of Assyria, who had been accustomed to a monarch holding his
+ court alternately at Nineveh and at Babylon, that the new power was merely
+ a continuation of the old, and the monarch a legitimate successor of the
+ old line of Ninevite kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the reign of Nabopolassar the information which has come down to us is
+ scanty. It appears by the canon of Ptolemy that he dated his accession to
+ the throne from the year B.C. 625, and that his reign lasted twenty-one
+ years, from B.C. 625 to B.C. 604. During the greater portion of this
+ period the history of Babylon is a blank. Apparently the &ldquo;golden city&rdquo;
+ enjoyed her new position at the head of an empire too much to endanger it
+ by aggression; and, her peaceful attitude provoking no hostility, she was
+ for a while left unmolested by her neighbors. Media, bound to her by
+ formal treaty as well as by dynastic interests, could be relied upon as a
+ firm friend; Persia was too weak, Lydia too remote, to be formidable; in
+ Egypt alone was there a combination of hostile feeling with military
+ strength such as might have been expected to lead speedily to a trial of
+ strength; but Egypt was under the rule of an aged and wary prince, one
+ trained in the school of adversity, whose years forbade his engaging in
+ any distant enterprise, and whose prudence led him to think more of
+ defending his own country than of attacking others. Thus, while
+ Psammetichus lived, Babylon had little to fear from any quarter, and could
+ afford to &ldquo;give herself to pleasures and dwell carelessly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only exertion which she seems to have been called upon to make during
+ her first eighteen years of empire resulted from the close connection
+ which had been established between herself and Media. Cyaxares, as already
+ remarked, proceeded from the capture of Nineveh to a long series of wars
+ and conquests. In some, if not in all, of these he appears to have been
+ assisted by the Babylonians, who were perhaps bound by treaty to furnish a
+ contingent as often as he required it, Either Nabopolassar himself, or his
+ son Nebuchadnezzar, would lead out the troops on such occasions; and thus
+ the military spirit of both prince and people would be pretty constantly
+ exercised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was as the leader of such a contingent that Nabopolassar was able on
+ one occasion to play the important part of peacemaker in one of the
+ bloodiest of all Cyaxares&rsquo; wars. After five years&rsquo; desperate fighting the
+ Medes and Lydians were once more engaged in conflict when an eclipse of
+ the sun took place. Filled with superstitious dread the two armies ceased
+ to contend, and showed a disposition for reconciliation, of which the
+ Babylonian monarch was not slow to take advantage. Having consulted with
+ Syennesis of Cilicia, the foremost man of the allies on the other side,
+ and found him well disposed to second his efforts, he proposed that the
+ sword should be returned to the scabbard, and that a conference should be
+ held to arrange terms of peace. This timely interference proved effectual.
+ A peace was concluded between the Lydians and the Medes, which was
+ cemented by a royal intermarriage: and the result was to give to Western
+ Asia, where war and ravage had long been almost perpetual, nearly half a
+ century of tranquillity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Successful in his mediation, almost beyond his hopes, Nabopolassar
+ returned from Asia Minor to Babylon. He was now advanced in years, and
+ would no doubt gladly have spent the remainder of his days in the
+ enjoyment of that repose which is so dear to those who feel the
+ infirmities of age creeping upon them. But Providence had ordained
+ otherwise. In B.C. 610&mdash;probably the very year of the eclipse&mdash;Psammetichus
+ died, and was succeeded by his son Neco, who was in the prime of life and
+ who in disposition was bold and enterprising. This monarch very shortly
+ after his accession cast a covetous eye upon Syria, and in the year B.C.
+ 608, having made vast preparations, he crossed his frontier and invaded
+ the territories of Nabopolassar. Marching along the usual route, by the <i>Shephilah</i>
+ and the plain of Esdraelon, he learned, when he neared Megiddo, that a
+ body of troops was drawn up at that place to oppose him, Josiah, the
+ Jewish king, regarding himself as bound to resist the passage through his
+ territories of an army hostile to the monarch of whom he held his crown,
+ had collected his forces, and, having placed them across the line of the
+ invader&rsquo;s march, was calmly awaiting in this position the approach of his
+ master&rsquo;s enemy. Neco hereupon sent ambassadors to persuade Josiah to let
+ him pass, representing that he had no quarrel with the Jews, and claiming
+ a divine sanction to his undertaking. But nothing could shake the Jewish
+ monarch&rsquo;s sense of duty; and Neco was consequently forced to engage with
+ him, and to drive his troops from their position. Josiah, defeated and
+ mortally wounded, returned to Jerusalem, where he died. Neco pressed
+ forward through Syria to the Euphrates; and carrying all before him,
+ established his dominion over the whole tract lying between Egypt on the
+ one hand, and the &ldquo;Great River&rdquo; upon the other. On his return three months
+ later he visited Jerusalem, deposed Jehoahaz, a younger son of Josiah,
+ whom the people had made king, and gave the crown to Jehoiakim, his elder
+ brother. It was probably about this time that he besieged and took Gaza,
+ the most important of the Philistine towns next to Ashdod.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loss of this large and valuable territory did not at once arouse the
+ Babylonian monarch from his inaction or induce him to make any effort for
+ its recovery. Neco enjoyed his conquests in quiet for the space of at
+ least three full years. At length, in the year B.C. 605, Nabopolassar, who
+ felt himself unequal to the fatigues of a campaign, resolved to entrust
+ his forces to Nebuchadnezzar, his son, and to send him to contend with the
+ Egyptians. The key of Syria at this time was Carchemish, a city situated
+ on the right bank of the Euphrates, probably near the site which was
+ afterwards occupied by Hierapolis. Here the forces of Neco were drawn up
+ to protect his conquests, and here Nebuchadnezzar proceeded boldly to
+ attack them. A great battle was fought in the vicinity of the river, which
+ was utterly disastrous to the Egyptians, who &ldquo;fled away&rdquo; in confusion, and
+ seem not to have ventured on making a second stand. Nebuchadnezzar rapidly
+ recovered the lost territory, received the submission of Jehoiakim, king
+ of Judah, restored the old frontier line, and probably pressed on into
+ Egypt itself, hoping to cripple or even to crush his presumptuous
+ adversary. But at this point he was compelled to pause. News arrived from
+ Babylon that Nabopolassar was dead; and the Babylonian prince, who feared
+ a disputed succession, having first concluded a hasty arrangement with
+ Neco, returned at his best speed to his capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arriving probably before he was expected, he discovered that his fears
+ were groundless. The priests had taken the direction of affairs during his
+ absence, and the throne had been kept vacant for him by the Chief Priest,
+ or Head of the Order. No pretender had started up to dispute his claims.
+ Doubtless his military prestige, and the probability that the soldiers
+ would adopt his cause, had helped to keep back aspirants; but perhaps it
+ was the promptness of his return, as much as anything, that caused the
+ crisis to pass off without difficulty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nebuchadnezzar is the great monarch of the Babylonian Empire, which,
+ lasting only 88 years&mdash;from B.C. 625 to B.C. 538&mdash;was for nearly
+ half the time under his sway. Its military glory is due chiefly to him,
+ while the constructive energy, which constitutes its especial
+ characteristic, belongs to it still more markedly through his character
+ and genius. It is scarcely too much to say that, but for Nebuchadnezzar,
+ the Babylonians would have had no place in history. At any rate, their
+ actual place is owing almost entirely to this prince, who to the military
+ talents of an able general added a grandeur of artistic conception and a
+ skill in construction which place him on a par with the greatest builders
+ of antiquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have no complete, or even general account of Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s wars. Our
+ chief, our almost sole, information concerning them is derived from the
+ Jewish writers. Consequently, those wars only which interested these
+ writers, in other words those whose scene is Palestine or its immediate
+ vicinity, admit of being placed before the reader. If Nebuchadnezzar had
+ quarrels with the Persians, or the Arabians, or the Medes, or the tribes
+ in Mount Zagros, as is not improbable, nothing is now known of their
+ course or issue. Until some historical document belonging to his time
+ shall be discovered, we must be content with a very partial knowledge of
+ the external history of Babylon during his reign. We have a tolerably full
+ account of his campaigns against the Jews, and some information as to the
+ general course of the wars which he carried on with Egypt and Phoenicia;
+ but beyond these narrow limits we know nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appears to have been only a few years after Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s triumphant
+ campaign against Neco that renewed troubles broke out in Syria. Phoenicia
+ revolted under the leadership of Tyre; and about the same time Jehoiakim,
+ the Jewish king, having obtained a promise of aid from the Egyptians,
+ renounced his allegiance. Upon this, in his seventh year (B.C. 598),
+ Nebuchadnezzar proceeded once more into Palestine at the head of a vast
+ army, composed partly of his allies, the Medes, partly of his own
+ subjects. He first invested Tyre; but, finding that city too strong to be
+ taken by assault, he left a portion of his army to continue the siege,
+ while he himself pressed forward against Jerusalem. On his near approach,
+ Jehoiakim, seeing that the Egyptians did not care to come to his aid, made
+ his submission; but Nebuchadnezzar punished his rebellion with death, and,
+ departing from the common Oriental practice, had his dead body treated
+ with indignity. At first he placed upon the throne Jehoia-chin, the son of
+ the late monarch, a youth of eighteen; but three months later, becoming
+ suspicious (probably not without reason) of this prince&rsquo;s fidelity, he
+ deposed him and had him brought a captive to Babylon, substituting in his
+ place his uncle, Zedekiah, a brother of Jehoiakim and Jehoahaz. Meanwhile
+ the siege of Tyre was pressed, but with little effect. A blockade is
+ always tedious; and the blockade of an island city, strong in its navy, by
+ an enemy unaccustomed to the sea, and therefore forced to depend mainly
+ upon the assistance of reluctant allies, must have been a task of such
+ extreme difficulty that one is surprised it was not given up in despair.
+ According to the Tyrian historians their city resisted all the power of
+ Nebuchadnezzar for thirteen years. If this statement is to be relied on,
+ Tyre must have been still uncaptured, when the time came for its sister
+ capital to make that last effort for freedom in which it perished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After receiving his crown from Nebuchadnezzar, Zedekiah continued for
+ eight years to play the part of a faithful vassal. At length, however, in
+ the ninth year, he fancied he saw a way to independence. A young and
+ enterprising monarch, Uaphris&mdash;the Apries of Herodotus&mdash;had
+ recently mounted the Egyptian throne. If the alliance of this prince could
+ be secured, there was, Zedekiah thought, a reasonable hope that the yoke
+ of Babylon might be thrown off and Hebrew autonomy re-established. The
+ infatuated monarch did not see that, do what he would, his country had no
+ more than a choice of masters, that by the laws of political attraction
+ Judaea must gravitate to one or other of the two great states between
+ which it had the misfortune of lying. Hoping to free his country, he sent
+ ambassadors to Uaphris, who were to conclude a treaty and demand the
+ assistance of a powerful contingent, composed of both foot and horse.
+ Uaphris received the overture favorably; and Zedekiah at once revolted
+ from Babylon, and made preparations to defend himself with vigor. It was
+ not long before the Babylonians arrived. Determined to crush the daring
+ state, which, weak as it was, had yet ventured to revolt against him now
+ for the fourth time, Nebuchadnezzar came in person, &ldquo;he and all his host,&rdquo;
+ against Jerusalem, and after overcoming and pillaging the open country,
+ &ldquo;built forts&rdquo; and besieged the city. Uaphris, upon this, learning the
+ danger of his ally, marched out of Egypt to his relief; and the Babylonian
+ army, receiving intelligence of his approach, raised the siege and
+ proceeded in quest of their new enemy. According to Josephus a battle was
+ fought, in which the Egyptians were defeated; but it is perhaps more
+ probable that they avoided an engagement by a precipitate retreat into
+ their own country. At any rate the attempt effectually to relieve
+ Jerusalem failed. After a brief interval the siege was renewed; a complete
+ blockade was established; and in a year and a half from the time of the
+ second investment, the city fell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nebuchadnezzar had not waited to witness this success of his arms. The
+ siege of Tyre was still being pressed at the date of the second investment
+ of Jerusalem, and the Chaldaean monarch had perhaps thought that his
+ presence on the borders of Phoenicia was necessary to animate his troops
+ in that quarter. If this was his motive in withdrawing from the Jewish
+ capital, the event would seem to have shown that he judged wisely. Tyre,
+ if it fell at the end of its thirteen years&rsquo; siege, must have been taken
+ in the very year which followed the capture of Jerusalem, B.C. 585. We may
+ suppose that Nebuchadnezzar, when he quitted Jerusalem and took up his
+ abode at Eiblah in the Coele-Syrian valley, turned his main attention to
+ the great Phoenician city, and made arrangements which caused its capture
+ in the ensuing year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The recovery of these two important cities secured to the Babylonian
+ monarch the quiet possession thenceforth of Syria and Palestine. But still
+ he had not as yet inflicted any chastisement upon Egypt; though policy, no
+ less than honor, required that the aggressions of this audacious power
+ should be punished. If we may believe Josephus, however, the day of
+ vengeance was not very long delayed. Within four years of the fall of
+ Tyre, B.C. 581, Nebuchadnezzar, he tells us, invaded Egypt, put Uaphris,
+ the monarch who had succored Zedekiah, to death, and placed a creature of
+ his own upon the throne. Egyptian history, it is true, forbids our
+ accepting this statement as correct in all its particulars. Uaphris
+ appears certainly to have reigned at least as late as B.C. 569, and
+ according to Herodotus, he was put to death, not by a foreign invader, but
+ by a rebellious subject. Perhaps we may best harmonize the conflicting
+ statements on the subject by supposing that Josephus has confounded two
+ distinct invasions of Egypt, one made by Nebuchadnezzar in his
+ twenty-third year, B.C. 581, which had no very important consequences, and
+ the other eleven years later, B.C. 570, which terminated in the deposition
+ of Uaphris, and the establishment on the throne of a new king, Amasis, who
+ received a nominal royalty from Chaldaean monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such&mdash;as far as they are known&mdash;were the military exploits of
+ this great king. He defeated Neco, recovered Syria, crushed rebellion in
+ Judaea, took Tyre, and humiliated Egypt. According to some writers his
+ successes did not stop here. Megasthenes made him subdue most of Africa,
+ and thence pass over into Spain and conquer the Iberians. He even went
+ further, and declared that, on his return from these regions, he settled
+ his Iberian captives on the shores of the Euxine in the country between
+ Armenia and the Caucasus! Thus Nebuchadnezzar was made to reign over an
+ empire extending from the Atlantic to the Caspian, and from the Caucasus
+ to the Great Sahara.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The victories of Nebuchadnezzar were not without an effect on his home
+ administration and on the construction of the vast works with which his
+ name is inseparably associated. It was through them that he obtained that
+ enormous command of &ldquo;naked human strength&rdquo; which enabled him, without
+ undue oppression of his own people, to carry out on the grandest scale his
+ schemes for at once beautifying and benefiting his kingdom. From the time
+ when he first took the field at the head of an army he adopted the
+ Assyrian system of forcibly removing almost the whole population of a
+ conquered country, and planting it in a distant part of his dominions.
+ Crowds of captives&mdash;the produce of his various wars&mdash;Jews,
+ Egyptians, Phoenicians, Syrians, Ammonites, Moabites, were settled in
+ various parts of Mesopotamia, more especially about Babylon. From these
+ unfortunates forced labor was as a matter of course required; and it seems
+ to have been chiefly, if not solely, by their exertions that the
+ magnificent series of great works was accomplished, which formed the
+ special glory of the Fourth Monarchy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief works expressly ascribed to Nebuchadnezzar by the ancient
+ writers are the following: He built the great wall of Babylon, which,
+ according to the lowest estimate, must have contained more than
+ 500,000,000 square feet of solid masonry, and must have required three or
+ four times that number of bricks. He constructed a new and magnificent
+ palace in the neighborhood of the ancient residence of the kings. He made
+ the celebrated &ldquo;Hanging Garden&rdquo; for the gratification of his wife,
+ Amyitis. He repaired and beautified the great temple of Belus at Babylon.
+ He dug the huge reservoir near Sippara, said to have been 140 miles in
+ circumference, and 180 feet deep, furnishing it with flood-gates, through
+ which its water could be drawn off for purposes of irrigation. He
+ constructed a number of canals, among them the Nahr Malcha or &ldquo;Royal
+ River,&rdquo; a broad and deep channel which connected the Euphrates with the
+ Tigris. He built quays and breakwaters along the shores of the Persian
+ Gulf, and he at the same time founded the city of Diridotis or Teredon in
+ the vicinity of that sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To these constructions may be added, on the authority either of
+ Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s own inscriptions or of the existing remains, the
+ Birs-i-Nimrud, or great temple of Nebo at Bor-sippa; a vast reservoir in
+ Babylon itself, called the Yapur-Shapu; an extensive embankment along the
+ course of the Tigris, near Baghdad; and almost innumerable temples, walls,
+ and other public buildings at Cutha, Sippara, Borsippa, Babylon, Chilmad,
+ Bit-Digla, etc. The indefatigable monarch seems to have either rebuilt, or
+ at least repaired, almost every city and temple throughout the entire
+ country. There are said to be at least a hundred sites in the tract
+ immediately about Babylon, which give evidence, by inscribed bricks
+ bearing his legend, of the marvellous activity and energy of this king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may suspect that among the constructions of Nebuchadnezzar was another
+ great work, a work second in utility to none of those above mentioned, and
+ requiring for its completion an enormous amount of labor. This is the
+ canal called by the Arabs the <i>Kerek Saideh</i>, or canal of Saideh,
+ which they ascribe to a wife of Nebuchadnezzar, a cutting 400 miles in
+ length, which commenced at Hit on the Euphrates, and was carried along the
+ extreme western edge of the alluvium close to the Arabian frontier,
+ finally falling into the sea at the head of the Bubian creek, about twenty
+ miles to the west of the Shat el-Arab. The traces of this canal which
+ still remain indicate a work of such magnitude and difficulty that we can
+ scarcely ascribe it with probability to any monarch who has held the
+ country since Nebuchadnezzar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pallacopas, or canal of Opa (Palga Opa), which left the Euphrates at
+ Sippara (Mosaib) and ran into a great lake in the neighborhood of
+ Borsippa, whence the lands in the neighborhood were irrigated, may also
+ have been one of Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s constructions. It was an old canal, much
+ out of repair, in the time of Alexander, and was certainly the work, not
+ of the Persian conquerors, but of some native monarch anterior to Cyrus.
+ The Arabs, who call it the Nahr Abba, regard it as the oldest canal in the
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some glimpses into the private life and personal character of
+ Nebuchadnezzar are afforded us by certain of the Old Testament writers. We
+ see him in the Book of Daniel at the head of a magnificent Court,
+ surrounded by &ldquo;princes, governors, and captains, judges, treasurers,
+ councillors, and sheriffs;&rdquo; waited on by eunuchs selected with the
+ greatest care, &ldquo;well-favored&rdquo; and carefully educated; attended, whenever
+ he requires it, by a multitude of astrologers and other &ldquo;wise men,&rdquo; who
+ seek to interpret to him the will of Heaven. He is an absolute monarch,
+ disposing with a word of the lives and properties of his subjects, even
+ the highest. All offices are in his gift. He can raise a foreigner to the
+ second place in the kingdom, and even set him over the entire priestly
+ order. His wealth is enormous, for he makes of pure gold an image, or
+ obelisk, ninety feet high and nine feet broad. He is religious after a
+ sort, but wavers in his faith, sometimes acknowledging the God of the Jews
+ as the only real deity, sometimes relapsing into an idolatrous worship,
+ and forcing all his subjects to follow his example. Even then, however,
+ his polytheism is of a kind which admits of a special devotion to a
+ particular deity, who is called emphatically &ldquo;his god.&rdquo; In temper he is
+ hasty and violent, but not obstinate; his fierce resolves are taken
+ suddenly and as suddenly repented of; he is moreover capable of bursts of
+ gratitude and devotion, no less than of accesses of fury; like most
+ Orientals, he is vainglorious but he can humble himself before the
+ chastening hand of the Almighty; in his better moods he shows a spirit
+ astonishing in one of his country and time&mdash;a spirit of real piety,
+ self-condemnation, and self-abasement, which renders him one of the most
+ remarkable characters in Scripture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few touches of a darker hue must be added to this portrait of the great
+ Babylonian king from the statements of another contemporary, the prophet
+ Jeremiah. The execution of Jehoi-akim, and the putting out of Zedekiah&rsquo;s
+ eyes, though acts of considerable severity, may perhaps be regarded as
+ justified by the general practice of the age, and therefore as not
+ indicating in Nebuchadnezzar any special ferocity of disposition. But the
+ ill-treatment of Jehoiakim&rsquo;s dead body, the barbarity of murdering
+ Zedekiah&rsquo;s sons before his eyes, and the prolonged imprisonment both of
+ Zedekiah and of Jehoiachin, though the latter had only contemplated
+ rebellion, cannot be thus excused. They were unusual and unnecessary acts,
+ which tell against the monarch who authorized them, and must be considered
+ to imply a real cruelty of disposition, such as is observable in Sargon
+ and Asshur-bani-pal. Nebuchadnezzar, it is plain, was not content with
+ such a measure of severity as was needed to secure his own interests, but
+ took a pleasure in the wanton infliction of suffering on those who had
+ provoked his resentment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, we obtain from the native writer, Berosus, one amiable
+ trait which deserves a cursory mention. Nebuchadnezzar was fondly attached
+ to the Median princess who had been chosen for him as a wife by his father
+ from political motives. Not content with ordinary tokens of affection, he
+ erected, solely for her gratification, the remarkable structure which the
+ Greeks called the &ldquo;Hanging Garden.&rdquo; A native of a mountainous country,
+ Amyitis disliked the tiresome uniformity of the level alluvium, and pined
+ for the woods and hills of Media. It was to satisfy this longing by the
+ best substitute which circumstances allowed that the celebrated Garden was
+ made. Art strove to emulate nature with a certain measure of success, and
+ the lofty rocks and various trees of this wonderful Paradise, if they were
+ not a very close imitation of Median mountain scenery, were at any rate a
+ pleasant change from the natural monotony of the Babylonian plain, and
+ must have formed a grateful retreat for the Babylonian queen, whom they
+ reminded at once of her husband&rsquo;s love and of the beauty of her native
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most remarkable circumstance in Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s life remains to be
+ noticed. Towards the close of his reign, when his conquests and probably
+ most of his great works were completed, in the midst of complete
+ tranquillity and prosperity, a sudden warning was sent him. He dreamt a
+ strange dream, and when he sought to know its meaning, the Prophet Daniel
+ was inspired to tell him that it portended his removal from the kingly
+ office for the space of seven years, in consequence of a curious and very
+ unusual kind of madness. This malady, which is not unknown to physicians,
+ has been termed &ldquo;Lycanthropy.&rdquo; It consists in the belief that one is not a
+ man but a beast, in the disuse of language, the rejection of all ordinary
+ human food, and sometimes in the loss of the erect posture and a
+ preference for walking on all fours. Within a year of the time that he
+ received the warning, Nebuchadnezzar was smitten. The great king became a
+ wretched maniac. Allowed to indulge in his distempered fancy, he eschewed
+ human habitations, lived in the open air night and day, fed on herbs,
+ disused clothing, and became covered with a rough coat of hair. His
+ subjects generally, it is probable, were not allowed to know of his
+ condition, although they could not but be aware that he was suffering from
+ some terrible malady. The queen most likely held the reins of power, and
+ carried on the government in his name. The dream had been interpreted to
+ mean that the lycanthropy would not be permanent; and even the date of
+ recovery had been announced, only with a certain ambiguity. The
+ Babylonians were thereby encouraged to await events, without taking any
+ steps that would have involved them in difficulties if the malady ceased.
+ And their faith and patience met with a reward. After suffering
+ obscuration for the space of seven years, suddenly the king&rsquo;s intellect
+ returned to him. His recovery was received with joy by his Court. Lords
+ and councillors gathered about him. He once more took the government into
+ his own hands, issued his proclamations, and performed the other functions
+ of royalty. He was now an old man, and his reign does not seem to have
+ been much prolonged; but &ldquo;the glory of his kingdon,&rdquo; his &ldquo;honor and
+ brightness&rdquo; returned; his last days were as brilliant as his first: his
+ sun set in an unclouded sky, shorn of none of the rays that had given
+ splendor to its noonday. Nebuchadnezzar expired at Babylon in the
+ forty-fourth year of his reign, B.C. 561, after an illness of no long
+ duration. He was probably little short of eighty years old at his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The successor of Nebuchadnezzar was his son Evil-Mero-dach, who reigned
+ only two years, and of whom very little is known. We may expect that the
+ marvellous events of his father&rsquo;s life, which are recorded in the Book of
+ Daniel, had made a deep impression upon him, and that he was thence
+ inclined to favor the persons, and perhaps the religion, of the Jews. One
+ of his first acts was to release the unfortunate Jehoiachin from the
+ imprisonment in which he had languished for thirty-five years, and to
+ treat him with kindness and respect. He not only recognized his royal
+ rank, but gave him precedence over all the captive kings resident at
+ Babylon. Josephus says that he even admitted Jehoiachin into the number of
+ his most intimate friends. Perhaps he may have designed him some further
+ advancement, and may in other respects have entertained projects which
+ seemed strange and alarming to his subjects. At any rate he had been but
+ two years upon the throne when a conspiracy was formed against him; he was
+ accused of lawlessness and intemperance; his own brother-in-law,
+ Neriglissar, the husband of a daughter of Nebuchadnezzar, headed the
+ malcontents; and Evil-Merodach lost his life with his crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neriglissar, the successful conspirator, was at once acknowledged king. He
+ is probably identical with the &ldquo;Nergal-shar-ezer, Rab-Mag,&rdquo; of Jeremiah,
+ who occupied a prominent position among the Babylonian nobles left to
+ press the siege of Jerusalem when Nebuchadnezzar retired to Riblah. The
+ title of &ldquo;Rab-Mag,&rdquo; is one that he bears upon his bricks. It is doubtful
+ what exactly his office was; for we have no reason to believe that there
+ were at this time any Magi at Babylon; but it was certainly an ancient and
+ very high dignity of which even kings might be proud. It is remarkable
+ that Neriglissar calls himself the son of Bel-sum-iskun, &ldquo;king of Babylon&rdquo;&mdash;a
+ monarch whose name does not appear in Ptolemy&rsquo;s list, but who is probably
+ to be identified with a chieftain so called, who assumed the royal title
+ in the troubles which preceded the fall of the Assyrian Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During his short reign of four years, or rather three years and a few
+ months, Neriglissar had not time to distinguish himself by many exploits.
+ So far as appears, he was at peace with all his neighbors, and employed
+ his time principally in the construction of the Western Palace at Babylon,
+ which was a large building placed at one corner of a fortified inclosure,
+ directly opposite the ancient royal residence, and abutting on the
+ Euphrates. If the account which Diodorus gives of this palace be not a
+ gross exaggeration of the truth, it must have been a magnificent erection,
+ elaborately ornamented with painting and sculpture in the best style of
+ Babylonian art, though in size it may have been inferior to the old
+ residence of the kings on the other side of the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neriglissar reigned from B.C. 559 to B.C. 556, and dying a natural death
+ in the last-named year, left his throne to his son, Laborosoarchod, or
+ Labossoracus. This prince, who was a mere boy, and therefore quite unequal
+ to the task of governing a great empire in critical times, was not allowed
+ to retain the crown many months. Accused by those about him&mdash;whether
+ justly or unjustly we cannot say&mdash;of giving many indications of a bad
+ disposition, he was deposed and put to death by torture. With him power
+ passed from the House of Nabopolassar, which had held the throne for just
+ seventy years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the death of Laborosoarchod the conspirators selected one of their
+ number, a certain Nabonadius or Nabannidochus, and invested him with the
+ sovereignty. He was in no way related to the late monarch, and his claim
+ to succeed must have been derived mainly from the part which he had played
+ in the conspiracy. But still he was a personage of some rank, for his
+ father had, like Neriglissar, held the important office of Rab Mag. It is
+ probable that one of his first steps on ascending the throne was to
+ connect himself by marriage with the royal house which had preceded him in
+ the kingdom. Either the mother of the late king Laborosoarchod, and widow
+ of Neriglissar, or possibly some other daughter of Nebuchadnezzar, was
+ found willing to unite her fortune with those of the new sovereign, and
+ share the dangers and the dignity of his position. Such a union
+ strengthened the hold of the reigning monarch on the allegiance of his
+ subjects, and tended still more to add stability to his dynasty. For as
+ the issue of such a marriage would join in one the claims of both royal
+ houses, he would be sure to receive the support of all parties in the
+ state. Very shortly after the accession of Nabonadius (B.C. 555) he
+ received an embassy from the far north-west. An important revolution had
+ occurred on the eastern frontier of Babylonia three years before, in the
+ reign of Neriglissar; but its effects only now began to make themselves
+ felt among the neighboring nations. Had Cyrus, on taking the crown,
+ adopted the policy of Astyages, the substitution of Persia for Media as
+ the ruling Arian nation would have been a matter of small account. But
+ there can be little doubt that he really entered at once on a career of
+ conquest, Lydia, at any rate, felt herself menaced by the new power, and
+ seeing the danger which threatened the other monarchies of the time, if
+ they allowed the great Arian kingdom to attack them severally with her
+ full force, proposed a league whereby the common enemy might, she thought,
+ be resisted with success. Ambassadors seem to have been sent from Sardis
+ to Babylon in the very year in which Nabonadius became king. He therefore
+ had at once to decide whether he would embrace the offer made him, and
+ uniting with Lydia and Egypt in a league against Persia, make that power
+ his enemy, or refuse the proffered alliance and trust to the gratitude of
+ Cyrus for the future security of his kingdom. It would be easy to imagine
+ the arguments pro and contra which presented themselves to his mind at
+ this conjuncture; but as they would be destitute of a historical
+ foundation, it is perhaps best to state simply the decision at which he is
+ known to have arrived. This was an acceptance of the Lydian offer.
+ Nabonadius consented to join the proposed league; and a treaty was
+ probably soon afterwards concluded between the three powers whereby they
+ united in an alliance offensive and defensive against the Persians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Knowing that he had provoked a powerful enemy by this bold act, and
+ ignorant how soon he might be called upon to defend his kingdom, from the
+ entire force of his foe, which might be suddenly hurled against him almost
+ at any moment, Nabonadius seems to have turned his attention at once to
+ providing means of defence. The works ascribed by Herodotus to a queen,
+ Nitocris, whom he makes the mother of Nabonadius (Labynetus) must be
+ regarded as in reality constructions of that monarch himself, undertaken
+ with the object of protecting Babylon from Cyrus. They consisted in part
+ of defences within the city, designed apparently to secure it against an
+ enemy who should enter by the river, in part of hydraulic works intended
+ to obstruct the advances of an army by the usual route. The river had
+ hitherto flowed in its natural bed through the middle of the town.
+ Nabonadius confined the stream by a brick embankment carried the whole way
+ along both banks, after which he built on the top of the embankment a wall
+ of a considerable height, pierced at intervals by gateways, in which were
+ set gates of bronze. He likewise made certain cuttings, reservoirs, and
+ sluices at some distance from Babylon towards the north, which were to be
+ hindrances to an enemy&rsquo;s march, though in what way is not very apparent.
+ Some have supposed that besides these works there was further built at the
+ same time a great wall which extended entirely across the tract between
+ the two rivers&mdash;a huge barrier a hundred feet high and twenty thick&mdash;meant,
+ like the Roman walls in Britain and the great wall of China, to be
+ insurmountable by an unskillful foe; but there is ground for suspecting
+ that this belief is ill-founded, having for its sole basis a misconception
+ of Xenophon&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nabonadius appears to have been allowed ample time to carry out to the
+ full his system of defences, and to complete all his preparations. The
+ precipitancy of Croesus, who plunged into a war with Persia single-handed,
+ asking no aid from his allies, and the promptitude of Cyrus, who allowed
+ him no opportunity of recovering from his first false step, had prevented
+ Nabonadius from coming into actual collision with Persia in the early part
+ of his reign. The defeat of Croesus in the battle of Pteria, the siege of
+ Sardis, and its capture, followed so rapidly on the first commencement of
+ hostilities, that whatever his wishes may have been, Nabonadius had it not
+ in his power to give any help to his rash ally. Actual war was thus
+ avoided at this time; and no collision having occurred, Cyrus could defer
+ an attack on the great kingdom of the south until he had consolidated his
+ power in the north and the northeast, which he rightly regarded as of the
+ last importance. Thus fourteen years intervened between the capture of
+ Sardis by the Persian arms and the commencement of the expedition against
+ Babylon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When at last it was rumored that the Persian king had quitted Ecbatana
+ (B.C. 539) and commenced his march to the south-west, Nabonadius received
+ the tidings with indifference. His defences were completed: his city was
+ amply provisioned; if the enemy should defeat him in the open field, he
+ might retire behind his walls, and laugh to scorn all attempts to reduce
+ his capital either by blockade or storm. It does not appear to have
+ occurred to him that it was possible to protect his territory. With a
+ broad, deep, and rapid river directly interposed between him and his foe,
+ with a network of canals spread far and wide over his country, with an
+ almost inexhaustible supply of human labor at his command for the
+ construction of such dikes, walls, or cuttings as he should deem
+ advisable, Nabonadius might, one would have thought, have aspired to save
+ his land from invasion, or have disputed inch by inch his enemy&rsquo;s advance
+ towards the capital. But such considerations have seldom had much force
+ with Orientals, whose notions of war and strategy are even now of the
+ rudest and most primitive description. To measure one&rsquo;s strength as
+ quickly as possible with that of one&rsquo;s foe, to fight one great pitched
+ battle in order to decide the question of superiority in the field, and
+ then, if defeated, either to surrender or to retire behind walls, has been
+ the ordinary conception of a commander&rsquo;s duties in the East from the time
+ of the Ramesside kings to our own day. No special blame therefore attaches
+ to Nabonadius for his neglect. He followed the traditional policy of
+ Oriental monarchs in the course which he took. And his subjects had less
+ reason to complain of his resolution than most others, since the many
+ strongholds in Babylonia must have afforded them a ready refuge, and the
+ great fortified district within which Babylon itself stood must have been
+ capable of accommodating with ease the whole native population of the
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we may trust Herodotus, the invader, having made all his preparations
+ and commenced his march, came to a sudden pause midway between Ecbatana
+ and Babylon. One of the sacred white horses, which drew the chariot of
+ Ormazd, had been drowned in crossing a river; and Cyrus had thereupon
+ desisted from his march, and, declaring that he would revenge himself on
+ the insolent stream, had set his soldiers to disperse its waters into 360
+ channels. This work employed him during the whole summer and autumn; nor
+ was it till another spring had come that he resumed his expedition. To the
+ Babylonians such a pause must have appeared like irresolution. They must
+ have suspected that the invader had changed his mind and would not venture
+ across the Tigris. If the particulars of the story reached them, they
+ probably laughed at the monarch who vented his rage on inanimate nature,
+ while he let his enemies escape scot free.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyrus, however, had a motive for his proceedings which will appear in the
+ sequel. Having wintered on the banks of the Gyndes in a mild climate,
+ where tents would have been quite a sufficient protection to his army, he
+ put his troops in motion at the commencement of spring, crossed the Tigris
+ apparently unopposed, and soon came in sight of the capital. Here he found
+ the Babylonian army drawn out to meet him under the command of Nabonadius
+ himself, who had resolved to try the chance of a battle. An engagement
+ ensued, of which we possess no details; our informants simply tell us that
+ the Babylonian monarch was completely defeated, and that, while most of
+ his army sought safety within the walls of the capital, he himself with a
+ small body of troops threw himself into Borsippa, an important town lying
+ at a short distance from Babylon towards the south-west. It is not easy to
+ see the exact object of this movement. Perhaps Nabonadius thought that the
+ enemy would thereby be obliged to divide his army, which might then more
+ easily be defeated; perhaps he imagined that by remaining without the
+ walls he might be able to collect such a force among his subjects and
+ allies as would compel the beleaguering army to withdraw. Or, possibly, he
+ merely followed an instinct of self-preservation, and fearing that the
+ soldiers of Cyrus might enter Babylon with his own, if he fled thither,
+ sought refuge in another city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It might have been supposed that his absence would have produced anarchy
+ and confusion in the capital; but a step which he had recently taken with
+ the object of giving stability to his throne rendered the preservation of
+ order tolerably easy. At the earliest possible moment&mdash;probably when
+ he was about fourteen&mdash;he had associated with him in the government
+ his son, Belshazzar, or Bel-shar-uzur, the grandson of the great
+ Nebuchadnezzar. This step, taken most likely with a view to none but
+ internal dangers, was now found exceedingly convenient for the purposes of
+ the war. In his father&rsquo;s absence Belshazzar took the direction of affairs
+ within the city, and met and foiled for a considerable time all the
+ assaults of the Persians. He was young and inexperienced, but he had the
+ counsels of the queen-mother to guide and support him, as well as those of
+ the various lords and officers of the court. So well did he manage the
+ defence that after a while Cyrus despaired, and as a last resource
+ ventured on a stratagem in which it was clear that he must either succeed
+ or perish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Withdrawing the greater part of his army from the vicinity of the city,
+ and leaving behind him only certain corps of observation, Cyrus marched
+ away up the course of the Euphrates for a certain distance, and there
+ proceeded to make a vigorous use of the spade. His soldiers could now
+ appreciate the value of the experience which they had gained by dispersing
+ the Gyndes, and perceive that the summer and autumn of the preceding year
+ had not been wasted. They dug a channel or channels from the Euphrates, by
+ means of which a great portion of its water would be drawn off, and hoped
+ in this way to render the natural course of the river fordable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When all was prepared, Cyrus determined to wait for the arrival of a
+ certain festival, during which the whole population were wont to engage in
+ drinking and revelling, and then silently in the dead of night to turn the
+ water of the river and make his attack. It fell out as he hoped and
+ wished. The festival was held with even greater pomp and splendor than
+ usual; for Belshazzar, with the natural insolence of youth, to mark his
+ contempt of the besieging army, abandoned himself wholly to the delights
+ of the season, and himself entertained a thousand lords in his palace.
+ Elsewhere the rest of the population was occupied in feasting and dancing.
+ Drunken riot and mad excitement held possession of the town; the siege was
+ forgotten; ordinary precautions were neglected. Following the example of
+ their king, the Babylonians gave themselves up for the night to orgies in
+ which religious frenzy and drunken excess formed a strange and revolting
+ medley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, outside the city, in silence and darkness, the Persians watched
+ at the two points where the Euphrates entered and left the walls.
+ Anxiously they noted the gradual sinking of the water in the river-bed;
+ still more anxiously they watched to see if those within the walls would
+ observe the suspicious circumstance and sound an alarm through the town.
+ Should such an alarm be given, all their labors would be lost. If, when
+ they entered the river-bed, they found the river-walls manned and the
+ river-gates fast-locked, they would be indeed &ldquo;caught in a trap.&rdquo;
+ Enfiladed on both sides by an enemy whom they could neither see nor reach,
+ they would be overwhelmed and destroyed by his missiles before they could
+ succeed in making their escape. But, as they watched, no sounds of alarm
+ reached them&mdash;only a confused noise of revel and riot, which showed
+ that the unhappy townsmen were quite unconscious of the approach of
+ danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last shadowy forms began to emerge from the obscurity of the deep
+ river-bed, and on the landing-places opposite the river-gates scattered
+ clusters of men grew into solid columns&mdash;the undefended gateways were
+ seized&mdash;a war-shout was raised&mdash;the alarm was taken and spread&mdash;and
+ swift runners started off to &ldquo;show the King of Babylon that his city was
+ taken at one end.&rdquo; In the darkness and confusion of the night a terrible
+ massacre ensued. The drunken revellers could make no resistance. The king
+ paralyzed with fear at the awful handwriting upon the wall, which too late
+ had warned him of his peril, could do nothing even to check the progress
+ of the assailants, who carried all before them everywhere. Bursting into
+ the palace, a band of Persians made their way to the presence of the
+ monarch, and slew him on the scene of his impious revelry. Other bands
+ carried fire and sword through the town. When morning came, Cyrus found
+ himself undisputed master of the city, which, if it had not despised his
+ efforts, might with the greatest ease have baffled them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war, however, was not even yet at an end. Nabonadius still held
+ Borsippa, and, if allowed to remain unmolested, might have gradually
+ gathered strength and become once more a formidable foe. Cyrus, therefore,
+ having first issued his orders that the outer fortifications of Babylon
+ should be dismantled, proceeded to complete his conquest by laying siege
+ to the town where he knew that Nabonadius had taken refuge. That monarch,
+ however, perceiving that resistance would be vain, did not wait till
+ Borsippa was invested, but on the approach of his enemy surrendered
+ himself. Cyrus rewarded his submission by kind and liberal treatment. Not
+ only did he spare his life, but (if we may trust Abydenus) he conferred on
+ him the government of the important province of Carmania.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus perished the Babylonian empire. If we seek the causes of its fall, we
+ shall find them partly in its essential military inferiority to the
+ kingdom that had recently grown up upon its borders, partly in the
+ accidental circumstance that its ruler at the time of the Persian attack
+ was a man of no great capacity. Had Nebuchadnezzar himself, or a prince of
+ his mental calibre, been the contemporary of Cyrus, the issue of the
+ contest might have been doubtful. Babylonia possessed naturally vast
+ powers of resistance&mdash;powers which, had they been made use of to the
+ utmost, might have tired out the patience of the Persians. That lively,
+ active, but not over-persevering people would scarcely have maintained a
+ siege with the pertinacity of the Babylonians themselves or of the
+ Egyptians. If the stratagem of Cyrus had failed&mdash;and its success
+ depended wholly on the Babylonians exercising no vigilance&mdash;the
+ capture of the town would have been almost impossible. Babylon was too
+ large to be blockaded; its walls were too lofty to be scaled, and too
+ massive to be battered down by the means possessed by the ancients. Mining
+ in the soft alluvial soil would have been dangerous work, especially as
+ the town ditch was deep and supplied with abundant water from the
+ Euphrates. Cyrus, had he failed in his night attack, would probably have
+ at once raised the siege; and Babylonian independence might perhaps in
+ that case have been maintained down to the time of Alexander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even thus, however, the &ldquo;Empire&rdquo; would not have been continued. So soon as
+ it became evident that the Babylonians were no match for the Persians in
+ the field, their authority over the subject nations was at an end. The
+ Susianians, the tribes of the middle Euphrates, the Syrians, the
+ Phoenicians, the Jews, the Idumseans, the Ammonites and Moabites, would
+ have gravitated to the stronger power, even if the attack of Cyrus on
+ Babylon itself had been repulsed. For the conquests of Cyrus in Asia
+ Minor, the Oxus region, and Afghanistan, had completely destroyed the
+ balance of power in Western Asia, and given to Persia a preponderance both
+ in men and in resources against which the cleverest and most energetic of
+ Babylonian princes would have struggled in vain. Persia must in any case
+ have absorbed all the tract between Mount Zagros and the Mediterranean,
+ except Babylonia Proper; and thus the successful defence of Babylon would
+ merely have deprived the Persian Empire of a province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In its general character the Babylonian Empire was little more than a
+ reproduction of the Assyrian. The same loose organization of the provinces
+ under native kings rather than satraps almost universally prevailed, with
+ the same duties on the part of suzerain and subjects and the same results
+ of ever-recurring revolt and re-conquest. Similar means were employed
+ under both empires to check and discourage rebellion&mdash;mutilations and
+ executions of chiefs, pillage of the rebellious region, and wholesale
+ deportation of its population. Babylon, equally with Assyria, failed to
+ win the affections of the subject nations, and, as a natural result,
+ received no help from them in her hour of need. Her system was to exhaust
+ and oppress the conquered races for the supposed benefit of the
+ conquerors, and to impoverish the provinces for the adornment and
+ enrichment of the capital. The wisest of her monarch&rsquo;s thought it enough
+ to construct works of public utility in Babylonia Proper, leaving the
+ dependent countries to themselves, and doing nothing to develop their
+ resources. This selfish system was, like most selfishness, short-sighted;
+ it alienated those whom it would have been true policy to conciliate and
+ win. When the time of peril came, the subject nations were no source of
+ strength to the menaced empire, On the contrary, it would seem that some
+ even turned against her and made common cause with the assailants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Babylonian civilization differed in many respects from Assyrian, to which
+ however it approached more nearly than to any other known type. Its
+ advantages over Assyrian were in its greater originality, its superior
+ literary character, and its comparative width and flexibility. Babylonia
+ seems to have been the source from which Assyria drew her learning, such
+ as it was, her architecture, the main ideas of her mimetic art, her
+ religious notions, her legal forms, and a vast number of her customs and
+ usages. But Babylonia herself, so far as we know, drew her stores from no
+ foreign country. Hers was apparently the genius which excogitated an
+ alphabet&mdash;worked out the simpler problems of arithmetic&mdash;invented
+ implements for measuring the lapse of time&mdash;conceived the idea of
+ raising enormous structures with the poorest of all materials, clay&mdash;discovered
+ the art of polishing, boring, and engraving gems&mdash;reproduced with
+ truthfulness the outlines of human and animal forms&mdash;attained to high
+ perfection in textile fabrics&mdash;studied with success the motions of
+ the heavenly bodies&mdash;conceived of grammar as a science&mdash;elaborated
+ a system of law&mdash;saw the value of an exact chronology&mdash;in almost
+ every branch of science made a beginning, thus rendering it comparatively
+ easy for other nations to proceed with the superstructure. To Babylonia,
+ far more than to Egypt, we owe the art and learning of the Greeks. It was
+ from the East, not from Egypt, that Greece derived her architecture, her
+ sculpture, her science, her philosophy, her mathematical knowledge&mdash;in
+ a word, her intellectual life. And Babylon was the source to which the
+ entire stream of Eastern civilization may be traced. It is scarcely too
+ much to say that, but for Babylon, real civilization might not even yet
+ have dawned upon the earth. Mankind might never have advanced beyond that
+ spurious and false form of it which in Egypt, India, China, Japan, Mexico,
+ and Peru, contented the aspirations of the species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_APPE" id="link2H_APPE">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A. STANDARD INSCRIPTION OF NEBUCHADNEZZAR.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Inscription begins with the various titles of Nebuchadnezzar. It then
+ contains prayers and invocations to the Gods, Merodach and Nebo. The
+ extent of N.&lsquo;s power is spoken of&mdash;it reaches from one sea to the
+ other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An account is then given of the wonders of Babylon, viz.:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The great temple of Merodach. (The mound of Babil is the tower or
+ ziggurat of this.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The Borsippa temple (or Birs).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Various other temples in Babylon and Borsippa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The subjoined description of the city follows: &ldquo;The double inclosure which
+ Nabopolassar my father had made but not completed, I finished.
+ Nabopolassar made its ditch. With two long embankments of brick and mortar
+ he bound its bed. He made the embankment of the Arahha. He lined the other
+ side of the Euphrates with brick. He made a bridge (?) over the Euphrates,
+ but did not finish its buttresses (?). From... (the name of a place) he
+ made with bricks burnt as hard as stones, by the help of the great Lord
+ Merodach, a way (for) a branch of the Shimat to the waters of the
+ Yapur-Shapu, the great reservoir of Babylon, opposite to the gate of Nin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The <i>Ingur-Bel</i> and the <i>Nimiti-Bel</i>&mdash;the great double
+ wall of Babylon&mdash;I finished. With two long embankments of brick and
+ mortar I built the sides of its ditch. I joined it on with that which my
+ father had made. I strengthened the city. Across the river to the west I
+ built the wall of Babylon with brick. The Yapur-Shapu-the reservoir of
+ Babylon&mdash;by the grace of Merodach I filled completely full of water.
+ With bricks burnt as hard as stones, and with bricks in huge masses like
+ mountains (?), the Yapur-Shapu, from the gate of Mula as far as Nana, who
+ is the protectress of her votaries, by the grace of his godship (i.e.
+ Merodach) I strengthened. With that which my father had made I joined it.
+ I made the way of Nana, the protectress of her votaries. The great gates
+ of the Ingur-Bel and the Nimiti-Bel-the reservoir of Babylon, at the time
+ of the flood (lit. of fulness), inundated them. These gates I raised.
+ Against the waters their foundations with brick and mortar I built. [Here
+ follows a description of the gates, with various architectural details, an
+ account of the decorations, hangings, etc.] For the delight of mankind I
+ filled the reservoir. Behold! besides the Ingur-Bel, the impregnable
+ fortification of Babylon. I constructed inside Babylon on the eastern side
+ of the river a fortification such as no king had ever made before me,
+ viz., a long rampart, 4000 ammas square, as an extra defence. I excavated
+ the ditch: with brick and mortar I bound its bed; a long rampart at its
+ head (?) I strongly built. I adorned its gates. The folding doors and the
+ pillars I plated with copper. Against presumptuous enemies, who were
+ hostile to the men of Babylon, great waters, like the waters of the ocean,
+ I made use of abundantly. Their depths were like the depths of the vast
+ ocean. I did not allow the waters to overflow, but the fulness of their
+ floods I caused to flow on, restraining them with a brick embankment....
+ Thus I completely made strong the defences of Babylon. May it last
+ forever!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Here follows a similar account of works at Borsippa.] &ldquo;In Babylon&mdash;the
+ city which is the delight of my eyes, and which I have glorified&mdash;when
+ the waters were in flood, they inundated the foundations of the great
+ palace called Taprati-nisi, or &lsquo;the Wonder of Mankind;&rsquo; (a palace) with
+ many chambers and lofty towers; the high-place of Royalty; (situated) in
+ the land of Babylon, and in the middle of Babylon; stretching from the
+ Ingur-Bel to the bed of the Shebil, the eastern canal, (and) from the bank
+ of the Sippara river, to the water of the Yapur-Shapu; which Nabopolassar
+ my father built with brick and raised up; when the reservoir of Babylon
+ was full, the gates of this palace were flooded. I raised the mound of
+ brick on which it was built, and made smooth its platform. I cut off the
+ floods of the water, and the foundations (of the palace) I protected
+ against the water with bricks and mortar: and I finished it completely.
+ Long beams I set up to support it: with pillars and beams plated with
+ copper and strengthened with iron I built up its gates. Silver and gold,
+ and precious stones whose names were almost unknown [here follow several
+ unknown names of objects, treasures of the palace], I stored up inside,
+ and placed there the treasure-house of my kingdom. Four years (?), the
+ seat of my kingdom in the city..., which....did not rejoice (my) heart. In
+ all my dominions I did not build a high-place of power; the precious
+ treasures of my kingdom I did not lay up. In Babylon, buildings for myself
+ and the honor of my kingdom I did not lay out. In the worship of Merodach
+ my lord, the joy of my heart (?), in Babylon, the city of his sovereignty
+ and the seat of my empire, I did not sing his praises (?), and I did not
+ furnish his altars (i.e. with victims), nor did I clear out the canals.&rdquo;
+ [Here follow further negative clauses.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As a further defence in war, at the Ingur-Bel, the impregnable outer
+ wall, the rampart of the Babylonians&mdash;with two strong lines of brick
+ and mortar I made a strong fort, 400 ammas square inside the Nimiti-Bel,
+ the inner defence of the Babylonians. Masonry of brick within them (the
+ lines) I constructed. With the palace of my father I connected it. In a
+ happy month and on an auspicious day its foundations I laid in the earth
+ like.... I completely finished its top. In fifteen days I completed it,
+ and made it the high-place of my kingdom. [Here follows a description of
+ the ornamentation of the palace.] A strong fort of brick and mortar in
+ strength I constructed. Inside the brick fortification another great
+ fortification of long stones, of the size of great mountains, I made. Like
+ Shedim I raised up its head. And this building I raised for a wonder; for
+ the defence of the people I constructed it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ B. ON THE MEANINGS OF BABYLONIAN NAMES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The names of the Babylonians, like those of the Assyrians, were
+ significant. Generally, if not always, they were composed of at least two
+ elements. These might be a noun in the nominative case with a verb
+ following it, a noun in the nominative with a participle in apposition, or
+ a word meaning &ldquo;servant&rdquo; followed by the name of a god. Under the first
+ class came such names as &ldquo;Bel-ipni&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Bel has made (me)&rdquo;&mdash;from
+ Bel,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0024" id="linkimage-0024">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/page0263.jpg" width="100%" alt="Page 263 " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0025" id="linkimage-0025">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/page0264.jpg" width="100%" alt="Page 264 " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0026" id="linkimage-0026">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/page0265.jpg" width="100%" alt="Page 265 " />
+ </div>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Seven Great Monarchies Of The
+Ancient Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon, by George Rawlinson
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+ </body>
+</html>
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@@ -0,0 +1,6009 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient
+Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon, by George Rawlinson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon
+ The History, Geography, And Antiquities Of Chaldaea,
+ Assyria, Babylon, Media, Persia, Parthia, And Sassanian
+ or New Persian Empire; With Maps and Illustrations.
+
+Author: George Rawlinson
+
+Illustrator: George Rawlinson
+
+Release Date: July 1, 2005 [EBook #16164]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SEVEN GREAT MONARCHIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SEVEN GREAT MONARCHIES
+
+OF THE
+
+ANCIENT EASTERN WORLD;
+
+
+OR,
+
+
+THE HISTORY, GEOGRAPHY, AND ANTIQUITIES OF CHALDAEA, ASSYRIA
+
+BABYLON, MEDIA, PERSIA, PARTHIA, AND SASSANIAN,
+
+OR NEW PERSIAN EMPIRE.
+
+
+BY
+
+GEORGE RAWLINSON, M.A.,
+
+CAMDEN PROFESSOR OF ANCIENT HISTORY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
+
+
+
+IN THREE VOLUMES.
+
+
+
+VOLUME II.
+
+
+
+WITH MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+
+
+THE FOURTH MONARCHY
+
+
+
+BABYLONIA.
+
+
+[Illustration: MAP]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. EXTENT OF THE EMPIRE.
+
+
+"Behold, a tree in the midst of the earth, and the height thereof was
+great; the tree grew and was strong: and the height thereof reached unto
+heaven, and the sight thereof to the end of all the earth."--Dan. iy.
+10, 11.
+
+
+The limits of Babylonia Proper, the tract in which the dominant power
+of the Fourth Monarchy had its abode, being almost identical with those
+which have been already described under the head of Chaldaea, will not
+require in this place to be treated afresh, at any length. It needs
+only to remind the reader that Babylonia Proper is that alluvial tract
+towards the mouth of the two great rivers of Western Asia--the Tigris
+and the Euphrates--which intervenes between the Arabian Desert on the
+one side, and the more eastern of the two streams on the other. Across
+the Tigris the country is no longer Babylonia, but Cissia, or Susiana--a
+distinct region, known to the Jews as Elam--the habitat of a distinct
+people. Babylonia lies westward of the Tigris, and consists of two vast
+plains or flats, one situated between the two rivers, and thus forming
+the lower portion of the "Mesopotamia" of the Greeks and Romans--the
+other interposed between the Euphrates and Arabia, a long but narrow
+strip along the right bank of that abounding river. The former of these
+two districts is shaped like an ancient amphora, the mouth extending
+from Hit to Samarah, the neck lying between Baghdad and Ctesiphon on the
+Tigris, Mohammed and Mosaib on the Euphrates, the full expansion of
+the body occurring between Serut and El Khithr, and the pointed base
+reaching down to Kornah at the junction of the two streams. This tract,
+the main region of the ancient Babylonia, is about 320 miles long, and
+from 20 to 100 broad. It may be estimated to contain about 18,000 square
+miles. The tract west of the Euphrates is smaller than this. Its length,
+in the time of the Babylonian Empire, may be regarded as about 350
+miles, its average width is from 25 to 30 miles, which would give an
+area of about 9000 square miles. Thus the Babylonia of Nabopolassar
+and Nebuchadnezzar may be regarded as covering a space of 27,000 square
+miles--a space a little exceeding the area of the Low countries.
+
+The small province included within these limits--smaller than Scotland
+or Ireland, or Portugal or Bavaria--became suddenly, in the latter half
+of the seventh century B.C., the mistress of an extensive empire. On the
+fall of Assyria, about B.C. 625, or a little later, Media and Babylonia,
+as already observed, divided between them her extensive territory. It
+is with the acquisitions thus made that we have now to deal. We have to
+inquire what portion exactly of the previous dominions of Assyria fell
+to the lot of the adventurous Nabopolassar, when Nineveh ceased to
+be--what was the extent of the territory which was ruled from Babylon in
+the latter portion of the seventh and the earlier portion of the sixth
+century before our era?
+
+Now the evidence which we possess on this point is threefold. It
+consists of certain notices in the Hebrew Scriptures, contemporary
+records of first-rate historical value; of an account which strangely
+mingles truth with fable in one of the books of the Apocrypha; and of a
+passage of Berosus preserved by Josephus in his work against Apion.
+The Scriptural notices are contained in Jeremiah, in Daniel, and in
+the books of Kings and Chronicles. From these sources we learn that the
+Babylonian Empire of this time embraced on the one hand the important
+country of Susiana or Elymais (Elam), while on the other it ran up the
+Euphrates at least as high as Carchemish, from thence extending westward
+to the Mediterranean, and southward to, or rather perhaps into, Egypt.
+The Apocryphal book of Judith enlarges these limits in every direction.
+That the Nabuchodonosor of that work is a reminiscence of the real
+Nebuchadnezzar there can be no doubt. The territories of that monarch
+are made to extend eastward, beyond Susiana, into Persia; northward to
+Nineveh; westward to Cilicia in Asia Minor; and southward to the very
+borders of Ethiopia. Among the countries under his sway are enumerated
+Elam, Persia, Assyria, Cilicia, Coele-Syria, Syria of Damascus,
+Phoenicia, Galilee, Gilead, Bashan, Judsea, Philistia, Goshen, and Egypt
+generally. The passage of Berosus is of a more partial character. It
+has no bearing on the general question of the extent of the Babylonian
+Empire, but, incidentally, it confirms the statements of our other
+authorities as to the influence of Babylon in the West. It tells us that
+Coele-Syria, Phoenicia, and Egypt, were subject to Nabopolassar, and
+that Nebuchadnezzar ruled, not only over these countries, but also over
+some portion of Arabia.
+
+From these statements, which, on the whole, are tolerably accordant, we
+may gather that the great Babylonian Empire of the seventh century
+B.C. inherited from Assyria all the southern and western portion of her
+territory, while the more northern and eastern provinces fell to the
+share of Media. Setting aside the statement of the book of Judith
+(wholly unconfirmed as it is by any other authority), that Persia was at
+this time subject to Babylon, we may regard as the most eastern portion
+of the Empire the district of Susiana, which corresponded nearly with
+the modern Khuzistan and Luristan. This acquisition advanced the eastern
+frontier of the Empire from the Tigris to the Bakhtiyari Mountains, a
+distance of 100 or 120 miles. It gave to Babylon an extensive tract
+of very productive territory, and an excellent strategic boundary.
+Khuzistan is one of the most valuable provinces of modern Persia. It
+consists of a broad tract of fertile alluvium, intervening between the
+Tigris and the mountains, well watered by numerous large streams, which
+are capable of giving an abundant irrigation to the whole of the low
+region. Above this is Luristan, a still more pleasant district, composed
+of alternate mountain, valley, and upland plain, abounding in beautiful
+glens, richly wooded, and full of gushing brooks and clear rapid rivers.
+Much of this region is of course uncultivable mountain, range succeeding
+range, in six or eight parallel lines, as the traveller advances to the
+north-east; and most of the ranges exhibiting vast tracts of bare
+and often precipitous rock, in the clefts of which snow rests till
+midsummer. Still the lower flanks of the mountains are in general
+cultivable, while the valleys teem with orchards and gardens, and the
+plains furnish excellent pasture. The region closely resembles Zagros,
+of which it is a continuation. As we follow it, however, towards the
+south-east into the Bakhtiyari country, where it adjoins upon the
+ancient Persia, it deteriorates in character; the mountains becoming
+barer and more arid, and the valleys narrower and less fertile.
+
+All the other acquisitions of Babylonia at this period lay towards the
+west. They consisted of the Euphrates valley, above Hit; of Mesopotamia
+Proper, or the country about the two streams of the Bilik and the
+Khabour; of Syria, Phoenicia, Palestine, Idumasa, Northern Arabia, and
+part of Egypt. The Euphrates valley from Hit to Balis is a tract of no
+great value, except as a line of communication. The Mesopotamian Desert
+presses it closely upon the one side, and the Arabian upon the other.
+The river flows mostly in a deep bed between cliffs of marl, gypsum, and
+limestone, or else between bare hills producing only a few dry sapless
+shrubs and a coarse grass; and there are but rare places where, except
+by great efforts, the water can be raised so as to irrigate, to any
+extent, the land along either bank. The course of the stream is fringed
+by date-palms as high as Anah, and above is dotted occasionally with
+willows, poplars, sumacs, and the unfruitful palm-tree. Cultivation
+is possible in places along both banks, and the undulating country on
+either side affords patches of good pasture. The land improves as we
+ascend. Above the junction of the Khabour with the main stream, the left
+bank is mostly cultivable. Much of the land is flat and well-wooded,
+while often there are broad stretches of open ground, well adapted for
+pasturage. A considerable population seems in ancient times to have
+peopled the valley, which did not depend wholly or even mainly on its
+own products, but was enriched by the important traffic which was always
+passing up and down the great river.
+
+Mesopotamia Proper, or the tract extending from the head streams of the
+Khabour about Mardin and Nisibin to the Euphrates at Bir, and thence
+southwards to Karkesiyeh or Circesium, is not certainly known to have
+belonged to the kingdom of Babylon, but may be assigned to it on grounds
+of probability. Divided by a desert or by high mountains from the valley
+of the Tigris, and attached by means of its streams to that of the
+Euphrates, it almost necessarily falls to that power which holds the
+Euphrates under its dominion. The tract is one of considerable extent
+and importance. Bounded on the north by the range of hills which Strabo
+calls Mons Masius, and on the east by the waterless upland which lies
+directly west of the middle Tigris, it comprises within it all the
+numerous affluents of the Khabour and Bilik, and is thus better supplied
+with water than almost any country in these regions. The borders of the
+streams afford the richest pasture, and the whole tract along the flank
+of Masius is fairly fertile. Towards the west, the tract between the
+Khabour and the Bilik, which is diversified by the Abd-el-Aziz hills,
+is a land of fountains. "Such," says Ibn Haukal, "are not to be found
+elsewhere in all the land of the Moslems, for there are more than three
+hundred pure running brooks." Irrigation is quite possible in this
+region; and many remains of ancient watercourses show that large tracts,
+at some distance from the main streams, were formerly brought under
+cultivation.
+
+Opposite to Mesopotamia Proper, on the west or right bank of the
+Euphrates, lay Northern Syria, with its important fortress of
+Carchemish, which was undoubtedly included in the Empire. This tract is
+not one of much value. Towards the north it is mountainous, consisting
+of spurs from Amanus and Taurus, which gradually subside into the desert
+a little to the south of Aleppo. The bare, round-backed, chalky or rocky
+ranges, which here continually succeed one another, are divided only by
+narrow tortuous valleys, which run chiefly towards the Euphrates or
+the lake of Antioch. This mountain tract is succeeded by a region of
+extensive plains, separated from each other by low hills, both equally
+desolate. The soil is shallow and stony; the streams are few and of
+little volume; irrigation is thus difficult, and, except where it can be
+applied, the crops are scanty. The pistachio-nut grows wild in places;
+Vines and olives are cultivated with some success; and some grain is
+raised by the inhabitants; but the country has few natural advantages,
+and it has always depended more upon its possession of a carrying trade
+than on its home products for prosperity.
+
+West and south-west of this region, between it and the Mediterranean,
+and extending southwards from Mount Amanus to the latitude of Tyre, lies
+Syria Proper, the Coele-Syria of many writers, a long but comparatively
+narrow tract of great fertility and value. Here two parallel ranges of
+mountains intervene between the coast and the desert, prolific parents
+of a numerous progeny of small streams. First, along the line of the
+coast, is the range known as Libanusin the south, from lat. 33 deg. 20' to
+lat. 34 deg. 40', and as Bargylus in the north, from lat. 34 deg. 45' to the
+Orontes at Antioch, a range of great beauty, richly wooded in places,
+and abounding in deep glens, foaming brooks, and precipices of a
+fantastic form. [PLATE VII., Fig 2.] More inland is Antilibanus,
+culminating towards the south in Hermon, and prolonged northward in the
+Jebel Shashabu, Jebel Biha, and Jebel-el-Ala, which extends from near
+Hems to the latitude of Aleppo. More striking than even Lebanon at its
+lower extremity, where Hermon lifts a snowy peak into the air during
+most of the year, it is on the whole inferior in beauty to the coast
+range, being bleaker, more stony, and less broken up by dells and
+valleys towards the south, and tamer, barer, and less well supplied with
+streams in its more northern portion. Between the two parallel ranges
+lies the "Hollow Syria," a long and broadish valley, watered by the
+two streams of the Orontes and the "Litany" which, rising at no great
+distance from one another, flow in opposite directions, one hurrying
+northwards nearly to the flanks of Amanus, the other southwards to the
+hills of Galilee. Few places in the world are more, remarkable, or have
+a more stirring history, than this wonderful vale. Extending for above
+two hundred miles from north to south, almost in a direct line, and
+without further break than an occasional screen of low hills, it
+furnishes the most convenient line of passage between Asia and Africa,
+alike for the journeys of merchants and for the march of armies. Along
+this line passed Thothines and Barneses, Sargon, and Sennacherib,
+Neco and Nebuchadnezzar, Alexander and his warlike successors, Pompey,
+Antony, Kaled, Godfrey of Bouillon; along this must pass every great
+army which, starting from the general seats of power in Western Asia,
+seeks conquests in Africa, or which, proceeding from Africa, aims at the
+acquisition of an Asiatic dominion. Few richer tracts are to be found
+even in these most favored portions of the earth's surface. Towards the
+south the famous El-Bukaa is a land of cornfields and vineyards, watered
+by numerous small streams which fall into the Litany. Towards the
+north El-Ghab is even more splendidly fertile, with a dark rich soil,
+luxuriant vegetation, and water in the utmost abundance, though at
+present it is cultivated only in patches immediately about the towns,
+from fear of the Nusairiyeh and the Bedouins.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VII.]
+
+
+Parallel with the southern part of the Coele-Syrian valley, to the west
+and to the east, were two small but important tracts, usually regarded
+as distinct states. Westward, between the heights of Lebanon and the
+sea, and extending somewhat beyond Lebanon, both up and down the coast,
+was Phoenicia, a narrow strip of territory lying along the shore, in
+length from 150 to 180 miles, and in breadth varying from one mile to
+twenty. This tract consisted of a mere belt of sandy land along the sea,
+where the smiling palm-groves grew from which the country derived its
+name, of a broader upland region along the flank of the hills, which
+was cultivated in grain, and of the higher slopes of the mountains
+which furnished excellent timber. Small harbors, sheltered by rocky
+projections, were frequent along the coast. Wood cut in Lebanon was
+readily floated down the many streams to the shore, and then conveyed
+by sea to the ports. A narrow and scanty land made commerce almost a
+necessity. Here accordingly the first great maritime nation of antiquity
+grew up. The Phoenician fleets explored the Mediterranean at a time
+anterior to Homer, and conveyed to the Greeks and the other inhabitants
+of Europe, and of Northern and Western Africa, the wares of Assyria,
+Babylon, and Egypt. Industry and enterprise reaped their usual harvest
+of success; the Phoenicians grew in wealth, and their towns became great
+and magnificent cities. In the time when the Babylonian Empire came
+into being, the narrow tract of Phoenicia--smaller than many an
+English county--was among the most valuable countries of Asia; and its
+possession was far more to be coveted than that of many a land whose
+area was ten or twenty times as great.
+
+Eastward of Antilibanus, in the tract between that range and the great
+Syrian desert, was another very important district--the district which
+the Jews called "Aram-Dammesek," and which now forms the chief part of
+the Pashalik of Damascus. From the eastern flanks of the Antilibanus two
+great and numerous smaller streams flow down into the Damascene plain,
+and, carrying with them that strange fertilizing power which water
+always has in hot climates, convert the arid sterility of the desert
+into a garden of the most wonderful beauty. The Barada and Awaaj,
+bursting by narrow gorges from the mountain chain, scatter themselves in
+numerous channels over the great flat, intermingling their waters, and
+spreading them out so widely that for a circle of thirty miles the
+deep verdure of Oriental vegetation replaces the red hue of the Hauran.
+Walnuts, planes, poplars, cypresses, apricots, orange-trees, citrons,
+pomegranates, olives, wave above; corn and grass of the most luxuriant
+growth, below. In the midst of this great mass of foliage the city of
+Damascus "strikes out the white arms of its streets hither and thither"
+among the trees, now hid among them, now overtopping them with its domes
+and minarets, the most beautiful of all those beautiful towns which
+delight the eye of the artist in the East. In the south-west towers
+the snow-clad peak of Hermon, visible from every part of the Damascene
+plain. West, north-west, and north, stretches the long Antilibanus
+range, bare, gray, and flat-topped, except where about midway in its
+course, the rounded summit of Jebel Tiniyen breaks the uniformity of the
+line. Outside the circle of deep verdure, known to the Orientals as El
+Merj ("the Meadow"), is a setting or framework of partially cultivable
+land, dotted with clumps of trees and groves, which extend for many
+miles over the plain. To the Damascus country must also be reckoned
+those many charming valleys of Hermon and Antilibanus which open out
+into it, sending their waters to increase its beauty and luxuriance,
+the most remarkable of which are the long ravine of the Barada, and the
+romantic Wady Halbon, whose vines produced the famous beverage which
+Damascus anciently supplied at once to the Tyrian merchant-princes and
+to the voluptuous Persian kings.
+
+Below the Coelo-Syrian valley, towards the south, came Palestine, the
+Land of Lands to the Christian, the country which even the philosopher
+must acknowledge to have had a greater influence on the world's
+history than any other tract which can be brought under a single
+ethnic designation. Palestine--etymologically the country of the
+Philistines--was somewhat unfortunately named. Philistine influence may
+possibly have extended at a very remote period over the whole of it; but
+in historical times that warlike people did but possess a corner of
+the tract, less than one tenth of the whole--the low coast region
+from Jamnia to Gaza. Palestine contained, besides this, the regions of
+Galilee, Samaria, and Judaea, to the west of the Jordan, and those of
+Ituraea, Trachonitis, Bashan, and Gilead, east of that river. It was a
+tract 140 miles long, by from 70 to 100 broad, containing probably about
+11,000 square miles. It was thus about equal in size to Belgium, while
+it was less than Holland or Hanover, and not much larger than the
+principality of Wales, with which it has been compared by a recent
+writer.
+
+The great natural division of the country is the Jordan valley. This
+remarkable depression, commencing on the west flank of Hermon, runs with
+a course which is almost due south from lat. 33 deg. 25' to lat. 31 deg. 47',
+where it is merged in the Dead Sea, which may be viewed, however, as a
+continuation of the valley, prolonging it to lat. 31 deg. 8'. This valley is
+quite unlike any other in the whole world. It is a volcanic rent in
+the earth's surface, a broad chasm which has gaped and never closed
+up. Naturally, it should terminate at Merom, where the level of the
+Mediterranean is nearly reached. By some wonderful convulsion, or at any
+rate by some unusual freak of Nature, there is a channel opened out from
+Merom, which rapidly sinks below the sea level, and allows the stream to
+flow hastily, down and still down, from Merom to Gennesareth, and from
+Gennesareth to the Dead Sea, where the depression reaches its lowest
+point, and the land, rising into a ridge, separates the Jordan valley
+from the upper end of the Gulf of Akabah. The Jordan valley divides
+Palestine, strongly and sharply, into two regions. Its depth, its
+inaccessibility (for it can only be entered from the highlands on either
+side down a few steep watercourses), and the difficulty of passing
+across it (for the Jordan has but few fords), give it a separating power
+almost equal to that of an arm of the sea. In length above a hundred
+miles, in width varying from one mile to ten, and averaging some five
+miles, or perhaps six, it must have been valuable as a territory,
+possessing, as it does, a rich soil, abundant water, and in its lower
+portion a tropical climate.
+
+On either side of the deep Jordan cleft lies a highland of moderate
+elevation, on the right that of Galilee, Samaria, and Judsea, on the
+left that of Ituraea, Bashan, and Gilead. The right or western highland
+consists of a mass of undulating hills, with rounded tops, composed of
+coarse gray stone, covered, or scarcely covered, with a scanty soil, but
+capable of cultivation in corn, olives, and figs. This region is
+most productive towards the north, barer and more arid as we proceed
+southwards towards the desert. The lowest portion, Judaea, is
+unpicturesque, ill-watered, and almost treeless; the central, Samaria,
+has numerous springs, some rich plains, many wooded heights, and in
+places quite a sylvan appearance; the highest, Galilee, is a land of
+water-brooks, abounding in timber, fertile and beautiful. The average
+height of the whole district is from 1500 to 1800 feet above the
+Mediterranean. Main elevations within it vary from 2500 to 4000 feet.
+The axis of the range is towards the East, nearer, that is, to the
+Jordan valley than to the sea. It is a peculiarity of the highland that
+there is one important break in it. As the Lowland mountains of Scotland
+are wholly separated from the mountains of the Highlands by the low
+tract which stretches across from the Frith of Forth to the Frith of
+Clyde, or as the ranges of St. Gall and Appenzell are divided off from
+the rest of the Swiss mountains by the flat which extends from the Rhine
+at Eagatz to the same river at Waldshut, so the western highland of
+Palestine is broken in twain by the famous "plain of Esdraelon,"
+which runs from the Bay of Acre to the Jordan valley at Beth-Shean or
+Scythopolis.
+
+East of the Jordan no such depression occurs, the highland there being
+continuous. It differs from the western highland chiefly in this--that
+its surface, instead of being broken up into a confused mass of rounded
+hills, is a table-land, consisting of a long succession of slightly
+undulating plains. Except in Trachonitis and southern Ituraea, where the
+basaltic rock everywhere crops out, the soil is rich and productive, the
+country in places wooded with fine trees, and the herbage luxuriant. On
+the west the mountains rise almost precipitously from the Jordan valley,
+above which they tower to the height of 3000 or 4000 feet. The outline
+is singularly uniform; and the effect is that of a huge wall guarding
+Palestine on this side from the wild tribes of the desert. Eastward the
+tableland slopes gradually, and melts into the sands of Arabia. Here
+water and wood are scarce; but the soil is still good, and bears the
+most abundant crops.
+
+Finally, Palestine contains the tract from which it derives its
+name, the low country of the Philistines, which the Jews called the
+_Shephelah_, together with a continuation of this tract northwards to
+the roots of Carmol, the district known to the Jews as "Sharon," or "the
+smooth place." From Carmol to the Wady Sheriah, where the Philistine
+country ended, is a distance of about one hundred miles, which gives the
+length of the region in question. Its breadth between the shore and the
+highland varies from about twenty-five miles, in the south, between Gaza
+and the hills of Dan, to three miles, or less, in the north, between
+Dor and the border of Manasseh. Its area is probably from 1400 to 1500
+square miles, This low strip is along its whole course divided into two
+parallel belts or bands-the first a flat sandy tract along the shore,
+the Ramleh of the modern Arabs; the second, more undulating, a region
+of broad rolling plains rich in corn, and anciently clothed in part with
+thick woods, watered by reedy streams, which flow down from the great
+highland. A valuable tract is this entire plain, but greatly exposed to
+ravage. Even the sandy belt will grow fruit-trees; and the towns which
+stand on it, as Gaza, Jaffa, and Ashdod, are surrounded with huge groves
+of olives, sycamores, and palms, or buried in orchards and gardens,
+bright with pomegranates and orange-trees. The more inland region is
+of marvellous fertility. Its soil is a rich loam, containing scarcely a
+pebble, which yields year after year prodigious crops of grain--chiefly
+wheat--without manure or irrigation, or other cultivation than a light
+ploughing. Philistia was the granary of Syria, and was important doubly,
+first, as yielding inexhaustible supplies to its conqueror, and secondly
+as affording the readiest passage to the great armies which contended in
+these regions for the mastery of the Eastern World.
+
+South of the region to which we have given the name of Palestine,
+intervening between it and Egypt, lay a tract, to which it is difficult
+to assign any political designation. Herodotus regarded it as a portion
+of Arabia, which he carried across the valley of the Arabah and
+made abut on the Mediterranean. To the Jews it was "the land of the
+south"--the special country of the Amalekites. By Strabo's time it had
+come to be known as Idumsea, or the Edomite country; and under this
+appellation it will perhaps be most convenient to describe it here.
+Idumasa, then, was the tract south and south-west of Palestine from
+about lat. 31 deg. 10'. It reached westward to the borders of Egypt, which
+were at this time marked by the Wady-el-Arish, southward to the range of
+Sinai and the Elanitic Gulf, and eastward to the Great Desert. Its
+chief town was Petra, in the mountains east of the Arabah valley. The
+character of the tract is for the most part a hard gravelly and rocky
+desert; but occasionally there is good herbage, and soil that admits of
+cultivation; brilliant flowers and luxuriantly growing shrubs bedeck the
+glens and terraces of the Petra range; and most of the tract produces
+plants and bushes on which camels, goats, and even sheep will browse,
+while occasional palm groves furnish a grateful shade and an important
+fruit. The tract divides itself into four regions--first, a region of
+sand, low and flat, along the Mediterranean, the Shephelah without
+its fertility; next, a region of hard gravelly plain intersected by
+limestone ridges, and raised considerably above the sea level, the
+Desert of El-Tin, or of "the Wanderings;" then the long, broad, low
+valley of the Arabah, which rises gradually from the Dead Sea to an
+imperceptible watershed, and then falls gently to the head of the
+Gulf of Akabah, a region of hard sand thickly dotted with bushes, and
+intersected by numerous torrent courses; finally a long narrow region
+of mountains and hills parallel with the Arabah, constituting Idumsea
+Proper, or the original Edom, which, though rocky and rugged, is full
+of fertile glens, ornamented with trees and shrubs, and in places
+cultivated in terraces. In shape the tract was a rude square or oblong,
+with its sides nearly facing the four cardinal points, its length from
+the Mediterranean to the Gulf of Akabah being 130 miles, and its width
+from the Wady-el-Arish to the eastern side of the Petra mountains 120
+miles. The area is thus about 1560 square miles.
+
+Beyond the Wady-el-Arish was Egypt, stretching from the Mediterranean
+southwards a distance of nearly eight degrees, or more than 550 miles.
+As this country was not, however, so much a part of the Babylonian
+Empire as a dependency lying upon its borders, it will not be necessary
+to describe it in this place.
+
+One region, however, remains still unnoticed which seems to have been
+an integral portion of the Empire. This is Palmyrene, or the Syrian
+Desert--the tract lying between Coelo-Syria on the one hand and the
+valley of the middle Euphrates on the other, and abutting towards the
+south on the great Arabian Desert, to which it is sometimes regarded
+as belonging. It is for the most part a hard sandy or gravelly plain,
+intersected by low rocky ranges, and either barren or productive only
+of some sapless shrubs and of a low thin grass. Occasionally, however,
+there are oases, where the fertility is considerable. Such an oasis is
+the region about Palmyra itself, which derived its name from the palm
+groves in the vicinity; here the soil is good, and a large tract is
+even now under cultivation. Another oasis is that of Karyatein, which
+is watered by an abundant stream, and is well wooded, and productive of
+grain. The Palmyrene, however, as a whole possesses but little value,
+except as a passage country. Though large armies can never have
+traversed the desert even in this upper region, where it is
+comparatively narrow, trade in ancient times found it expedient to
+avoid the long detour by the Orontes Valley, Aleppo, and Bambuk, and
+to proceed directly from Damascus by way of Palymra to Thapsaeus on the
+Euphrates. Small bands of light troops also occasionally took the same
+course; and the great saving of distance thus effected made it important
+to the Babylonians to possess an authority over the region in question.
+
+Such, then, in its geographical extent, was the great Babylonian Empire.
+Reaching from Luristan on the one side to the borders of Egypt on the
+other, its direct length from east to west was nearly sixteen degrees,
+or about 980 miles, while its length for all practical purposes, owing
+to the interposition of the desert between its western and its eastern
+provinces, was perhaps not less than 1400 miles. Its width was very
+disproportionate to this. Between Zagros and the Arabian Desert, where
+the width was the greatest, it amounted to about 280 miles; between
+Amanus and Palmyra it was 250; between the Mons Masius and the middle
+Euphrates it may have been 200; in Syria and Idumsea it cannot have been
+more than 100 or 160. The entire area of the Empire was probably from
+240,000 to 250,000 square miles--which is about the present size of
+Austria. Its shape may be compared roughly to a gnomon, with one longer
+and one shorter arm.
+
+It added to the inconvenience of this long straggling form, which made
+a rapid concentration of the forces of the Empire impossible, that the
+capital, instead of occupying a central position, was placed somewhat
+low in the longer of the two arms of the gnomon, and was thus nearly
+1000 miles removed from the frontier province of the west. Though in
+direct distance, as the crow flies, Babylon is not more than 450 miles
+from Damascus, or more than 520 from Jerusalem, yet the necessary detour
+by Aleppo is so great that it lengthens the distance, in the one case
+by 250, in the other by 380 miles. From so remote a centre it was
+impossible for the life-blood to circulate very vigorously to the
+extremities.
+
+The Empire was on the whole fertile and well-watered. The two great
+streams of Western Asia--the Tigris and the Euphrates--which afforded
+an abundant supply of the invaluable fluid to the most important of
+the provinces, those of the south-east, have already been described at
+length; as have also the chief streams of the Mesopotamian district, the
+Belik and the Khabour. But as yet in this work no account has been given
+of a number of important rivers in the extreme east and the extreme
+west, on which the fertility, and so the prosperity, of the Empire very
+greatly depended. It is proposed in the present place to supply this
+deficiency.
+
+The principle rivers of the extreme east were the Choaspes, or modern
+Kerkhah, the Pasitigris or Eulseus, now the Kuran, the Hedyphon or
+Hedypnus, now the Jerahi, and the Oroatis, at present the Tab or
+Hindyan. Of these, the Oroatis, which is the most eastern, belongs
+perhaps more to Persia than to Babylon; but its lower course probably
+fell within the Susianian territory. It rises in the mountains between
+Shiraz and Persepolis, about lat. 29 deg. 45', long. 52 deg. 35' E.; and flows
+towards the Persian Gulf with a course which is north-west to Failiyun,
+then nearly W. to Zehitun, after which it becomes somewhat south of west
+to Hindyan, and then S.W. by S. to the sea. The length of the stream,
+without counting lesser windings, is 200 miles; its width at Hindyan,
+sixteen miles above its mouth, is eighty yards, and to this distance it
+is navigable for boats of twenty tons burthen. At first its waters are
+pure and sweet, but they gradually become corrupted, and at Hindyan they
+are so brackish as not to be fit for use. The Jerahi rises from several
+sources in the Kuh Margun, a lofty and precipitous range, forming the
+continuation of the chain of Zagros. about long. 50 deg. to 51 deg., and lat.
+31 deg. 30'. These head-streams have a general direction from N.E. to S.W.
+The principal of them is the Kurdistan river, which rises about fifty
+miles to the north-east of Babahan and flowing south-west to that point,
+then bends round to the north, and runs north-west nearly to the fort
+of Mungasht, where it resumes its original direction, and receiving from
+the north-east the Abi Zard, or "Yellow River"--a delightful stream of
+the coldest and purest water possible--becomes known as the Jerahi, and
+carries a large body of water as far as Fellahiyeh or Dorak. Near Dorak
+the waters of the Jerahi are drawn off into a number of canals, and the
+river is thus greatly diminished; but still the stream struggles on, and
+proceeds by a southerly course towards the Persian Gulf, which it enters
+near Gadi in long. 48 deg. 52'. The course of the Jerahi, exclusively of
+the smaller windings, is about equal in length to that of the Tab or
+Hindyan. In volume, before its dispersion, it is considerably greater
+than that river. It has a breadth of about a hundred yards before it
+reaches Babahan, and is navigable for boats almost from its junction
+with the Abi Zard. Its size is, however, greatly reduced in its lower
+course, and travellers who skirt the coast regard the Tab as the more
+important river.
+
+The Kuran is a river very much exceeding in size both the Tab and the
+Jerahi. It is formed by the junction of two large streams--the Dizful
+river and the Kuran proper, or river of Shuster. Of these the Shuster
+stream is the more eastern. It rises in the Zarduh Kuh, or "Yellow
+Mountain," in lat. 32 deg., long. 51 deg., almost opposite to the river Isfahan.
+From its source it is a large stream. Its direction is at first to the
+southeast, but after a while it sweeps round and runs considerably north
+of west; and this course it pursues through the mountains, receiving
+tributaries of importance from both sides, till, near Akhili, it turns
+round to the south, and, cutting at a right angle the outermost of the
+Zagros ranges, flows down with a course S.W. by S. nearly to Sinister,
+where, in consequence of a bund or dam thrown across it, it bifurcates,
+and passes in two streams to the right and to the left of the town.
+The right branch, which earned commonly about two thirds of the water,
+proceeds by a tortuous course of nearly forty miles, in a direction a
+very little west of south, to its junction with the Dizful stream, which
+takes place about two miles north of the little town of Bandi-kir. Just
+below that town the left branch, called at present Abi-Gargar, which
+has made a considerable bend to the east, rejoins the main stream, which
+thenceforth flows in a single channel. The course of the Kuran from its
+source to its junction with the Dizful branch, including main windings,
+is about 210 miles. The Dizful. branch rises from two sources, nearly a
+degree apart, in lat. 33 deg. 30'. These streams run respectively south-east
+and south-west, a distance of forty miles, to their junction near
+Bahrein, whence their united waters flow in a tortuous course, with
+a general direction of south, for above a hundred miles to the outer
+barrier of Zagros, which they penetrate near the Diz fort, through a
+succession of chasms and gorges. The course of the stream from this
+point is south-west through the hills and across the plain, past Dizful,
+to the place where it receives the Beladrud from the west, when it
+changes and becomes first south and then southeast to its junction with
+the Shuster river near Bandi-kir. The entire course of the Dizful stream
+to this point is probably not less than 380 miles. Below Bandi-kir,
+the Kuran, now become "a noble river, exceeding in size the Tigris and
+Euphrates," meanders across the plain in a general direction of S.S.
+W., past the towns of Uris, Ahwaz, and Ismaili, to Sablah, when it
+turns more to the west, and passing Mohammerah, empties itself into the
+Shat-el-Arab, about 22 miles below Busra. The entire course of the Kuran
+from its most remote source, exclusive of the lesser windings, is not
+less than 430 miles.
+
+The Kerkhah (anciently the Choaspes) is formed by three streams of
+almost equal magnitude, all of them rising in the most eastern portion
+of the Zagros range. The central of the three flows from the southern
+flank of Mount Elwand (Orontes), the mountain behind Hamadan (Ecbatana),
+and receives on the right, after a course of about thirty miles, the
+northern or Singur branch, and ten miles further on the southern or
+Guran branch, which is known by the name of the Gamas-ab. The river
+thus formed flows westward to Behistun, after which it bonds to the
+south-west, and then to the south, receiving tributaries on both hands,
+and winding among the mountains as far as the ruined city of Rudbar.
+Here it bursts through the outer barrier of the great range, and,
+receiving the large stream of the Kirrind from the north-west, flows
+S.S.E. and S.E. along the foot of the range, between it and the Kebir
+Kuh, till it meets the stream of the Abi-Zal, when it finally leaves the
+hills and flows through the plain, pursuing a S.S.E. direction to the
+ruins of Susa, which lie upon its left bank, and then turning to the
+S. S. W., and running in that direction to the Shat-el-Arab, which it
+reaches about five miles below Kurnur. Its length is estimated at above
+500 miles; its width, at some distance above its junction with the
+Abi-Zal, is from eighty to a hundred yards.
+
+The course of the Kerkhah was not always exactly such as is here
+described. Anciently it appears to have bifurcated at Pai Pul, 18 or 20
+miles N.W. of Susa, and to have sent a branch east of the Susa ruins,
+which absorbed the Shapur, a small tributary of the Dizful stream, and
+ran into the Kuran a little above Ahwaz. The remains of the old channel
+are still to be traced; and its existence explains the confusion,
+observable in ancient times, between the Kerkhah and the Kuran, to each
+of which streams, in certain parts of their course, we find the name
+Eulseus applied. The proper Eulseus was the eastern branch of the
+Kerkhah (Choaspes) from Pai Pul to Ahwaz; but the name was naturally
+extended both northwards to the Choaspes above Pai Pul and southwards to
+the Kuran below Ahwaz. The latter stream was, however, known also, both
+in its upper and its lower course, as the Pasitigris.
+
+On the opposite side of the Empire the rivers were less considerable.
+Among the most important may be mentioned the Sajur, a tributary of
+the Euphrates, the Koweik, or river of Aleppo, the Orontes, or river of
+Antioch, the Litany, or river of Tyre, the Barada, or river of Damascus,
+and the Jordan, with its tributaries, the Jabbok and the Hieromax.
+
+The Sajur rises from two principle sources on the southern flanks of
+Amanus, which, after running a short distance, unite a little to the
+east of Ain-Tab. The course of the stream from the point of junction is
+south-east. In this direction it flows in a somewhat tortuous channel
+between two ranges of hills for a distance of about 30 miles to Tel
+Khalid, a remarkable conical hill crowned by ruins. Here it receives an
+important affluent--the Keraskat--from the west, and becomes suitable
+for boat navigation. At the same time its course changes, and runs
+eastward for about 12 miles; after which the stream again inclines to
+the south, and keeping an E.S.E. direction for 14 or 15 miles, enters
+the Euphrates by five mouths in about lat. 36 deg. 37'. The course of the
+river measures probably about 65 miles.
+
+The Koweik, or river of Aleppo (the Chalus of Xenophon), rises in the
+hills south of Ain-Tab. Springing from two sources, one of which is
+known as the Baloklu-Su, or "Fish River," it flows at first eastward,
+as if intending to join the Euphrates. On reaching the plain of Aleppo,
+however, near Sayyadok-Koi, it receives a tributary from the north,
+which gives its course a southern inclination; and from this point it
+proceeds in a south and south-westerly direction, winding along the
+shallow bed which it has scooped in the Aloppo plain, a distance of 60
+miles, past Aleppo to Kinnisrin, near the foot of the Jebel-el-Sis. Here
+its further progress southward is barred, and it is forced to turn to
+the east along the foot of the mountain, which it skirts for eight or
+ten miles, finally entering the small lake or marsh of El Melak, in
+which it loses itself after a source of about 80 miles.
+
+The Orontes, the great river of Assyria, rises in the Buka'a--the deep
+valley known to the ancients as Coele-Syria Proper--springing from
+a number of small brooks, which flow down from the Antilibanus range
+between lat. 34 deg. 5' and lat. 34 deg. 12'. Its most remote source is near
+Yunin, about seven mites N.N.E. of Baalbek. The stream flows at first
+N.W. by W. into the plain, on reaching which it turns at a right-angle
+to the northeast, and skirts the foot of the Antilibanus range as far as
+Lebweh, where, being joined by a larger stream from the southeast,130 it
+takes its direction and flows N.W. and then N. across the plain to the
+foot of Lebanon. Here it receives the waters of a much more abundant
+fountain, which wells out from the roots of that range, and is regarded
+by the Orientals as the true "head of the stream." Thus increased the
+river flows northwards for a short space, after which it turns to the
+northeast, and runs in a deep cleft along the base of Lebanon, pursuing
+this direction for 15 or 16 miles to a point beyond Ribleh, nearly
+in lat. 34 deg. 30'. Here the course of the river again changes, becoming
+slightly west of north to the Lake of Hems (Buheiret-Hems), which is
+nine or ten miles below Ribleh. Issuing from the Lake of Hems about lat.
+34 deg. 43', the Orontes once more flows to the north east, and in five or
+six miles reaches Hems itself, which it leaves on its right bank.
+It then flows for twenty miles nearly due north, after which, on
+approaching Hama (Hamath), it makes a slight bend to the east round
+the foot of Jebel Erbayn, and then entering the rich pasture country of
+El-Ghab' runs north-west and north to the "Iron Bridge" (Jisr Hadid),
+in lat. 36 deg. 11'. Its course thus far has been nearly parallel with
+the coast of the Mediterranean, and has lain between two ranges of
+mountains, the more western of which has shut it out from the sea.
+At Jisr Hadid the western mountains come to an end, and the Orontes,
+sweeping round their base, runs first west and then south-west down the
+broad valley of Antioch, in the midst of the most lovely scenery, to the
+coast, which it reaches a little above the 36th parallel, in long. 35 deg.
+55'. The course of the Orontes, exclusive of lesser windings, is about
+200 miles. It is a considerable stream almost from its source. At Hamah,
+more than a hundred miles from its mouth, it is crossed by a bridge
+of thirteen arches. At Antioch it is fifty yards in width, and runs
+rapidly. The natives now call it the Nahr-el-Asy, or "Rebel River,"
+either from its running in an opposite direction to all other streams of
+the country, or (more probably) from its violence and impetuosity.
+
+There is one tributary of the Orontes which deserves a cursory mention.
+This is the Kara Su, or "Black River," which reaches it from the Aga
+Denghis, or Bahr-el-Abiyad, about five miles below Jisr Hadid and four
+or five above Antioch. This stream brings into the Orontes the greater
+part of the water that is drained from the southern side of Amanus. It
+is formed by a union of two rivers, the upper Kara Su and the Afrin,
+which flow into the Aga Denghis (White Sea), or Lake of Antioch, from
+the north-west, the one entering it at its northern, the other at its
+eastern extremity. Both are considerable streams; and the Kara Su on
+issuing from the lake carries a greater body of water than the Orontes
+itself, and thus adds largely to the volume of that stream in its lower
+course from the point of junction to the Mediterranean.
+
+The Litany, or river of Tyre, rises from a source at no great distance
+from the head springs of the Orontes. The almost imperceptible watershed
+of the Buka'a runs between Yunin and Baalbek, a few miles north of
+the latter; and when it is once passed, the drainage of the water is
+southwards. The highest permanent fountain of the southern stream seems
+to be a small lake near Tel Hushben, which lies about six miles to the
+south-west of the Baalbek ruins. Springing from this source the Litany
+flows along the lower Buka'a in a direction which is generally a little
+west of south, receiving on either side a number of streamlets and
+rills from Libanus and Anti-libanus, and giving out in its turn numerous
+canals for irrigation, which fertilize the thirsty soil. As the stream
+descends with numerous windings, but still with the same general course,
+the valley of the Buka'a contracts more and more, till finally it
+terminates in a gorge, down which thunders the Litany--a gorge a
+thousand feet or more in depth, and so narrow that in one place it
+is actually bridged over by masses of rock which have fallen from the
+jagged sides. Narrower and deeper grows the gorge, and the river chafes
+and foams through it, gradually working itself round to the west, and so
+clearing a way through the very roots of Lebanon to the low coast tract,
+across which it meanders slowly, as if wearied with its long struggle,
+before finally emptying itself into the sea. The course of the Litany
+may be roughly estimated at from 70 to 75 miles.
+
+The Barada, or river of Damascus, rises in the plain of Zebdany--the
+very centre of the Antilibanus. It has its real permanent source in a
+small nameless lake in the lower part of the plain, about lat. 33 deg.
+41'; but in winter it is fed by streams flowing from the valley above,
+especially by one which rises in lat. 33 deg. 46', near the small hamlet
+of Ain Hawar. The course of the Barada from the small lake is at first
+towards the east; but it soon sweeps round and flows-southward for about
+four miles to the lower end of the plain, after which it again turns to
+the east and enters a romantic glen, running between high cliffs, and
+cutting through the main ridge of the Antilibanus between the Zebdany
+plain and Suk, the Abila of the ancients. From Suk the river flows
+through a narrow but lovely valley, in a course which has a general
+direction of south-east, past Ain Fijoh (where its waters are greatly
+increased), through a series of gorges and glens, to the point where the
+roots of the Antilibanus sink down upon the plain, when it bursts forth
+from the mountains and scatters. Channels are drawn from it on either
+side, and its waters are spread far and wide over the Merj, which it
+covers with fine trees and splendid herbage.
+
+One branch passes right through the city, cutting it in half. Others
+irrigate the gardens and orchards both to the north and to the south.
+Beyond the town the tendency to division still continues. The river,
+weakened greatly through the irrigation, separates into three main
+channels, which flow with divergent courses towards the east, and
+terminate in two large swamps or lakes, the Bahret-esh-Shurkiyeh and the
+Bahret-el-Kibli-yeh, at a distance of sixteen or seventeen miles from
+the city. The Barada is a short stream, its entire course from the plain
+of Zebdany not much exceeding forty miles.
+
+The Jordan is commonly regarded as flowing from two sources in the
+Huleh or plain immediately above Lake Merom, one at Banias (the ancient
+Paneas), the other at Tel-el-Kady, which marks the site of Laish or
+Dan. But the true highest present source of the river is the spring near
+Hasbeiya, called Nebaes-Hasbany, or Eas-en-Neba. This spring rises in
+the torrent-course known as the Wady-el-Teim, which descends from the
+north-western flank of Hermon, and runs nearly parallel with the great
+gorge of the Litany, having a direction from north-east to south-west.
+The water wells forth in abundance from the foot of a volcanic
+bluff, called Eas-el-Anjah, lying directly north of Hasbeiya, and is
+immediately used to turn a mill. The course of the streamlet is very
+slightly west of south down the Wady to the Huleh plain, where it
+is joined, and multiplied sevenfold, by the streams from Banais and
+Tel-el-Kady, becoming at once worthy of the name of river. Hence it
+runs almost due south to the Merom lake, which it enters in lat. 33 deg.
+7', through a reedy and marshy tract which it is difficult to penetrate.
+Issuing from Merom in lat. 33 deg. 3', the Jordan flows at first sluggishly
+southward to "Jacob's Bridge," passing which, it proceeds in the same
+direction, with a much swifter current down the depressed and narrow
+cleft between Merom and Tiberias, descending at the rate of fifty
+feet in a mile, and becoming (as has been said) a sort of "continuous
+waterfall." Before reaching Tiberias its course bends slightly to the
+west of south for about two miles, and it pours itself into that "sea"
+in about lat. 32 deg. 53'. Quitting the sea in lat. 32 deg. 42', it finally
+enters the track called the Ghor, the still lower chasm or cleft which
+intervenes between Tiberias and the upper end of the Dead Sea. Here the
+descent of the stream becomes comparatively gentle, not much exceeding
+three feet per mile; for though the direct distance between the two
+lakes is less than seventy miles, and the entire fall above 600 feet,
+which would seem to give a descent of nine or ten feet a mile, yet, as
+the course of the river throughout this part of its career is tortuous
+in the extreme, the fall is really not greater than above indicated.
+Still it is sufficient to produce as many as twenty-seven rapids, or
+at the rate of one to every seven miles. In this part of its course
+the Jordan receives two important tributaries, each of which seems to
+deserve a few words.
+
+The Jarmuk, or Sheriat-el-Mandhur, anciently the Hiero-max, drains the
+water, not only from Gaulonitis or Jaulan, the country immediately east
+and south-east of the sea of Tiberias, but also from almost the whole
+of the Hauran. At its mouth it is 130 feet wide, and in the winter it
+brings down a great body of water into the Jordan. In summer, however,
+it shrinks up into an inconsiderable brook, having no more remote
+sources than the perennial springs at Mazarib, Dilly, and one or
+two other places on the plateau of Jaulan. It runs through a fertile
+country, and has generally a deep course far below the surface of the
+plain; ere falling into the Jordan it makes its way through a wild
+ravine, between rugged cliffs of basalt, which are in places upwards of
+a hundred feet in height.
+
+The Zurka, or Jabbok, is a stream of the same character with the
+Hieromax, but of inferior dimensions and importance. It drains a
+considerable portion of the land of Gilead, but has no very remote
+sources, and in summer only carries water through a few miles of its
+lower course. In winter, on the contrary, it is a roaring stream with a
+strong current, and sometimes cannot be forded. The ravine through which
+it flows is narrow, deep, and in some places wild. Throughout nearly
+its whole course it is fringed by thickets of cane and oleander, while
+above, its banks are clothed with forests of oak.
+
+The Jordan receives the Hieromax about four or five miles below the
+point where it issues from the Sea of Tiberias, and the Jabbok about
+half-way between that lake and the Dead Sea. Augmented by these streams,
+and others of less importance from the mountains on either side, it
+becomes a river of considerable size, being opposite Beth-shan (Beisan)
+140 feet wide, and three feet deep, and averaging, in its lower course,
+a width of ninety with a depth of eight or nine feet. Its entire course,
+from the fountain near Hasbeiya to the Dead Sea, including the passage
+of the two lakes through which it flows, is, if we exclude meanders,
+about 130, if we include them, 360 miles. It is calculated to pour into
+the Dead Sea 6,090,000 tons of water daily.
+
+Besides these rivers the Babylonian territory comprised a number of
+important lakes. Of these some of the more eastern have been described
+in a former volume: as the Bahr-i-Nedjif in Lower Chaldsea, and the Lake
+of Khatouniyeh in the tract between the Sinjar and the Khabour. It was
+chiefly, however, towards the west that sheets of water abounded: the
+principal of these were the Sabakhah, the Bahr-el-Melak, and the Lake
+of Antioch in Upper Syria; the Bahr-el-Kades, or Lake of Hems, in the
+central region; and the Damascus lakes, the Lake of Merom, the Sea of
+Galilee or Tiberias, and the Dead Sea, in the regions lying furthest to
+the south. Of these the greater number were salt, and of little value,
+except as furnishing the salt of commerce; but four--the Lake of
+Antioch, the Bahr-el-Kades, the Lake Merom, and the Sea of Galilee-were
+fresh-water basins lying upon the courses of streams which ran through
+them; and these not only diversified the scenery by their clear bright
+aspect, but were of considerable value to the inhabitants, as furnishing
+them with many excellent sorts of fish.
+
+Of the salt lakes the most eastern was the Sabakhah. This is a basin of
+long and narrow form, lying on and just below the 36th parallel. It
+is situated on the southern route from Balis to Aleppo, and is nearly
+equally distant between the two places. Its length is from twelve to
+thirteen miles; and its width, where it is broadest, is about five
+miles. It receives from the north the waters of the Nahr-el-Dhahab, or
+"Golden River" (which has by some been identified with the Daradax of
+Xenophon), and from the west two or three insignificant streams, which
+empty themselves into its western extremity. The lake produces a large
+quantity of salt, especially after wet seasons, which is collected and
+sold by the inhabitants of the surrounding country.
+
+The Bahr-el-Molak, the lake which absorbs the Koweik, or river of
+Aleppo, is less than twenty miles distant from Lake Sabakhah, which it
+very much resembles in its general character. Its ordinary length is
+about nine miles, and its width three or four; but in winter it is
+greatly swollen by the rains, and at that time it spreads out so widely
+that its circumference sometimes exceeds fifty miles. Much salt is
+drawn from its bed in the dry season, and a large part of Syria is hence
+supplied with the commodity. The lake is covered with small islands, and
+greatly frequented by aquatic birds-geese, ducks, flamingoes, and the
+like.
+
+The lakes in the neighborhood of Damascus are three in number, and are
+all of a very similar type. They are indeterminate in size and shape,
+changing with the wetness or dryness of the season; and it is possible
+that sometimes they may be all united in one. The most northern, which
+is called the Bahret-esh-Shurkiyeh, receives about half the surplus
+water of the Barada, together with some streamlets from the outlying
+ranges of Antilibanus towards the north. The central one, called the
+Bahret-el-Kibliyeh, receives the rest of the Barada water, which enters
+it by three or four branches on its northern and western sides. The most
+southern, known as Bahret-Hijaneh, is the receptacle for the stream
+of the Awaaj, and takes also the water from the northern parts of the
+Ledjah, or region of Argob. The three lakes are in the same line--a line
+which runs from N.N.E. to S.S.W. They are, or at least were recently,
+separated by tracts of dry land from two to four miles broad. Dense
+thickets of tall reeds surround them, and in summer almost cover their
+surface. Like the Bahr-el-Melak, they are a home for water-fowl, which
+flock to them in enormous numbers.
+
+By far the largest and most important of the salt lakes is the Great
+Lake of the South--the Bahr Lut ("Sea of Lot"), or Dead Sea. This sheet
+of water, which has always attracted the special notice and observation
+of travellers, has of late years been scientifically surveyed by
+officers of the American navy; and its shape, its size, and even its
+depth, are thus known with accuracy. The Dead Sea is of an oblong form,
+and would be of a very regular contour, were it not for a remarkable
+projection from its eastern shore near its southern extremity. In this
+place, a long and low peninsula, shaped like a human foot, projects
+into the lake, filling up two thirds of its width, and thus dividing the
+expanse of water into two portions, which are connected by a long and
+somewhat narrow passage. The entire length of the sea, from north to
+south, is 46 miles: its greatest width, between its eastern and its
+western shores, is 101 miles. The whole area is estimated at 250
+geographical square miles. Of this space 174 square miles belong to the
+northern portion of the lake (the true "Sea"), 29 to the narrow channel,
+and 46 to the southern portion, which has been called "the back-water,"
+or "the lagoon."
+
+The most remarkable difference between the two portions of the lake is
+the contrast they present as to depth. While the depth of the northern
+portion is from 600 feet, at a short distance from the mouth of the
+Jordan, to 800, 1000, 1200, and even 1300 feet, further down, the depth
+of the lagoon is nowhere more than 12 or 13 feet; and in places it is
+so shallow that it has been found possible, in some seasons, to ford the
+whole way across from one side to the other. The peculiarities of the
+Dead Sea, as compared with other lakes, are its depression below the
+sea-level, its buoyancy, and its extreme saltness. The degree of the
+depression is not yet certainly known; but there is reason to believe
+that it is at least as much at 1300 feet, whereas no other lake is known
+to be depressed more than 570 feet. The buoyancy and the saltness are
+not so wholly unparalleled. The waters of Lake Urumiyeh are probably
+as salt and as buoyant; those of Lake Elton in the steppe east of the
+Wolga, and of certain other Russian lakes, appear to be even salter. But
+with these few exceptions (if they are exceptions), the Dead Sea water
+must be pronounced to be the heaviest and saltest water known to us.
+More than one fourth of its weight is solid matter held in solution. Of
+this solid matter nearly one third is common salt, which is more than
+twice as much as is contained in the waters of the ocean.
+
+Of the fresh-water lakes the largest and most important is the Sea of
+Tiberias. This sheet of water is of an oval shape, with an axis, like
+that of the Dead Sea, very nearly due north and south. Its greatest
+length is about thirteen and its greatest width about six miles. Its
+extreme depth, so far as has been ascertained, is 27 fathoms, or 165
+feet. The Jordan flows into its upper end turbid and muddy, and issues
+forth at its southern extremity clear and pellucid. It receives also the
+waters of a considerable number of small streams and springs, some of
+which are warm and brackish; yet its own water is always sweet, cool,
+and transparent, and, having everywhere a shelving pebbly beach, has
+a bright sparkling appearance. The banks are lofty, and in general
+destitute of verdure. What exactly is the amount of depression below the
+level of the Mediterranean remains still, to some extent, uncertain; but
+it is probably not much less than 700 feet. Now, as formerly, the lake
+produces an abundance of fish, which are pronounced, by those who have
+partaken of them, to be "delicious."
+
+Nine miles above the Sea of Tiberias, on the course of the same stream,
+is the far smaller basin known now as the Bahr-el Huleh, and anciently
+(perhaps) as Merom. This is a mountain tarn, varying in size as the
+season is wet or dry, but never apparently more than about seven miles
+long, by five or six broad. It is situated at the lower extremity of
+the plain called Huleh, and is almost entirely surrounded by flat marshy
+ground, thickly set with reeds and canes, which make the lake itself
+almost unapproachable. The depth of the Huleh is not known. It is a
+favorite resort of aquatic birds, and is said to contain an abundant
+supply of fish.
+
+The Bahr-el-Kades, or Lake of Hems, lies on the course of the Orontes,
+about 139 miles N.N.E. of Merom, and nearly the same distance south of
+the Lake of Antioch. It is a small sheet of water, not more than six
+or eight miles long, and only two or three wide, running in the same
+direction with the course of the river, which here turns from north to
+north-east. According to Abulfeda and some other writers, it is mainly,
+if not wholly, artificial, owing its origin to a dam or embankment
+across the stream, which is from four to five hundred yards in
+length, and about twelve or fourteen feet high. In Abulfeda's time the
+construction of the embankment was ascribed to Alexander the Great, and
+the lake consequently was not regarded as having had any existence in
+Babylonian times; but traditions of this kind are little to be trusted,
+and it is quite possible that the work above mentioned, constructed
+apparently with a view to irrigation, may really belong to a very much
+earlier age.
+
+Finally, in Northern Syria, 115 miles north of the Bahr-el-Kades, and
+about 60 miles N.W.W. of the Bahr-el-Melak, is the Bahr-el-Abyad (White
+Lake), or Sea of Antioch. [PLATE. VIII., Fig. 1.] This sheet of water
+is a parallelogram, the angles of which face the cardinal points: in its
+greater diameter it extends somewhat more than ten miles, while it
+is about seven miles across. Its depth on the western side, where it
+approaches the mountains, is six or eight feet; but elsewhere it is
+generally more shallow, not exceeding three or four feet. It lies in a
+marshy plain called El-Umk, and is thickly fringed with reeds round the
+whole of its circumference. From the silence of antiquity, some
+writers have imagined that it did not exist in ancient times; but the
+observations of scientific travellers are opposed to this theory. The
+lake abounds with fish of several kinds, and the fishery attracts and
+employs a considerable number of the natives who dwell near it.
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VIII.]
+
+Besides these lakes, there were contained within the limits of
+the Empire a number of petty tarns, which do not merit particular
+description. Such were the Bahr-el-Taka, and other small lakes on the
+right bank of the middle Orontes, the Birket-el-Limum in the
+Lebanon, and the Birket-er-Eam on the southern flank of Hermon. It is
+unnecessary, however, to pursue this subject any further. But a few
+words must be added on the chief cities of the Empire, before this
+chapter is brought to a conclusion.
+
+The cities of the Empire may be divided into those of the dominant
+country and those of the provinces. Those of the dominant country
+were, for the most part, identical with the towns already described
+as belonging to the ancient Chaldaea, Besides Babylon itself, there
+flourished in the Babylonian period the cities of Borsippa, Duraba,
+Sippara or Sepharvaim, Opis, Psittace, Cutha, Orchoe or Erech, and
+Diridotis or Teredon. The sites of most of those have been described in
+the first volume; but it remains to state briefly the positions of some
+few which were either new creations or comparatively undistinguished in
+the earlier times.
+
+Opis, a town of sufficient magnitude to attract the attention of
+Herodotus, was situated on the left or east bank of the Tigris, near the
+point where the Diyaleh or Gyndes joined the main river. Its position
+was south of the Gyndes embouchure, and it might be reckoned as lying
+upon either river. The true name of the place--that which it bears in
+the cuneiform inscriptions--was Hupiya; and its site is probably marked
+by the ruins at Khafaji, near Baghdad, which place is thought to retain,
+in a corrupted form, the original appellation. Psittace or Sitace,
+the town which gave name to the province of Sittacene, was in the near
+neighborhood of Opis, lying on the same side of the Tigris, but lower
+down, at least as low as the modern fort of the Zobeid chief. Its exact
+site has not been as yet discovered. Teredon, or Diriaotis, appears to
+have been first founded by Nebuchadnezzar. It lay on the coast of the
+Persian Gulf, a little west of the mouth of the Euphrates, and protected
+by a quay, or a breakwater, from the high tides that rolled in from the
+Indian Ocean. There is great difficulty in identifying its site, owing
+to the extreme uncertainty as to the exact position of the coast-line,
+and the course of the river, in the time of Nebuchadnezzar. Probably it
+should be sought about Zobair, or a little further inland.. The chief
+provincial cities were Susa and Badaca in Susiana; Anat, Sirki, and
+Carchemish, on the Middle Euphrates; Sidikan on the Khabour; Harran on
+the Bilik; Hamath, Damascus, and Jerusalem, in Inner Syria; Tyre,
+Sidon, Ashdod, Ascalon, and Gaza, upon the coast. Of these, Susa was
+undoubtedly the most important; indeed, it deserves to be regarded
+as the second city of the Empire. Here, between the two arms of the
+Choaspes, on a noble and well-watered plain, backed at the distance
+of twenty-five miles by a lofty mountain range, the fresh breezes from
+which tempered the summer heats, was the ancient palace of the Kissian
+kings, proudly placed upon a lofty platform or mound, and commanding
+a wide prospect of the rich pastures at its base, which extended
+northwards to the roots of the hills, and in every other direction as
+far as the eye could reach. Clustered at the foot of the palace
+mound, more especially on its eastern side, lay the ancient town, the
+foundation of the traditional Memnon who led an army to the defence
+of Troy. The pure and sparkling water of the Choaspes--a drink fit for
+kings--flowed near, while around grew palms, konars, and lemon-trees,
+the plain beyond waving with green grass and golden corn. It may be
+suspected that the Babylonian kings, who certainly maintained a palace
+at this place, and sent high officers of their court to "do their
+business" there, made it their occasional residence, exchanging,
+in summer and early autumn, the heats and swamps of Babylon for the
+comparatively dry and cool region at the base of the Lurish hills. But,
+however, this may have been, at any rate Susa, long the capital of a
+kingdom little inferior to Babylon itself, must have been the first of
+the provincial cities, surpassing all the rest at once in size and in
+magnificence. Among the other cities, Carchemish on the Upper Euphrates,
+Tyre upon the Syrian coast, and Ashdod on the borders of Egypt, held
+the highest place. Carchemish, which has been wrongly identified with
+Circesium, lay certainly high up the river, and most likely occupied a
+site some distance to the north of Balis, which is in lat. 36 deg. nearly.
+It was the key of Syria on the east, commanding the ordinary passage
+of the Euphrates, and being the only great city in this quarter. Tyre,
+which had by this time surpassed its rival, Sidon, was the chief of all
+the maritime towns; and its possession gave the mastery of the Eastern
+Mediterranean to the power which could acquire and maintain it. Ashdod
+was the key of Syria upon the south, being a place of great strength,
+and commanding the coast route between Palestine and Egypt, which was
+usually pursued by armies. It is scarcely too much to say that the
+possession of Ashdod, Tyre, and Carchemish, involved the lordship of
+Syria, which could not be permanently retained except by the occupation
+of those cities.
+
+The countries by which the Babylonian Empire was bounded were Persia on
+the east, Media and her dependencies on the north, Arabia on the south,
+and Egypt at the extreme southwest. Directly to the west she had no
+neighbor, her territory being on that side washed by the Mediterranean.
+
+Of Persia, which must be described at length in the next volume, since
+it was the seat of Empire during the Fifth Monarchy, no more need
+be said here than that it was for the most part a rugged and sterile
+country, apt to produce a brave and hardy race, but incapable of
+sustaining a large population. A strong barrier separated it from the
+great Mesopotamian lowland; and the Babylonians, by occupying a few
+easily defensible passes, could readily prevent a Persian army from
+debouching on their fertile plains. On the other hand, the natural
+strength of the region is so great that in the hands of brave and active
+men its defence is easy; and the Babylonians were not likely, if an
+aggressive spirit led to their pressing eastward, to make any serious
+impression in this quarter, or ever greatly to advance their frontier.
+
+To Media, the power which bordered her upon the north, Babylonia, on the
+contrary, lay wholly open. The Medes, possessing Assyria and Armenia,
+with the Upper Tigris valley, and probably the Mons Masius, could at any
+time, with the greatest ease, have marched armies into the low country,
+and resumed the contest in which Assyria was engaged for so many hundred
+years with the great people of the south. On this side nature had set no
+obstacles; and, if danger threatened, resistance had to be made by means
+of those artificial works which are specially suited for flat countries.
+Long lines of wall, broad dykes, huge reservoirs, by means of which
+large tracts may be laid under water, form the natural resort in such
+a case; and to such defences as these alone, in addition to her armies,
+could Babylonia look in case of a quarrel with the Medes. On this side,
+however, she for many years felt no fear. Political arrangements and
+family ties connected her with the Median reigning house, and she looked
+to her northern neighbor as an ally upon whom she might depend for aid,
+rather than as a rival whose ambitious designs were to be watched and
+baffled.
+
+Babylonia lay open also on the side of Arabia. Here, however, the nature
+of the country is such that population must be always sparse; and the
+habits of the people are opposed to that political union which can alone
+make a race really formidable to others. Once only in their history,
+under the excitement of a religious frenzy, have the Arabs issued forth
+from the great peninsula on an errand of conquest. In general they are
+content to vex and harass without seriously alarming their neighbors.
+The vast space and arid character of the peninsula are adverse to
+the collection and the movement of armies; the love of independence
+cherished by the several tribes indisposes them to union; the affection
+for the nomadic life, which is strongly felt, disinclines them to
+the occupation of conquests. Arabia, as a a conterminous power, is
+troublesome, but rarely dangerous: one section of the nation may almost
+always be played off against another: if "their hand is against every
+man," "every man's hand" is also "against them;" blood-feuds divide and
+decimate their tribes, which are ever turning their swords against each
+other; their neighbors generally wish them ill, and will fall upon them,
+if they can take them at a disadvantage; it is only under very peculiar
+circumstances, such as can very rarely exist, that they are likely even
+to attempt anything more serious than a plundering inroad. Babylonia
+consequently, though open to attack on the side of the south as well
+as on that of the north, had little to fear from either quarter. The
+friendliness of her northern neighbor, and the practical weakness of her
+southern one, were equal securities against aggression; and thus on her
+two largest and most exposed frontiers the Empire dreaded no attack.
+
+But it was otherwise in the far south-west. Here the Empire bordered
+upon Egypt, a rich and populous country, which at all times covets
+Syria, and is often strong enough to seize and hold it in possession.
+The natural frontier is moreover weak, no other barrier separating
+between Africa and Asia than a narrow desert, which has never yet proved
+a serious obstacle to an army. From the side of Egypt, if from no other
+quarter, Babylonia might expect to have trouble. Here she inherited from
+her predecessor, Assyria, an old hereditary feud, which might at any
+time break out into active hostility. Here was an ancient, powerful, and
+well-organized kingdom upon her borders, with claims upon that
+portion of her territory which it was most difficult for her to defend
+effectively. By seas and by land equally the strip of Syrian coast lay
+open to the arms of Egypt, who was free to choose her time, and pour
+her hosts into the country when the attention of Babylon was directed
+to some other quarter. The physical and political circumstances alike
+pointed to hostile transactions between Babylon and her south-western
+neighbor. Whether destruction would come from this quarter, or from some
+other, it would have been impossible to predict. Perhaps, on the
+whole, it may be said that Babylon might have been expected to contend
+successfully with Egypt--that she had little to fear from Arabia--that
+against Persia Proper it might have been anticipated that she would
+be able to defend herself--but that she lay at the mercy of Media. The
+Babylonian Empire was in truth an empire upon sufferance. From the time
+of its establishment with the consent of the Medes, the Modes might
+at any time have destroyed it. The dynastic tie alone prevented this
+result. When that tie was snapped, and when moreover, by the victories
+of Cyrus, Persian enterprise succeeded to the direction of Median
+power, the fate of Babylon was sealed. It was impossible for the
+long straggling Empire of the south, lying chiefly in low, flat, open
+regions, to resist for any considerable time the great kingdom of the
+north, of the high plateau, and of the mountain-chains.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. CLIMATE AND PRODUCTIONS.
+
+
+The Babylonian Empire, lying as it did between the thirtieth and
+thirty-seventh parallels of north latitude, and consisting mostly of
+comparatively low countries, enjoyed a climate which was, upon the
+whole, considerably warmer than that of Media, and less subject to
+extreme variations. In its more southern parts-Susiana, Chaldaea (or
+Babylonia Proper), Philistia, and Edom---the intensity of the summer
+heat must have been great; but the winters were mild and of short
+duration. In the middle regions of Central Mesopotamia, the Euphrates
+valley, the Palmyrene, Coele-Syria, Judaea, and Phoenicia, while the
+winters were somewhat colder and longer, the summer warmth was more
+tolerable. Towards the north, along the flanks of Masius, Taurus, and
+Amanus, a climate more like that of eastern Media prevailed, the summers
+being little less hot than those of the middle region, while the winters
+were of considerable severity. A variety of climate thus existed, but a
+variety within somewhat narrow limits. The region was altogether hotter
+and drier than is usual in the same latitude. The close proximity of the
+great Arabian desert, the small size of the adjoining seas, the want of
+mountains within the region having any great elevation, and the general
+absence of timber, combined to produce an amount of heat and dryness
+scarcely known elsewhere outside the tropics.
+
+Detailed accounts of the temperature, and of the climate generally, in
+the most important provinces of the Empire, Babylonia and Mesopotamia
+Proper, have been already given, and on these points the reader is
+referred to the first volume. With regard to the remaining provinces, it
+may be noticed, in the first place, that the climate of Susiana differs
+but very slightly from that of Babylonia, the region to which it is
+adjacent. The heat in summer is excessive, the thermometer, even in the
+hill country, at an elevation of 5000 feet, standing often at 107 deg.
+Fahr. in the shade. The natives construct for themselves serdaubs,
+or subterranean apartments, in which they live during the day, thus
+somewhat reducing the temperature, but probably never bringing it much
+below 100 degrees. They sleep at night in the open air on the flat roofs
+of their houses. So far as there is any difference of climate at this
+season between Susiana and Babylonia, it is in favor of the former. The
+heat, though scorching, is rarely oppressive; and not unfrequently a
+cool, invigorating breeze sets in from the mountains, which refreshes
+both mind and body. The winters are exceedingly mild, snow being unknown
+on the plains, and rare on the mountains, except at a considerable
+elevation. At this time, however--from December to the end of
+March--rain falls in tropical abundance; and occasionally there are
+violent hail-storms, which inflict serious injury on the crops. The
+spring-time in Susiana is delightful. Soft airs fan the cheek, laden
+with the scent of flowers; a carpet of verdure is spread over the
+plains; the sky is cloudless, or overspread with a thin gauzy veil; the
+heat of the sun is not too great; the rivers run with full banks and
+fill the numerous canals; the crops advance rapidly towards perfection;
+and on every side a rich luxuriant growth cheers the eye of the
+traveller.
+
+On the opposite side of the Empire, in Syria and Palestine, a moister,
+and on the whole a cooler climate prevails. In Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon
+there is a severe winter, which lasts from October to April; much snow
+falls, and the thermometer often marks twenty or thirty degrees of
+frost. On the flanks of the mountain ranges, and in the highlands of
+Upper and Coele-Syria, of Damascus, Samaria, and Judsea, the cold is
+considerably less; but there are intervals of frost; snow falls, though
+it does not often remain long upon the ground; and prolonged chilling
+rains make the winter and early spring unpleasant. In the low regions,
+on the other hand, in the _Shephelah_, the plain of Sharon, the
+Phoenician coast tract, the lower valley of the Orontes, and again in
+the plain of Esdraelon and the remarkable depression from the Merom lake
+to the Dead Sea, the winters are exceedingly mild; frost and snow are
+unknown; the lowest temperature is produced by cold rains and fogs,
+which do not bring the thermometer much below 40 deg.. During the summer
+these low regions, especially the Jordan valley or Ghor, are excessively
+hot, the heat being ordinarily of that moist kind which is intolerably
+oppressive. The upland plains and mountain flanks experience also a
+high temperature, but there the heat is of a drier character, and is
+not greatly complained of; the nights even in summer are cold, the dews
+being often heavy; cool winds blow occasionally, and though the sky is
+for months without a cloud, the prevailing heat produces no injurious
+effects on those who are exposed to it. In Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon the
+heat is of course still less; refreshing breezes blow almost constantly;
+and the numerous streams and woods give a sense of coolness beyond the
+markings of the thermometer.
+
+There is one evil, however, to which almost the whole Empire must have
+been subject. Alike in the east and in the west, in Syria and Palestine,
+no less than in Babylonia Proper and Susiana, there are times when
+a fierce and scorching wind prevails for days together--a wind whose
+breath withers the herbage and is unspeakably depressing to man. Called
+in the east the Sherghis, and in the west the Khamsin, this fiery
+sirocco comes laden with fine particles of heated sand, which at once
+raise the temperature and render the air unwholesome to breathe. In
+Syria these winds occur commonly in the spring, from February to April;
+but in Susiana and Babylonia the time for them is the height of summer.
+They blow from various quarters, according to the position, with respect
+to Arabia, occupied by the different provinces. In Palestine the worst
+are from the east, the direction in which the desert is nearest; in
+Lower Babylonia they are from the south; in Susiana from the west or the
+north-west. During their continuance the air is darkened, a lurid glow
+is cast over the earth, the animal world pines and droops, vegetation
+languishes, and, if the traveller cannot obtain shelter, and the wind
+continues, he may sink and die under its deleterious influence.
+
+The climate of the entire tract included within the limits of the Empire
+was probably much the same in ancient times as in our own days. In the
+low alluvial plains indeed near the Persian Gulf it is probable that
+vegetation was anciently more abundant, the date-palm being cultivated
+much more extensively then than at present; and so far it might appear
+reasonable to conclude that the climate of that region must have been
+moister and cooler than it now is. But if we may judge by Strabo's
+account of Susiana, where the climatic conditions were nearly the same
+as in Babylonia, no important change can have taken place, for Strabo
+not only calls the climate of Susiana "fiery and scorching," but says
+that in Susa, during the height of summer, if a lizard or a snake
+tried to cross the street about noon-day, he was baked to death before
+accomplishing half the distance. Similarly on the west, though there is
+reason to believe that Palestine is now much more denuded of timber than
+it was formerly, and its climate should therefore be both warmer and
+drier, yet it has been argued with great force from the identity of the
+modern with the ancient vegetation, that in reality there can have
+been no considerable change. If then there has been such permanency of
+climate in the two regions where the greatest alteration seems to have
+taken place in the circumstances whereby climate is usually affected,
+it can scarcely be thought that elsewhere any serious change has been
+brought about.
+
+The chief vegetable productions of Babylonia Proper in ancient times
+are thus enumerated by Berosus. "The land of the Babylonians," he
+says, "produces wheat as an indigenous plant," and has also barley,
+and lentils, and vetches, and sesame; the banks of the streams and the
+marshes supply edible roots, called gongoe, which have the taste
+of barley-cakes. Palms, too, grow in the country, and apples, and
+fruit-trees of various kinds. Wheat, it will be observed, and barley are
+placed first, since it was especially as a grain country that Babylonia
+was celebrated. The testimonies of Herodotus, Theophrastus, Strabo, and
+Pliny as to the enormous returns which the Babylonian farmers obtained
+from their corn lands have been already cited. No such fertility is
+known anywhere in modern times; and, unless the accounts are grossly
+exaggerated, we must ascribe it, in part, to the extraordinary vigor of
+a virgin soil, a deep and rich alluvium; in part, perhaps, to a peculiar
+adaptation of the soil to the wheat plant, which the providence of God
+made to grow spontaneously in this region, and nowhere else, so far as
+we know, on the whole face of the earth.
+
+Besides wheat, it appears that barley, millet, and lentils were
+cultivated for food, while vetches were grown for beasts, and sesame
+for the sake of the oil which can be expressed from its seed. All grew
+luxuriantly, and the returns of the barley in particular are stated at a
+fabulous amount. But the production of first necessity in Babylonia
+was the date-palm, which flourished in great abundance throughout the
+region, and probably furnished the chief food of the greater portion
+of the inhabitants. The various uses to which it was applied have been
+stated in the first volume, where a representation of its mode of growth
+has been also given.
+
+In the adjoining country of Susiana, or at any rate in the alluvial
+portion of it, the principal products of the earth seem to have been
+nearly the same as in Babylonia, while the fecundity of the soil was but
+little less. Wheat and barley returned to the sower a hundred or even
+two hundred fold. The date-palm grew plentifully, more especially in the
+vicinity of the towns. Other trees also were common, as probably konars,
+acacias, and poplars, which are still found scattered in tolerable
+abundance over the plain country. The neighboring mountains could
+furnish good timber of various kinds; but it appears that the palm was
+the tree chiefly used for building. If we may judge the past by
+the present, we may further suppose that Susiana produced fruits in
+abundance; for modern travellers tell us that there is not a fruit known
+in Persia which does not thrive in the province of Khuzistan.
+
+Along the Euphrates valley to a considerable distance--at least as
+far as Anah (or Hena)--the character of the country resembles that of
+Babylonia and Susiana, and the products cannot have been very different.
+About Anah the date-palm begins to fail, and the olive first makes its
+appearance. Further up a chief fruit is the mulberry. Still higher, in
+northern Mesopotamia, the mulberry is comparatively rare, but its
+place is supplied by the walnut, the vine, and the pistachio-nut.
+This district produces also good crops of grain, and grows oranges,
+pomegranates, and the commoner kinds of fruit abundantly.
+
+Across the Euphrates, in Northern Syria, the country is less suited for
+grain crops; but trees and shrubs of all kinds grow luxuriantly, the
+pasture is excellent, and much of the land is well adapted for the
+growth of cotton. The Assyrian kings cut timber frequently in this
+tract; and here are found at the present day enormous planes, thick
+forests of oak, pine, and ilex, walnuts, willows, poplars, ash-trees,
+birches, larches, and the carob or locust tree. Among wild shrubs are
+the oleander with its ruddy blossoms, the myrtle, the bay, the arbutus,
+the clematis, the juniper, and the honeysuckle; among cultivated
+fruit-trees, the orange, the pomegranate, the pistachio-nut, the
+vine, the mulberry, and the olive. The adis, an excellent pea, and the
+Lycoperdon, or wild potato, grow in the neighborhood of Aleppo. The
+castor-oil plant is cultivated in the plain of Edlib. Melons, cucumbers,
+and most of the ordinary vegetables are produced in abundance and of
+good quality everywhere.
+
+In Southern Syria and Palestine most of the same forms of vegetation
+occur, with several others of quite a new character. These are due
+either to the change of latitude, or to the tropical heat of the
+Jordan and Dead Sea valley, or finally to the high elevation of Hermon,
+Lebanon, and Anti-Lebanon. The date-palm fringes the Syrian shore as
+high as Beyrut, and formerly flourished in the Jordan valley, where,
+however, it is not now seen, except in a few dwarfed specimens near the
+Tiberias lake. The banana accompanies the date along the coast, and
+even grows as far north as Tripoli. The prickly pear, introduced from
+America, has completely neutralized itself, and is in general request
+for hedging. The fig mulberry (or true sycamore), another southern form,
+is also common, and grows to a considerable size. Other denizens of
+warm climes, unknown in Northern Syria, are the jujube, the tamarisk,
+theelasagnus or wild olive, the gum-styrax plant (_Styrax officinalis_),
+the egg-plant, the Egyptian papyrus, the sugar-cane, the scarlet
+misletoe, the solanum that produces the "Dead Sea apple" (_Solanum
+Sodomceum_), the yellow-flowered acacia, and the liquorice plant. Among
+the forms due to high elevation are the famous Lebanon cedar, several
+oaks and juniper, the maple, berberry, jessamine, ivy, butcher's broom,
+a rhododendron, and the gum-tragacanth plant. The fruits additional to
+those of the north are dates, lemons, almonds, shaddocks, and limes.
+
+The chief mineral products of the Empire seem to have been bitumen, with
+its concomitants, naphtha and petroleum, salt, sulphur, nitre, copper,
+iron, perhaps silver, and several sorts of precious stones. Bitumen was
+furnished in great abundance by the springs at Hit or Is, which were
+celebrated in the days of Herodotus; it was also procured from Ardericca
+(Kir-Ab), and probably from Earn Ormuz, in Susiana, and likewise from
+the Dead Sea. Salt was obtainable from the various lakes which had no
+outlet, as especially from the Sabakhab, the Bahr-el-Melak, the Dead
+Sea, and a small lake near Tadmor or Palmyra. The Dead Sea gave also
+most probably both sulphur and nitre, but the latter only in small
+quantities. Copper and iron seem to have been yielded by the hills of
+Palestine. Silver was perhaps a product of the Anti-Lebanon.
+
+It may be doubted whether any gems were really found in Babylonia
+itself, which, being purely alluvial, possesses no stone of any kind.
+Most likely the sorts known as Babylonian came from the neighboring
+Susiana, whose unexplored mountains may possess many rich treasures.
+According to Dionysius, the bed of the Choaspes produced numerous
+agates, and it may well be that from the same quarter came that "beryl
+more precious than gold," and those "highly reputed sard," which Babylon
+seems to have exported to other countries. The western provinces may,
+however, very probably have furnished the gems which are ascribed
+to them, as amethysts, which are said to have been found in the
+neighborhood of Petra, alabaster, which came from near Damascus, and the
+cyanus, a kind of lapis-lazuli, which was a production of Phoenicia. No
+doubt the Babylonian love of gems caused the provinces to be carefully
+searched for stones; and it is not improbable that they yielded besides
+the varieties already named, and the other unknown kinds mentioned by
+Pliny, many, if not most, of the materials which we find to have
+been used for seals by the ancient people. These are, cornelian,
+rock-crystal, chalcedony, onyx, jasper, quartz, serpentine, sienite,
+haematite, green felspar, pyrites, loadstone, and amazon-stone.
+
+Stone for building was absent from Babylonia Proper and the alluvial
+tracts of Susiana, but in the other provinces it abounded. The Euphrates
+valley could furnish stone at almost any point above Hit; the mountain
+regions of Susiana could supply it in whatever quantity might be
+required; and in the western provinces it was only too plentiful. Near
+to Babylonia the most common kind was limestone; but about Had-disah on
+the Euphrates there was also a gritty, silicious rock alternating with
+iron-stone, and in the Arabian Desert were sandstone and granite. Such
+stone as was used in Babylon itself, and in the other cities of the
+low country, probably either came down the Euphrates, or was brought
+by canals from the adjacent part of Arabia. The quantity, however, thus
+consumed was small, the Babylonians being content for most uses with
+the brick, of which their own territory gave them a supply practically
+inexhaustible.
+
+The principal wild animals known to have inhabited the Empire in ancient
+times are the following: the lion, the panther or large leopard, the
+hunting leopard, the bear, the hyena, the wild ox, the buffalo (?), the
+wild ass, the stag, the antelope, the ibex or wild goat, the wild sheep,
+the wild boar, the wolf, the jackal, the fox, the hare, and the rabbit.
+Of these, the lion, leopard, bear, stag, wolf, jackal, and fox seem to
+have been very widely diffused, while the remainder were rarer, and,
+generally speaking, confined to certain localities. The wild ass was
+met with only in the dry parts of Mesopotamia, and perhaps of Syria, the
+buffalo and wild boar only in moist regions, along the banks of rivers
+or among marshes. The wild ox was altogether scarce; the wild sheep, the
+rabbit, and the hare, were probably not common.
+
+To this list may be added as present denizens of the region, and
+therefore probably belonging to it in ancient times, the lynx, the
+wildcat, the ratel, the sable, the genet, the badger, the otter, the
+beaver, the polecat, the jerboa, the rat, the mouse, the marmot,
+the porcupine, the squirrel, and perhaps the alligator. Of these the
+commonest at the present day are porcupines, badgers, otters, rats,
+mice, and jerboas. The ratel, sable, and genet belong only to the north;
+the beaver is found nowhere but in the Khabour and middle Euphrates;
+the alligator, if a denizen of the region at all exists only in the
+Euphrates.
+
+The chief birds of the region are eagles, vultures, falcons, owls,
+hawks, many kinds of crows, magpies, jackdaws, thrushes, blackbirds,
+nightingales, larks, sparrows, goldfinches, swallows, doves of fourteen
+kinds, francolins, rock partridges, gray partridges, black partridges,
+quails, pheasants, capercailzies, bustards, flamingoes, pelicans,
+cormorants, storks, herons, cranes, wild-geese, ducks, teal,
+kingfishers, snipes, woodcocks, the sand-grouse, the hoopoe, the green
+parrot, the becafico, the locust-bird, the humming-bird (?), and
+the bee-eater. The eagle, pheasant, capercailzie, quail, parrot,
+locust-bird, becafico, and humming-bird are rare; the remainder are all
+tolerably common. Besides these, we know that in ancient times ostriches
+wore found within the limits of the Empire, though now they have
+retreated further south into the Great Desert of Arabia. Perhaps
+bitterns may also formerly have frequented some of the countries
+belonging to it, though they are not mentioned among the birds of the
+region by modern writers.
+
+There is a bird of the heron species, or rather of a species between
+the heron and the stork, which seems to deserve a few words of special
+description. It is found chiefly in Northern Syria, in the plain of
+Aleppo and the districts watered by the Koweik and Sajur rivers. The
+Arabs call it Tair-el-Raouf, or "the magnificent." This bird is of a
+grayish-white, the breast white, the joints of the wings tipped with
+scarlet, and the under part of the beak scarlet, the upper part being of
+a blackish-gray. The beak is nearly five inches long, and two thirds of
+an inch thick. The circumference of the eye is red; the feet are of a
+deep yellow; and the bird in its general form strongly resembles the
+stork; but its color is darker. It is four feet high, and covers a
+breadth of nine feet when the wings are spread. The birds of this
+species are wont to collect in large flocks on the North Syrian rivers,
+and to arrange themselves in several rows across the streams where they
+are shallowest. Here they squat side by side, as close to one another as
+possible, and spread out their tails against the current, thus forming a
+temporary dam. The water drains off below them, and when it has reached
+its lowest point, at a signal from one of their number who from the bank
+watches the proceedings, they rise and swoop upon the fish, frogs, etc.,
+which the lowering of the water has exposed to view.
+
+Fish are abundant in the Chaldaean marshes, and in almost all the
+fresh-water lakes and rivers. [PLATE. VIII., Fig.] The Tigris and
+Euphrates yield chiefly barbel and carp; but the former stream has also
+eels, trout, chub, shad-fish, siluruses, and many kinds which have
+no English names. The Koweik contains the Aleppo eel (_Ophidium
+masbacambahis_), a very rare variety; and in other streams of
+Northern Syria are found lampreys, bream, dace, and the black-fish
+(_Macroptero-notus niger_), besides carp, trout, chub, and barbel. Chub,
+bream, and the silurus are taken in the Sea of Galilee. The black-fish
+is extremely abundant in the Bahr-el-Taka and the Lake of Antioch.
+
+Among reptiles may be noticed, besides snakes, lizards, and frogs, which
+are numerous, the following less common species--iguanoes, tortoises of
+two kinds, chameleons, and monitors. Bats also were common in Babylonia
+Proper, where they grew to a great size. Of insects the most remarkable
+are scorpions, tarantulas, and locusts. These last come suddenly in
+countless myriads with the wind, and, settling on the crops, rapidly
+destroy all the hopes of the husbandman, after which they strip
+the shrubs and trees of their leaves, reducing rich districts in an
+incredibly short space of time to the condition of howling wildernesses.
+[PLATE. VIII., Fig. 3.] If it were not for the locust-bird, which is
+constantly keeping down their numbers, these destructive insects would
+probably increase so as to ruin utterly the various regions exposed to
+their ravages.
+
+The domestic animals employed in the countries which composed the Empire
+were, camels, horses, mules, asses, buffaloes, cows and oxen, goats,
+sheep, and dogs. Mules as well as horses seem to have been anciently
+used in war by the people of the more southern regions-by the Susianians
+at any rate, if not also by the Babylonians. Sometimes they were ridden;
+sometimes they were employed to draw carts or chariots. They were
+spirited and active animals, evidently of a fine breed, such as that for
+which Khuzistan is famous at the present day. [PLATE. VIII., Fig. 4.]
+The asses from which these mules were produced must also have been of
+superior quality, like the breed for which Baghdad is even now famous,
+The Babylonian horses are not likely to have been nearly so good; for
+this animal does not flourish in a climate which is at once moist and
+hot. Still, at any rate under the Persians, Babylonia seems to have been
+a great breeding-place for horses, since the stud of a single satrap
+consisted of 800 stallions and 16,000 mares. If we may judge of the
+character of Babylonian from that of Susianian steeds, we may consider
+the breed to have, been strong and large limbed, but not very handsome,
+the head being too large and the legs too short for beauty. [PLATE IX.,
+Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE IX.]
+
+
+The Babylonians were also from very early times famous for their
+breed of dogs. The tablet engraved in a former volume, which gives a
+representation of a Babylonian hound, is probably of a high antiquity,
+not later than the period or the Empire. Dogs are also not unfrequently
+represented on ancient Babylonian stones and cylinders. It would seem
+that, as in Assyria, there were two principal breeds, one somewhat
+clumsy and heavy, of a character not unlike that of our mastiff, the
+other of a much lighter make, nearly resembling our greyhound. The
+former kind is probably the breed known as Indian, which was kept up
+by continual importations from the country whence it was originally
+derived.[PLATE. IX., Fig. 2.]
+
+We have no evidence that camels were employed in the time of the
+Empire, either by the Babylonians themselves or by their neighbors, the
+Susianians; but in Upper Mesopotamia, in Syria, and in Palestine
+they had been in use from a very early date. The Amalekitos and the
+Midianites found them serviceable in war; and the latter people employed
+them also as beasts of burden in their caravan trade. The Syrians of
+Upper Mesopotamia rode upon them in their journeys. It appears that
+they were also sometimes yoked to chariots, though from their size and
+clumsiness they would be but ill fitted for beasts of draught.
+
+Buffaloes were, it is probable, domesticated by the Babylonians at an
+early date. The animal seems to have been indigenous in the country, and
+it is far better suited for the marshy regions of Lower Babylonia and
+Susiana than cattle of the ordinary kind. It is perhaps a buffalo which
+is represented on an ancient tablet already referred to, where a lion
+is disturbed in the middle of his feast off a prostrate animal by a man
+armed with a hatchet. Cows and oxen, however, of the common kind are
+occasionally represented on the cylinders [PLATE IX., Fig. 4.], where
+they seem sometimes to represent animals about to be offered to the
+gods. Goats also appear frequently in this capacity; and they were
+probably more common than sheep, at any rate in the more southern
+districts. Of Babylonian sheep we have no representations at all on the
+monuments; but it is scarcely likely that a country which used wool so
+largely was content to be without them. At any rate they abounded in the
+provinces, forming the chief wealth of the more northern nations.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTEE III. THE PEOPLE.
+
+
+"The Chaldaeans, that bitter and hasty nation."--Habak. 1. 6.
+
+
+The Babylonians, who, under Nabopolassar and Nebuchadnezzar, held the
+second place among the nations of the East, were emphatically a mixed
+race. The ancient people from whom they were in the main descended--the
+Chaldaeans of the First Empire--possessed this character to a
+considerable extent, since they united Cusbite with Turanian blood, and
+contained moreover a slight Semitic and probably a slight Arian element.
+But the Babylonians of later times--the Chaldaeans of the Hebrew
+prophets--must have been very much more a mixed race than their earlier
+namesakes--partly in consequence of the policy of colonization pursued
+systematically by the later Assyrian kings, partly from the direct
+influence exerted upon them by conquerors. Whatever may have been the
+case with the Arab dynasty, which bore sway in the country from about
+B.C. 1546 till B.C. 1300, it is certain that the Assyrians conquered
+Babylon about B.C. 1300, and almost certain that they established
+an Assyrian family upon the throne of Nimrod, which held for some
+considerable time the actual sovereignty of the country. It was natural
+that under a dynasty of Semites, Semitic blood should flow freely into
+the lower region, Semitic usages and modes of thought become prevalent,
+and the spoken language of the country pass from a Turanian or
+Turano-Cushite to a Semitic type. The previous Chaldaean race blended,
+apparently, with the new comers, and people was produced in which the
+three elements--the Semitic, the Turanian, and the Cushite--held about
+equal shares. The colonization of the Sargonid kings added probably
+other elements in small proportions, and the result was that among
+all the nations inhabiting Western Asia there can have been none so
+thoroughly deserving the title of a "mingled people" as the Babylonians
+of the later Empire.
+
+In mixtures of this kind it is almost always found that some one element
+practically preponderates, and assumes to itself the right of fashioning
+and forming the general character of the race. It is not at all
+necessary that this formative element should be larger than any other;
+on the contrary, it may be and sometimes is extremely small; for it does
+not work by its mass, but by its innate force and strong vital energy.
+In Babylonia, the element which showed itself to possess this superior
+vitality, which practically asserted its pre-eminence and proceeded to
+mold the national character, was the Semitic. There is abundant
+evidence that by the time of the later Empire the Babylonians had become
+thoroughly Semitized; so much so, that ordinary observers scarcely
+distinguished them from their purely Semitic neighbors, the Assyrians.
+No doubt there were differences which a Hippocrates or an Aristotle
+could have detected--differences resulting from mixed descent, as
+well as differences arising from climate and physical geography; but,
+speaking broadly, it must be said that the Semitic element, introduced
+into Babylonia from the north, had so prevailed by the time of the
+establishment of the Empire that the race was no longer one sui generis,
+but was a mere variety of the well-known and widely spread Semitic type.
+
+We possess but few notices, and fewer assured representations, from
+which to form an opinion of the physical characteristics of the
+Babylonians. Except upon the cylinders, there are extant only three or
+four representations of the human forms by Babylonian artists, and
+in the few cases where this form occurs we cannot always feel at all
+certain that the intention is to portray a human being. A few Assyrian
+bas-reliefs probably represent campaigns in Babylonia; but the Assyrians
+vary their human type so little that these sculptures must not be
+regarded as conveying to us very exact information. Tho cylinders are
+too rudely executed to be of much service, and they seem to preserve
+an archaic type which originated with the Proto-Chaldaeans. If we might
+trust the figures upon them as at all nearly representing the truth,
+we should have to regard the Babylonians as of much slighter and sparer
+frames than their northern neighbors, of a physique in fact approaching
+to meagreness. The Assyrian sculptures, however, are far from
+bearing out this idea; from them it would seem that the frames of
+the Babylonians were as brawny and massive as those of the Assyrians
+themselves, while in feature there was not much difference between the
+nations. [PLATE IX., Fig. 3.] Foreheads straight but not high, noses
+well formed but somewhat depressed, full lips, and a well-marked rounded
+chin, constitute the physiognomy of the Babylonians as it appears
+upon the sculptures of their neighbors. This representation is
+not contradicted by the few specimens of actual sculpture left by
+themselves. In these the type approaches nearly to the Assyrian, while
+there is still, such an amount of difference as renders it tolerably
+easy to distinguish between the productions of the two nations. The eye
+is larger, and not so decidedly almond-shaped; the nose is shorter, and
+its depression is still more marked; while the general expression of the
+countenance is altogether more commonplace.
+
+These differences may be probably referred to the influence which
+was exercised upon the physical form of the race by the primitive
+or Proto-Chaldaean element, an influence which appears to have
+been considerable. This element, as has been already observed, was
+predominantly Cushite; and there is reason to believe that the Cushite
+race was connected not very remotely with the negro. In Susiana, where
+the Cushite blood was maintained in tolerable purity--Elymseans and
+Kissians existing side by side, instead of blending together--there was,
+if we may trust the Assyrian remains, a very decided prevalency of a
+negro type of countenance, as the accompanying specimens, carefully
+copied from the sculptures, will render evident. [PLATE IX., Fig. 6.]
+The head was covered with short crisp curls; the eye was large, the nose
+and mouth nearly in the same line, the lips thick. Such a physiognomy
+as the Babylonian appears to have been would naturally arise from an
+intermixture of a race like the Assyrian with one resembling that which
+the later sculptures represent as the main race inhabiting Susiana.
+
+Herodotus remarks that the Babylonians wore their hair long; and this
+remark is confirmed to some extent by the native remains. These in
+general represent the hair as forming a single stiff and heavy curl at
+the back of the head (No. 3). Sometimes, however, they make it take the
+shape of long flowing locks, which depend over the back (No. 1), or
+over the back and shoulders (No. 4), reaching nearly to the waist.
+Occasionally, in lieu of these commoner types, wo have one which closely
+resembles the Assyrian, the hair forming a round mass behind the head
+(No. 2), on which we can sometimes trace indications of a slight wave.
+[PLATE X., Fig. 1.] The national fashion, that to which Herodotus
+alludes, seems to be represented by the three commoner modes. Where
+the round mass is worn, we have probably an Assyrian fashion, which the
+Babylonians aped during the time of that people's pre-eminence.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE X.]
+
+
+Besides their flowing hair, the Babylonians are represented frequently
+with a large beard. This is generally longer than the Assyrian,
+descending nearly to the waist. Sometimes it curls crisply upon the
+face, but below the chin depends over the breast in long, straight
+locks. At other times it droops perpendicularly from the cheeks and the
+under lip.15 Frequently, however, the beard is shaven off, and the whole
+face is smooth and hairless.
+
+The Chaldaean females, as represented by the Assyrians, are tall
+and large-limbed. Their physiognomy is Assyrian, their hair not very
+abundant. The Babylonian cylinders, on the other hand, make the hair
+long and conspicuous, while the forms are quite as spare and meagre as
+those of the men.
+
+On the whole, it is most probable that the physical type of the later
+Babylonians was nearly that of their northern neighbors. A somewhat
+sparer form, longer and more flowing hair, and features less stern
+and strong, may perhaps have characterized them. They were also, it
+is probable, of a darker complexion than the Assyrians, being to some
+extent Ethiopians by descent, and inhabiting a region which lies four
+degrees nearer to the tropics than Assyria. The Cha'ab Arabs, the
+present possessors of the more southern parts of Babylonia, are nearly
+black; and the "black Syrians," of whom Strabo speaks, seem intended to
+represent the Babylonians.
+
+Among the moral and mental characteristics of the people, the first
+place is due to their intellectual ability. Inheriting a legacy
+of scientific knowledge, astronomical and arithmetical, from the
+Proto-Chaldaeans, they seem to have not only maintained but considerably
+advanced these sciences by their own efforts. Their "wisdom and
+learning" are celebrated by the Jewish prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, and
+Daniel; the Father of History records their valuable inventions; and an
+Aristotle was not ashamed to be beholden to them for scientific data.
+They were good observers of astronomical phenomena, careful recorders of
+such observations, and mathematicians of no small repute. Unfortunately,
+they mixed with their really scientific studies those occult pursuits
+which, in ages and countries where the limits of true science are not
+known, are always apt to seduce students from the right path, having
+attractions against which few men are proof, so long as it is believed
+that they can really accomplish the end that they propose to themselves.
+The Babylonians were astrologers no less than astronomers; they
+professed to cast nativities, to expound dreams, and to foretell events
+by means of the stars; and though there were always a certain number
+who kept within the legitimate bounds of science, and repudiated the
+astrological pretensions of their brethren, yet on the whole it must
+be allowed that their astronomy was fatally tinged with a mystic and
+unscientific element.
+
+In close connection with the intellectual ability of the Babylonians
+was the spirit of enterprise which led them to engage in traffic and
+to adventure themselves upon the ocean in ships. In a future chapter
+we shall have to consider the extent and probable direction of this
+commerce. It is sufficient to observe in the present place that the same
+turn of mind which made the Phoenicians anciently the great carriers
+between the East and West, and which in modern times has rendered
+the Jews so successful in various branches of trade, seems to have
+characterized the Semitized Babylonians, whose land was emphatically "a
+land of traffic," and their chief city "a city of merchants."
+
+The trading spirit which was thus strongly developed in the Babylonian
+people led naturally to the two somewhat opposite vices of avarice and
+over-luxuriousness. Not content with honorable gains, the Babylonians
+"coveted an evil covetousness," as we learn both from Habakkuk and
+Jeremiah. The "shameful custom" mentioned by Herodotus, which required
+as a religious duty that every Babylonian woman, rich or poor, highborn
+or humble, should once in her life prostitute herself in the temple of
+Beltis, was probably based on the desire of attracting strangers to
+the capital, who would either bring with them valuable commodities
+or purchase the productions of the country. The public auction of
+marriageable virgins had most likely a similar intention. If we may
+believe Curtius, strangers might at any time purchase the gratification
+of any passion they might feel, from the avarice of parents or husbands.
+
+The luxury of the Babylonians is a constant theme with both sacred
+and profane writers. The "daughter of the Chaldaeans" was "tender and
+delicate," "given to pleasures," apt to "dwell carelessly." Her young
+men made themselves "as princes to look at--exceeding in dyed attire
+upon their heads,"--painting their faces, wearing earrings, and clothing
+themselves in robes of soft and rich material. Extensive polygamy
+prevailed. The pleasures of the table were carried to excess.
+Drunkenness was common. Rich unguents were invented. The tables groaned
+under the weight of gold and silver plate. In every possible way
+the Babylonians practised luxuriousness of living, and in respect of
+softness and self-indulgence they certainly did not fall short of any
+nation of antiquity.
+
+There was, however, a harder and sterner side to the Babylonian
+character. Despite their love of luxury, they were at all times brave
+and skilful in war; and, during the period of their greatest strength,
+they were one of the most formidable of all the nations of the East.
+Habakkuk describes them, drawing evidently from the life, as "bitter and
+hasty," and again as "terrible and dreadful--their horses' hoofs swifter
+than the leopard's, and more fierce than the evening wolves." Hence they
+"smote the people in wrath with a continual stroke"--they "made the
+earth to tremble, and did shake kingdoms"--they carried all before them
+in their great enterprises, seldom allowing themselves to be foiled by
+resistance, or turned from their course by pity. Exercised for centuries
+in long and fierce wars with the well-armed and well-disciplined
+Assyrians, they were no sooner quit of this enemy, and able to take an
+aggressive attitude, than they showed themselves no unworthy successors
+of that long-dominant nation, so far as energy, valor, and military
+skill constitute desert. They carried their victorious arms from the
+shores of the Persian Gulf to the banks of the Nile; wherever they went,
+they rapidly established their power, crushing all resistance, and fully
+meriting the remarkable title, which they seem to have received from
+those who had felt their attacks, of "the hammer of the whole earth."
+
+The military successes of the Babylonians were accompanied with needless
+violence, and with outrages not unusual in the East, which the
+historian must nevertheless regard as at once crimes and follies. The
+transplantation of conquered races--a part of the policy of Assyria
+which the Chaldaeans adopted--may perhaps have been morally defensible,
+notwithstanding the sufferings which it involved. But the mutilations of
+prisoners, the weary imprisonments, the massacre of non-combatants, the
+refinement of cruelty shown in the execution of children before the eyes
+of their fathers--these and similar atrocities, which are recorded of
+the Babylonians, are wholly without excuse, since they did not so much
+terrify as exasperate the conquered nations, and thus rather endangered
+than added strength or security to the empire. A savage and inhuman
+temper is betrayed by these harsh punishments--a temper common in
+Asiatics, but none the less reprehensible on that account--one that led
+its possessors to sacrifice interest to vengeance, and the peace of
+a kingdom to a tiger-like thirst for blood. Nor was this cruel temper
+shown only towards the subject nations and captives taken in war.
+Babylonian nobles trembled for their heads if they incurred by a slight
+fault the displeasure of the monarch; and even the most powerful class
+in the kingdom, the learned and venerable "Chaldaeans," ran on one
+occasion the risk of being exterminated, because they could not expound
+a dream which the king had forgotten. If a monarch displeased his court,
+and was regarded as having a bad disposition, it was not thought enough
+simply to make away with him, but he was put to death by torture. Among
+recognized punishments were cutting to pieces and casting into a
+heated furnace. The houses of offenders were pulled down and made into
+dunghills. These practices imply a "violence" and cruelty beyond the
+ordinary Oriental limit; and we cannot be surprised that when final
+judgment was denounced against Babylon, it was declared to be sent, in
+a great measure, "because of men's blood, and for the violence of the
+land-of the city, and all that dwelt therein."
+
+It is scarcely necessary to add that the Babylonians were a proud
+people. Pride is unfortunately the invariable accompaniment of success,
+in the nation, if not in the individual; and the sudden elevation of
+Babylon from a subject to a dominant power must have been peculiarly
+trying, more especially to the Oriental temperament. The spirit which
+culminated in Nebuchadnezzar, when, walking in the palace of his
+kingdom, and surveying the magnificent buildings which he had raided on
+every side from the plunder of the conquered nations, and by the labor
+of their captive bands, he exclaimed, "Is not the great Babylon which
+I have built by the might of my power and for the honor of my
+majesty?"--was rife in the people generally, who, naturally enough,
+believed themselves superior to every other nation upon the earth.
+"I am, and there is none else beside me," was the thought, if not
+the speech, of the people, whose arrogancy was perhaps somewhat less
+offensive than that of the Assyrians, but was quite as intense and as
+deep-seated.
+
+The Babylonians, notwithstanding their pride, their cruelty, their
+covetousness, and their love of luxury, must be pronounced to have been,
+according to their lights, a religious people. The temple in
+Babylonia is not a mere adjunct of the palace, but has almost the same
+pre-eminence over other buildings which it claims in Egypt. The vast
+mass of the Birs-i-Nimrud is sufficient to show that an enormous amount
+of labor was expended in the erection of sacred edifices; and the costly
+ornamentation lavished on such buildings is, as we shall hereafter find,
+even more remarkable than their size. Vast sums wore also expended on
+images of the gods, necessary adjuncts of the religion; and the whole
+paraphernalia of worship exhibited a rare splendor and magnificence. The
+monarchs were devout worshippers of the various deities, and gave much
+of their attention to the building and repair of temples, the erection
+of images, and the like. They bestowed on their children names
+indicative of religious feeling, and implying real faith in the power
+of the gods to protect their votaries. The people generally affected
+similar names--names containing, in almost every case, a god's name
+as one of their elements. The seals or signets which formed almost a
+necessary part of each man's costume were, except in rare instances, of
+a religious character. Even in banquets, where we might have expected
+that thoughts of religion would be laid aside, it seems to have been the
+practice during the drinking to rehearse the praises of the deities.
+
+We are told by Nicolas of Damascus that the Babylonians cultivated two
+virtues especially, honesty and calmness. Honesty is the natural, almost
+the necessary virtue of traders, who soon find that it is the best
+policy to be fair and just in their dealings. We may well believe that
+this intelligent people had the wisdom to see their true interests,
+and to understand that trade can never prosper unless conducted with
+integrity and straightforwardness. The very fact that their trade did
+prosper, that their goods were everywhere in request, is sufficient
+proof of their commercial honesty, and of their superiority to those
+tricks which speedily ruin a commerce.
+
+Calmness is not a common Oriental virtue. It is not even in general
+very highly appreciated, being apt to strike the lively, sensitive, and
+passionate Eastern as mere dulness and apathy. In China, however, it
+is a point of honor that the outward demeanor should be calm and placid
+under any amount of provocation; and indignation, fierceness, even
+haste, are regarded as signs of incomplete civilization, which the
+disciples of Confucius love to note in their would-be rivals of the
+West.
+
+We may conceive that some similar notion was entertained by the proud
+Babylonians, who no doubt regarded themselves as infinitely superior
+in manners and culture, no less than in scientific attainments, to the
+"barbarians" of Persia and Greece. While rage boiled in their hearts,
+and commands to torture and destroy fell from their tongues, etiquette
+may have required that the countenance should be unmoved, the eye
+serene, the voice low and gentle. Such contrasts are not uncommonly
+seen in the polite Mandarin, whose apparent calmness drives his European
+antagonist to despair; and it may well be that the Babylonians of the
+sixth and seventh centuries before our era had attained to an equal
+power of restraining the expression of feeling. But real gentleness,
+meekness, and placability were certainly not the attributes of a people
+who were so fierce in their wars and so cruel in their punishments.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTEE IV. THE CAPITAL.
+
+
+Babylon, the capital of the Fourth Monarchy, was probably the largest
+and most magnificent city of the ancient world. A dim tradition current
+in the East gave, it is true, a greater extent, if not a greater
+splendor, to the metropolis of Assyria; but this tradition first appears
+in ages subsequent to the complete destruction of the more northern
+city; and it is contradicted by the testimony of facts. The walls of
+Nineveh have been completely traced, and indicate a city three miles in
+length, by less than a mile and a half in breadth, containing an area of
+about 1800 English acres. Of this area less than one tenth is occupied
+by ruins of any pretension. On the admitted site of Babylon striking
+masses of ruin cover a space considerably larger than that which at
+Nineveh constitutes the whole area of the town. Beyond this space
+in every direction, north, east, south and west, are detached mounds
+indicating the former existence of edifices of some size, while the
+intermediate ground between these mounds and the main ruins shows
+distinct traces of its having been built upon in former days.
+
+Of the actual size of the town, modern research gives us no clear and
+definite notion. One explorer only has come away from the country with
+an idea that the general position of the detached mounds, by which the
+plain around Hillah is dotted, enables him to draw the lines of the
+ancient walls, and mark out the exact position of the city. But the very
+maps and plans which are put forward in support of this view show that
+it rests mainly on hypothesis; nor is complete confidence placed in the
+surveys on which the maps and plans have been constructed. The English
+surveys, which have been unfortunately lost, are said not to have placed
+the detached mounds in any such decided lines as M. Oppert believes them
+to occupy, and the general impression of the British officers who were
+employed on the service is that "no vestige of the walls of Babylon has
+been as yet discovered." [PLATE XI.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XI.]
+
+
+For the size and plan of the city we are thus of necessity thrown back
+upon the reports of ancient authors. It is not pretended that such
+reports are in this, or in any other case, deserving of implicit
+credence. The ancient historians, even the more trustworthy of them, are
+in the habit of exaggerating in their numbers; and on such subjects as
+measurements they were apt to take on trust the declarations of their
+native guides, who would be sure to make over-statements. Still in
+this instance we have so many distinct authorities--eyewitnesses of the
+facts--and some of them belonging to times when scientific accuracy had
+begun to be appreciated, that we must be very in credulous if we do not
+accept their witness, so far as it is consentient, and not intrinsically
+very improbable.
+
+According to Herodotus, an eye-witness, and the earliest authority on
+the subject the _enceinte_ of Babylon was a square, 120 stades (about 14
+miles) each way--the entire circuit of the wall being thus 56 miles, and
+the area enclosed within them falling little short of 200 square miles.
+Ctesias, also an eyewitness, and the next writer on the subject, reduced
+the circuit of the walls to 360 stades, or 41 miles, and made the area
+consequently little more than 100 square miles. These two estimates are
+respectively the greatest and the least that have come down to us. The
+historians of Alexander, while conforming nearly to the statements of
+Ctesias, a little enlarge his dimensions, making the circuit 365, 368,
+or 385 stades. The differences here are inconsiderable; and it seems to
+be established, on a weight of testimony which we rarely possess in such
+a matter, that the walls of this great town were about forty miles in
+circumference, and enclosed an area as large as that of the Landgraviat
+of Hesse-Homburg.
+
+It is difficult to suppose that the real city--the streets and
+squares--can at any time have occupied one half of this enormous area,
+A clear space, we are told, was left for a considerable distance inside
+the wall--like the _pomaerium_ of the Romans--upon which no houses
+were allowed to be built. When houses began, they were far from being
+continuous; gardens, orchards, even fields, were interspersed among
+the buildings; and it was supposed that the inhabitants, when besieged,
+could grow sufficient corn for their own consumption within the walls.
+Still the whole area was laid out with straight streets, or perhaps one
+should say with roads (for the houses cannot have been continuous
+along them), which cut one another everywhere at right angles, like the
+streets of some German towns. The wall of the town was pierced with a
+hundred gates, twenty-five (we may suppose) in each face, and the roads
+led straight to these portals, the whole area being thus cut up into
+square blocks. The houses were in general lofty, being three or even
+four stories high. They are said to have had vaulted roofs, which were
+not protected externally with any tiling, since the climate was so dry
+as to render such a protection unnecessary. The beams used in the houses
+were of palm-wood, all other timber being scarce in the country; and
+such pillars as the houses could boast were of the same material. The
+construction of these last was very rude. Around posts of palm-wood
+were twisted wisps of rushes, which were covered with plaster, and then
+colored according the taste of the owner.
+
+The Euphrates ran through the town, dividing it nearly in half. Its
+banks were lined throughout with quays of brick laid in bitumen, and
+were further guarded by two walls of brick, which skirted them along
+their whole length. In each of these walls were twenty-five gates,
+corresponding to the number of the streets which gave upon the river;
+and outside each gate was a sloped landing place, by which you could
+descend to the water's edge, if you had occasion to cross the river.
+Boats were kept ready at these landing-places to convey passengers from
+side to side; while for those who disliked this method of conveyance
+a bridge was provided of a somewhat peculiar construction. A number
+of stone piers were erected in the bed of the stream, firmly clamped
+together with fastenings of iron and lead; wooden drawbridges connected
+pier with pier during the day, and on these passengers passed over; but
+at night they were withdrawn, in order that the bridge might not be used
+during the dark. Diodorus declares that besides this bridge, to which he
+assigns a length of five stades (about 1000 yards) and a breadth of 30
+feet, the two sides of the river were joined together by a tunnel, which
+was fifteen feet wide and twelve high to the spring of its arched roof.
+
+The most remarkable buildings which the city contained were the two
+palaces, one on either side of the river, and the great temple of
+Belus. Herodotus describes the great temple as contained within a square
+enclosure, two stades (nearly a quarter of a mile) both in length and
+breadth. Its chief feature was the _ziggurat_ or tower, a huge solid
+mass of brick-work, built (like all Babylonian temple-towers) in stages,
+square being emplaced on square, and a sort of rude pyramid being thus
+formed, at the top of which was the main shrine of the god. The basement
+platform of the Belus tower was, Herodotus tells us, a stade, or rather
+more than 200 yards, each way. The number of stages was eight. The
+ascent to the highest stage, which contained the shrine of the god, was
+on the outside, and consisted either of steps, or of an inclined plane,
+carried round the four sides of the building, and in this way conducting
+to the top. According to Strabo the tower was a stado (606 feet 9
+inches) in height; but this estimate, if it is anything more than a
+conjecture, must represent rather the length of the winding ascent than
+the real altitude of the building. The great pyramid itself was only 480
+feet high; and it is very questionable whether any Babylonian building
+ever equalled it. About half-way up the ascent was a resting-place with
+seats, where persons commonly sat a while on their way to the summit.
+The shrine which crowned the edifice was large and rich. In the time
+of Herodotus it contained no image; but only a golden table and a large
+couch, covered with a handsome drapery. This, however, was after the
+Persian conquest and the plunder of its principal treasures. Previously,
+if we may believe Diodorus, the shrine was occupied by three colossal
+images of gold--one of Bel, one of Beltis, and the third of Rhea or
+Ishtar. Before the image of Beltis were two golden lions, and near them
+two enormous serpents of silver, each thirty talents in weight. The
+golden table--forty feet long and fifteen broad--was in front of these
+statues, and upon it stood two huge drinking-cups, of the same weight as
+the serpents. The shrine also contained two enormous censers and three
+golden bowls, one for each of the three deities.
+
+At the base of the tower was a second shrine or chapel, which in the
+time of Herodotus contained a sitting image of Bel, made of gold, with
+a golden table in front of it, and a stand for the image, of the same
+precious metal. Here, too, Persian avarice had been busy; for anciently
+this shrine had possessed a second statue, which was a human figure
+twelve cubits high, made of solid gold. The shrine was also rich
+in private offerings. Outside the building, but within the sacred
+enclosure, were two altars, a smaller one of gold, on which it was
+customary to offer sucklings, and a larger one, probably of stone, where
+the worshippers sacrificed full-grown victims.
+
+The great palace was a building of still larger dimensions than the
+great temple. According to Diodorus, it was situated within a triple
+enclosure, the innermost wall being twenty stades, the second forty
+stades, and the outermost sixty stades (nearly seven miles), in
+circumference. The outer wall was built entirely of plain baked brick.
+The middle and inner walls were of the same material, fronted with
+enamelled bricks representing hunting scenes. The figures, according to
+this author, were larger than the life, and consisted chiefly of a great
+variety of animal forms. There were not wanting, however, a certain
+number of human forms to enliven the scene; and among these were two--a
+man thrusting his spear through a lion, and a woman on horseback aiming
+at a leopard with her javelin--which the later Greeks believed to
+represent the mythic Ninus and Semiramis. Of the character of the
+apartments we hear nothing; but we are told that the palace had three
+gates, two of which were of bronze, and that these had to be opened and
+shut by a machine.
+
+But the main glory of the palace was its pleasure-ground--the "Hanging
+Gardens," which the Greeks regarded as one of the seven wonders of the
+world. This extraordinary construction, which owed its erection to the
+whim of a woman, was a square, each side of which measured 400 Greek
+feet. It was supported upon several tiers of open arches, built one over
+the other, like the walls of a classic theatre, and sustaining at each
+stage, or story, a solid platform, from which the piers of the next tier
+of arches rose. The building towered into the air to the height of at
+least seventy-five feet, and was covered at the top with a great mass of
+earth, in which there grew not merely flowers and shrubs, but tress
+also of the largest size. Water was supplied from the Euphrates through
+pipes, and was raised (it is said) by a screw, working on the principal
+of Archimedes. To prevent the moisture from penetrating into the
+brick-work and gradually destroying the building, there were interposed
+between the bricks and the mass of soil, first a layer of reeds mixed
+with bitumen, then a double layer of burnt brick cemented with gypsum,
+and thirdly a coating of sheet lead. The ascent to the garden was by
+steps. On the way up, among the arches which sustained the building,
+were stately apartments, which, must have been pleasant from their
+coolness. There was also a chamber within the structure containing the
+machinery by which the water was raised.
+
+Of the smaller palace, which was opposite to the larger one, on the
+other side the river, but few details have come down to us. Like the
+larger palace, it was guarded by a triple enclosure, the entire circuit
+of which measured (it is said) thirty stades. It contained a number of
+bronze statues, which the Greeks believed to represent the god Belus,
+and the sovereigns Ninus and Semiramis, together with their officers.
+The walls were covered with battle scenes and hunting scenes, vividly
+represented by means of bricks painted and enamelled.
+
+Such was the general character of the town and its chief edifices, if we
+may believe the descriptions of eye-witnesses. The walls which enclosed
+and guarded the whole--or which, perhaps one should rather say,
+guarded the district within which Babylon was placed--have been already
+mentioned as remarkable for their great extent, but cannot be dismissed
+without a more special and minute description. Like the "Hanging
+Gardens," they were included among the "world's seven wonders,"
+and, according to every account given of them, their magnitude and
+construction were remarkable.
+
+It has been already noticed that, according to the lowest of the ancient
+estimates, the entire length of the walls was 360 stades, or more than
+forty-one miles. With respect to the width we have two very different
+statements, one by Herodotus and the other by Clitarchus and Strabo.
+Herodotus makes the width 50 royal cubits, or about 85 English feet,
+Strabo and Q. Curtius reduced the estimate to 32 feet. There is still
+greater discrepancy with respect to the height of the walls. Herodotus
+says that the height was 200 royal cubits, or 300 royal feet (about 335
+English feet); Ctesias made it 50 fathoms, or 300 ordinary Greek feet;
+Pliny and Solinus, substituting feet for the royal cubits of Herodotus,
+made the altitude 235 feet; Philostratus and Q. Curtius, following
+perhaps some one of Alexander's historians, gave for the height 150
+feet; finally Clitarchus, as reported by Diodorus Siculus, and Strabo,
+who probably followed him, have left us the very moderate estimate of 75
+feet. It is impossible to reconcile these numbers. The supposition that
+some of them belong properly to the outer, and others to the inner wall,
+will not explain the discrepancies--for the measurements cannot by any
+ingenuity be reduced to two sets of dimensions. The only conclusion
+which it seems possible to draw from the conflicting testimony is that
+the numbers were either rough guesses made by very unskilful travellers,
+or else were (in most cases) intentional exaggerations palmed upon them
+by the native ciceroni. Still the broad facts remain--first, that the
+walls enclosed an enormous space, which was very partially occupied by
+buildings; secondly, that they were of great and unusual thickness;
+and thirdly, that they were of a vast height--seventy or eighty feet at
+least in the time of Alexander, after the wear and tear of centuries and
+the violence of at least three conquerors.
+
+The general character of the construction is open to but little doubt.
+The wall was made of bricks, either baked in kilns, or (more probably)
+dried in the sun, and laid in a cement of bitumen, with occasional
+layers of reeds between the courses. Externally it was protected by a
+wide and deep moat. On the summit were low towers, rising above the
+wall to the height of some ten or fifteen feet, and probably serving as
+guardrooms for the defenders. These towers are said to have been 250 in
+number; they were least numerous on the western face of the city, where
+the wall ran along the marshes. They were probably angular, not round;
+and instead of extending through the whole thickness of the wall, they
+were placed along its outer and inner edge, tower facing tower, with
+a wide space between them--"enough," Herodotus says, "for a four-horse
+chariot to turn in." The wall did not depend on them for its strength,
+but on its own height and thickness, which were such as to render
+scaling and mining equally hopeless.
+
+Such was Babylon, according to the descriptions of the ancients--a
+great city, built on a very regular plan, surrounded by populous suburbs
+interspersed among fields and gardens, the whole being included within a
+large square strongly fortified enceinte. When we turn from this picture
+of the past to contemplate the present condition of the localities, we
+are at first struck with astonishment at the small traces which remain
+of so vast and wonderful a metropolis. "The broad walls of Babylon"
+are "utterly broken" down, and her "high gates burned with fire."
+"The golden city hath ceased." God has "swept it with the bosom of
+destruction." "The glory of the kingdoms, the beauty of the Chaldees'
+excellency," is become "as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrha." The
+traveller who passes through the land is at first inclined to say that
+there are no ruins, no remains, of the mighty city which once lorded it
+over the earth. By and by, however, he begins to see that though ruins,
+in the common acceptation of the term, scarcely exist--though there are
+no arches, no pillars, but one or two appearances of masonry even yet
+the whole country is covered with traces of exactly that kind which it
+was prophesied Babylon should leave. Vast "heaps" or mounds, shapeless
+and unsightly, are scattered at intervals over the entire region where
+it is certain that Babylon anciently stood, and between the "heaps" the
+soil is in many places composed of fragments of pottery and bricks, and
+deeply impregnated with nitre, infallible indications of its having once
+been covered with buildings. As the traveller descends southward from
+Baghdad he finds these indications increase, until, on nearing the
+Euphrates, a few miles beyond Mohawil, he notes that they have become
+continuous, and finds himself in a region of mounds, some of which are
+of enormous size.
+
+These mounds begin about five miles above Hillah, and extend for a
+distance of about three miles from north to south along the course of
+the river, lying principally on its left or eastern bank. The ruins on
+this side consist chiefly of three great masses of building. The most
+northern, to which the Arabs of the present day apply the name of
+BABIL--the true native appellation of the ancient citys--is a vast pile
+of brick-work of an irregular quadrilateral shape, with precipitous
+sides furrowed by ravines, and with a flat top. [PLATE X., Fig.,3.] Of
+the four faces of the ruin the southern seems to be the most perfect.
+It extends a distance of about 200 yards, or almost exactly a stade,
+and runs nearly in a straight line from west to east. At its eastern
+extremity it forms a right angle with the east face, which runs nearly
+due north for about 180 yards, also almost in a straight line. The
+western and northern faces are apparently much worn away. Here are
+the chief ravines, and here is the greatest seeming deviation from the
+original lines of the building. The greatest height of the Babil mound
+is 130 or 140 feet. It is mainly composed of sun-dried brick, but shows
+signs of having been faced with fire-burnt brick, carefully cemented
+with an excellent white mortar. The bricks of this outer facing bear the
+name and titles of Nebuchadnezzar. A very small portion of the original
+structure has been laid bare enough however to show that the lines
+of the building did not slope like those of a pyramid, but were
+perpendicular, and that the side walls had, at intervals, the support of
+buttresses.
+
+This vast building, whatever it was, stood within a square enclosure,
+two sides of which, the northern and eastern, are still very distinctly
+marked. A long low line of rampart runs for 400 yards parallel to the
+east face of the building, at a distance of 120 or 130 yards, and a
+similar but somewhat longer line of mound runs parallel to the north
+face at rather a greater distance from it. On the west a third line
+could be traced in the early part of the present century; but it appears
+to be now obliterated. Here and on the south are the remains of
+an ancient canal, the construction of which may have caused the
+disappearance of the southern, and of the lower part of the western
+line. [PLATE XII., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XII.]
+
+
+Below the Babil mound, which stands isolated from the rest of the ruins,
+are two principal masses--the more northern known to the Arabs as EL
+KASR, "the Palace," and the more southern as "the mound of Amran," from
+the tomb of a reputed prophet Amran-ibn-Ali, which crowns its summit.
+The Kasr mound is an oblong square, about 700 yards long by 600 broad,
+with the sides facing the cardinal points. [PLATE XII., Fig. 2.] Its
+height above the plain is 70 feet. Its longer direction is from north
+to south. As far as it has been penetrated, it consists mainly of
+rubbish-loose bricks, tiles, and fragments of stone. In a few places
+only are there undisturbed remains of building. One such relic is a
+subterranean passage, seven feet in height, floored and walled with
+baked brick, and covered in at the top with great blocks of sandstone,
+which may either have been a secret exit or more probably an enormous
+drain. Another is the Kasr, or "palace" proper, whence the mound has
+its name. This is a fragment of excellent brick masonry in a wonderful
+state of preservation, consisting of walls, piers, and buttresses, and
+in places ornamented with pilasters, but of too fragmentary a character
+to furnish the modern inquirer with any clue to the original plan of the
+building. The bricks are of a pale yellow color and of the best possible
+quality, nearly resembling our fire-bricks. They are stamped, one and
+all, with the name and titles of Nebuchadnezzar. The mortar in which
+they are laid is a fine lime cement, which adheres so closely to the
+bricks that it is difficult to obtain a specimen entire. In the dust
+at the foot of the walls are numerous fragments of brick, painted, and
+covered with a thick enamel or glaze. Here, too, have been found a few
+fragments of sculptured stone, and slabs containing an account of the
+erection of a palatial edifice by Nebuchadnezzar. Near the northern edge
+of the mound, and about midway in its breadth, is a colossal figure of a
+lion, rudely carved in black basalt, standing over the prostrate figure
+of a man with arms outstretched. A single tree grows on the huge ruin,
+which the Arabs declare to be of a species not known elsewhere, and
+regard as a remnant of the hanging garden of Bokht-i-nazar. It is a
+tamarisk of no rare kind, but of very great ago, in consequence of
+which, and of its exposed position, the growth and foliage are somewhat
+peculiar.
+
+South of the Kasr mound, at the distance of about 800 yards, is the
+remaining great mass of ruins, the mound of Jumjuma, or of Amran. [PLATE
+XII., Fig. 3.] The general shape of this mound is triangular,107 but it
+is very irregular and ill-defined, so as scarcely to admit of accurate
+description. Its three sides face respectively a little east of north,
+a little south of east, and a little south of west. The south-western
+side, which runs nearly parallel with the Euphrates, and seems to have
+been once washed by the river, is longer than either of the others,
+extending a distance of above a thousand yards, while the south-eastern
+may be 800 yards, and the north-eastern 700. Innumerable ravines
+traverse the mound on every side, penetrating it nearly to its centre.
+The surface is a series of undulations. Neither masonry nor sculpture is
+anywhere apparent.
+
+All that meets the eye is a mass of debris; and the researches hitherto
+made have failed to bring to light any distinct traces of building.
+Occasionally bricks are found, generally of poor material, and bearing
+the names and titles of some of the earlier Babylonian monarchs; but the
+trenches opened in the pile have in no case laid bare even the smallest
+fragment of a wall.
+
+Besides the remains which have been already described, the most
+remarkable are certain long lines of rampart on both sides of the river,
+which lie outside of the other ruins, enclosing them all, except the
+mound of Babil. On the left bank of the stream there is to be traced,
+in the first place, a double line of wall or rampart, having a direction
+nearly due north and south, which lies east of the Kasr and Amran
+mounds, at the distance from them of about 1000 yards. Beyond this is a
+single line of rampart to the north-east, traceable for about two miles,
+the direction of which is nearly from north-west to south-east, and a
+double line of rampart to the south-east, traceable for a mile and a
+half, with a direction from northeast to south-west. The two lines in
+this last case are from 600 to 700 yards apart, and diverge from one
+another as they run out to the north-east. The inner of the two meets
+the north-eastern rampart nearly at a right angle, and is clearly a
+part of the same work. It is questioned, however, whether this line of
+fortification is ancient, and not rather a construction belonging to
+Parthian times.
+
+A low line of mounds is traceable between the western face of the Amran
+and Kasr hills, and the present eastern bank of the river, bounding a
+sort of narrow valley, in which either the main stream of the Euphrates,
+or at any rate a branch from it, seems anciently to have flowed.
+
+On the right bank of the stream the chief remains are of the same kind.
+West of the river, a rampart, twenty feet high, runs for nearly a mile
+parallel with the general line of the Amran mound, at the distance of
+about 1000 yards from the old course of the stream. At either extremity
+the line of the rampart turns at a right angle, running down towards the
+river, and being traceable towards the north for 400 yards and towards
+the south for fifty or sixty. It is evident that there was once, before
+the stream flowed in its present channel, a rectangular enclosure, a
+mile long and 1000 yards broad, opposite to the Amran mound; and there
+are indications that within this _enceinte_ was at least one important
+building, which was situated near the south-east angle of the enclosure,
+on the banks of the old course of the river. The bricks found at this
+point bear the name of Neriglissar.
+
+There are also, besides the ramparts and the great masses of ruin above
+described, a vast number of scattered and irregular heaps of hillocks
+on both sides of the river, chiefly, however, upon the eastern bank.
+Of these one only seems to deserve distinct mention. This is the mound
+called El Homeira, "the Red," which lies due east of the Kasr, distant
+from it about 800 yards--a mound said to be 300 yards long by 100 wide,
+and to attain an elevation of 60 or 70 feet. It is composed of baked
+brick of a bright red color, and must have been a building of a very
+considerable height resting upon a somewhat confined base. Its bricks
+are inscribed along their edges, not (as is the usual practice) on their
+lower face.
+
+The only other ancient work of any importance of which some remains are
+still to be traced is a brick embankment on the left bank of the stream
+between the Kasr and the Babil mounds, extending for a distance of
+a thousand yards in a line which has a slight curve and a general
+direction of S.S.W. The bricks of this embankment are of a bright red
+color, and of great hardness. They are laid wholly in bitumen. The
+legend which they bear shows that the quay was constructed by Nabonidus.
+[PLATE XIII.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XIII.]
+
+
+Such then are the ruins of Babylon--the whole that can now with
+certainty be assigned to the "beauty of the Chaldees' excellency"--the
+"great Babylon" of Nebuchadnezzar. Within a space little more than three
+miles long and a mile and three quarters broad are contained all the
+undoubted remains of the greatest city of the old world. These remains,
+however, do not serve in any way to define the ancient limits of the
+place. They are surrounded on every side by nitrous soil, and by low
+heaps which it has not been thought worth while to excavate, but which
+the best judges assign to the same era as the great mounds, and believe
+to mark the sites of the lesser temples and the other public buildings
+of the ancient city. Masses of this kind are most frequent to the north
+and east. Sometimes they are almost continuous for miles; and if we take
+the Kasr mound as a centre, and mark about it an area extending five
+miles in each direction (which would give a city of the size described
+by Ctesias and the historians of Alexander), we shall scarcely find a
+single square mile of the hundred without some indications of ancient
+buildings upon its surface. The case is not like that of Nineveh, where
+outside the walls the country is for a considerable distance singularly
+bare of ruins. The mass of Babylonian remains extending from Babil to
+Amran does not correspond to the whole _enceinte_ of Nineveh, but to the
+mound of Koyunjik. It has every appearance of being, not the city, but
+"the heart of the city"--the "Royal quarter" outside of which were the
+streets and squares, and still further off, the vanished walls. It may
+seem strange that the southern capital should have so greatly exceeded
+the dimensions of the northern one. But, if we follow the indications
+presented by the respective sites, we are obliged to conclude that there
+was really this remarkable difference.
+
+It has to be considered in conclusion how far we can identify the
+various ruins above described with the known buildings of the ancient
+capital, and to what extent it is possible to reconstruct upon the
+existing remains the true plan of the city. Fancy, if it discards the
+guidance of fact, may of course with the greatest ease compose plans
+of a charming completeness. A rigid adherence to existing data will
+produce, it is to be feared, a somewhat meagre and fragmentary result;
+but most persons will feel that this is one of the cases where the maxim
+of Hesiod applies--"the half is preferable to the whole."
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 182]
+
+The one identification which may be made upon certain and indeed
+indisputable evidence is that of the Kasr mound with the palace built
+by Nebuchadnezzar. The tradition which has attached the name of Kasr or
+"Palace" to this heap is confirmed by inscriptions upon slabs found on
+the spot, wherein Nebuchadnezzar declares the building to be his "Grand
+Palace." The bricks of that part of the ruin which remains uncovered
+bear, one and all, the name of this king; and it is thus clear that
+here stood in ancient times the great work of which Berosus speaks as
+remarkable for its height and splendor. If a confirmation of the fact
+were needed after evidence of so decisive a character, it would be found
+in the correspondence between the remains found on the mound and the
+description left us of the "greater palace" by Diodorus. Diodorus
+relates that the walls of this edifice were adorned with colored
+representations of hunting scenes; and modern explorers find that the
+whole soil of the mound, and especially the part on which the fragment
+of ruin stands, is full of broken pieces of enamelled brick, varied in
+hue, and evidently containing portions of human and animal forms.
+
+But if the Kasr represents the palace built by Nebuchadnezzar, as is
+generally allowed by those who have devoted their attention to the
+subject, it seems to follow almost as a certainty that the Amran mound
+is the site of that old palatial edifice to which the erection
+of Nebuchadnezzar was an addition. Berosus expressly states that
+Nebuchadnezzar's building "adjoined upon" the former palace, a
+description which is fairly applicable to the Amran mound by means of a
+certain latitude of interpretation, but which is wholly inapplicable to
+any of the other ruins. This argument would be conclusive, even if it
+stood alone. It has, however, received an important corroboration in the
+course of recent researches. From the Amran mound, and from this part
+of Babylon only, have monuments been recovered of an earlier date than
+Nebuchadnezzar. Here and here alone did the early kings leave memorials
+of their presence in Babylon; and here consequently, we may presume,
+stood the ancient royal residence.
+
+If, then, all the principal ruins on the east bank of the river, with
+the exception of the Babil mound and the long lines marking walls
+or embankments, be accepted as representing the "great palace" or
+"citadel" of the classical writers we must recognize in the remains west
+of the ancient course of the river-the oblong square enclosure and
+the important building at its south-east angle--the second or "smaller
+palace" of Ctesias, which was joined to the larger one, according to
+that writer, by a bridge and a tunnel. This edifice, built or at any
+rate repaired by Neriglissar, lay directly opposite the more ancient
+part of the eastern palace, being separated from it by the river, which
+anciently flowed along the western face of the Kasr and Amran mounds.
+The exact position of the bridge cannot be fixed. With regard to the
+tunnel, it is extremely unlikely that any such construction was ever
+made. The "Father of History" is wholly silent on the subject, while
+he carefully describes the bridge, a work far less extraordinary.
+The tunnel rests on the authority of two writers only--Diodorus and
+Philostratus--who both wrote after Babylon was completely ruined. It
+was probably one of the imaginations of the inventive Ctesias, from whom
+Diodorus evidently derived all the main points of his description.
+
+Thus far there is no great difficulty in identifying the existing
+remains with buildings mentioned by ancient authors; but, at the point
+to which we are now come, the subject grows exceedingly obscure, and it
+is impossible to offer more than reasonable conjectures upon the true
+character of the remaining ruins. The descriptions of ancient writers
+would lead us to expect that we should find among the ruins unmistakable
+traces of the great temple of Belus, and at least some indication of the
+position occupied by the Hanging Gardens. These two famous constructions
+can scarcely, one would think, have wholly perished. More especially,
+the Belus temple, which was a stade square, and (according to some) a
+stade in height, must almost of necessity have a representative among
+the existing remains. This, indeed, is admitted on all hands; and the
+controversy is thereby narrowed to the question, which of two
+great ruins--the only two entitled by their size and situation to
+attention--has the better right to be regarded as the great and
+celebrated sanctuary of the ancient Babylon.
+
+That the mound of Babil is the _ziggurat_ or tower of a Babylonian
+temple scarcely admits of a doubt. Its square shape, its solid
+construction, its isolated grandeur, its careful emplacement with the
+sides facing the cardinal points, and its close resemblance to other
+known Babylonian temple-towers, sufficiently mark it for a building
+of this character, or at any rate raise a presumption which it would
+require very strong reasons indeed to overcome. Its size moreover
+corresponds well with the accounts which have come down to us of the
+dimensions of the Belus temple, and its name and proximity to the other
+main ruins show that it belonged certainly to the ancient capital.
+Against its claim to be regarded as the remains of the temple of
+Bolus two objections only can be argued: these are the absence of any
+appearance of stages, or even of a pyramidical shape, from the present
+ruin, and its position on the same side of the Euphrates with the
+palace. Herodotus expressly declares that the temple of Belus and
+the royal palace were upon opposite sides of the river, and states,
+moreover, that the temple was built in stages, which rose one above the
+other to the number of eight. Now these two circumstances, which do not
+belong at present to the Babil mound, attach to a ruin distant from it
+about eleven or twelve miles--a ruin which is certainly one of the most
+remarkable in the whole country, and which, if Babylon had really been
+of the size asserted by Herodotus, might possibly have been included
+within the walls. The Birs-i-Nimrud had certainly seven, probably eight
+stages, and it is the only ruin on the present western bank of
+the Euphrates which is at once sufficiently grand to answer to the
+descriptions of the Belus temple, and sufficiently near to the other
+ruin to make its original inclusion within the walls not absolutely
+impossible. Hence, ever since the attention of scholars was first
+directed to the subject of Babylonian topography, opinion has been
+divided on the question before us, and there have not been wanting
+persons to maintain that the Birs-i-Nimrud is the true temple of
+Belus, if not also the actual tower of Babel, whose erection led to the
+confusion of tongues and general dispersion of the sons of Adam.
+
+With this latter identification we are not in the present place
+concerned. With respect to the view that the Birs is the sanctury
+of Belus, it may be observed in the first place that the size of the
+building is very much smaller than that ascribed to the Belus temple;
+secondly, that it was dedicated to Kebo, who cannot be identified with
+Bel; and thirdly, that it is not really any part of the remains of the
+ancient capital, but belongs to an entirely distinct town. The cylinders
+found in the ruin by Sir Henry Eawlinson declare the building to have
+been "the wonder of Borsippa;" and Borsippa, according to all the
+ancient authorities, was a town by itself--an entirely distinct place
+from Babylon. To include Borsippa within the outer wall of Babylon is to
+run counter to all the authorities on the subject, the inscriptions, the
+native writer, Berosus, and the classical geographers generally. Nor
+is the position thus assigned to the Belus temple in harmony with the
+statement of Herodotus, which alone causes explorers to seek for the
+temple on the west side of the river. For, though the expression which
+this writer uses does not necessarily mean that the temple was in the
+exact centre of one of the two divisions of the town, it certainly
+implies that it lay towards the middle of one division--well within
+it--and not upon its outskirts. It is indeed inconceivable that the
+main sanctuary of the place, where the kings constantly offered their
+worship, should have been nine or ten miles from the palace! The
+distance between the Amran mound and Babil, which is about two miles, is
+quite as great as probability will allow us to believe existed between
+the old residence of the kings and the sacred shrine to which they were
+in the constant habit of resorting.
+
+Still there remain as objections to the identification of the great
+temple with the Babil mound the two arguments already noticed. The Babil
+mound has no appearance of stages such as the Birs presents, nor has it
+even a pyramidical shape. It is a huge platform with a nearly level
+top, and sinks, rather than rises, in the centre. What has become, it is
+asked, of the seven upper stages of the great Belus tower, if this ruin
+represents it? Whither have they vanished? How is it that in crumbling
+down they have not left something like a heap towards the middle? To
+this it may be replied that the destruction of the Belus tower has not
+been the mere work of the elements--it was violently broken down either
+by Xerxes, or by some later king, who may have completely removed all
+the upper stages. Again, it has served as a quarry to the hunters after
+bricks for more than twenty centuries; so that it is only surprising
+that it still retains so much of its original shape. Further, when
+Alexander entered Babylon more than 2000 years ago 10,000 men were
+employed for several weeks in clearing away the rubbish and laying bare
+the foundations of the building. It is quite possible that a conical
+mass of crumbled brick may have been removed from the top of the mound
+at this time.
+
+The difficulty remains that the Babil mound is on the same side of the
+Euphrates with the ruins of the Great Palace, whereas Herodotus makes
+the two buildings balance each other, one on the right and the other
+on the left bank of the stream. Now here it is in the first place to
+be observed that Herodotus is the only writer who does this. No other
+ancient author tells us anything of the relative situation of the two
+buildings. We have thus nothing to explain but the bald statement of a
+single writer--a writer no doubt of great authority, but still one not
+wholly infallible. We might say, then, that Herodotus probably made a
+mistake--that his memory failed him in this instance, or that he mistook
+his notes on the subject. Or we may explain his error by supposing that
+he confounded a canal from the Euphrates, which seems to have
+anciently passed between the Babil mound and the Kasr (called Shebil by
+Nebuchadnezzar) with the main stream. Or, finally, we may conceive
+that at the time of his visit the old palace lay in ruins, and that the
+palace of Nerig-lissar on the west bank of the stream was that of which
+he spoke. It is at any rate remarkable, considering how his authority is
+quoted as fixing the site of the Belus tower to the west bank, that, in
+the only place where he gives us any intimation of the side of the river
+on which he would have placed the tower, it is the east and not the west
+bank to which his words point. He makes those who saw the treachery of
+Zopyrus at the Belian and Kissian gates, which must have been to the
+east of the city, at once take refuge in the famous sanctuary, which he
+implies was in the vicinity.
+
+On the whole, therefore, it seems best to regard the Babil mound as the
+ziggurat of the great temple of Bel (called by some "the tomb of Belus")
+which the Persians destroyed and which Alexander intended to restore.
+With regard to the "hanging gardens," as they were an erection of less
+than half the size of the tower, it is not so necessary to suppose that
+distinct traces must remain of them. Their debris may be confused with
+those of the Kasr mound, on which one writer places them. Or they may
+have stood between the Kasr and Amran ruins, where are now some mounds
+of no great height. Or, possibly, their true site is in the modern El
+Homeira, the remarkable red mound which lies east of the Kasr at the
+distance of about 800 yards, and attains an elevation of sixty-five
+feet. Though this building is not situated upon the banks of the
+Euphrates, where Strabo and Diodorus place the gardens, it abuts upon
+a long low valley into which the Euphrates water seems formerly to have
+been introduced, and which may therefore have been given the name of
+the river. This identification is, however, it must be allowed, very
+doubtful.
+
+The two lines of mounds which enclose the long low valley above
+mentioned are probably the remains of an embankment which here confined
+the waters of a great reservoir. Nebuchadnezzar relates that he
+constructed a large reservoir, which he calls the Yapur-Shapu, in
+Babylon, and led water into it by means of an "eastern canal"--the
+Shebil. The Shebil canal, it is probable, left the Euphrates at some
+point between Babil and the Kasr, and ran across with a course nearly
+from west to east to the top of the Yapur-Shapu. This reservoir seems to
+have been a long and somewhat narrow parallelogram, running nearly from
+north to south, which shut in the great palace on the east and protected
+it like a huge moat. Most likely it communicated with the Euphrates
+towards the south by a second canal, the exact line of which cannot be
+determined. Thus the palatial residence of the Babylonian kings looked
+in both directions upon broad sheets of water, an agreeable prospect in
+so hot a climate; while, at the same time, by the assignment of a double
+channel to the Euphrates, its floods were the more readily controlled,
+and the city was preserved from those terrible inundations which in
+modern times have often threatened the existence of Baghdad.
+
+The other lines of mound upon the east side of the river may either be
+Parthian works, or (possibly) they may be the remains of some of those
+lofty walls whereby, according to Diodorus, the greater palace was
+surrounded and defended. The fragments of them which remain are so
+placed that if the lines were produced they would include all the
+principal ruins on the left bank except the Babil tower. They may
+therefore be the old defences of the Eastern palace; though, if so,
+it is strange that they run in lines which are neither straight nor
+parallel to those of the buildings enclosed by them. The irregularity
+of these ramparts is certainly a very strong argument in favor of
+their having been the work of a people considerably more barbarous and
+ignorant than the Babylonians. [PLATE XIV.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XIV.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. ARTS AND SCIENCES.
+
+
+That the Babylonians were among the most ingenious of all the nations of
+antiquity, and had made considerable progress in the arts and sciences
+before their conquest by the Persians, is generally admitted. The
+classical writers commonly parallel them with the Egyptians; and though,
+from their habit of confusing Babylon with Assyria, it is not always
+quite certain that the inhabitants of the more southern country--the
+real Babylonians--are meant, still there is sufficient reason to believe
+that, in the estimation of the Greeks and Romans, the people of
+the lower Euphrates were regarded as at least equally advanced in
+civilization with those of the Nile valley and the Delta. The branches
+of knowledge wherein by general consent the Babylonians principally
+excelled were architecture and astronomy. Of their architectural works
+two at least were reckoned among the "Seven Wonders," while others, not
+elevated to this exalted rank, were yet considered to be among the most
+curious and admirable of Oriental constructions. In astronomical science
+they were thought to have far excelled all other nations, and the first
+Greeks who made much progress in the subject confessed themselves the
+humble disciples of Babylonian teachers.
+
+In the account, which it is proposed to give, in this place, of
+Babylonian art and science, so far as they are respectively known to us,
+the priority will be assigned to art, which is an earlier product of
+the human mind than science; and among the arts the first place will be
+given to architecture, as at once the most fundamental of all the fine
+arts, and the one in which the Babylonians attained their greatest
+excellence. It is as builders that the primitive Chaldaean people, the
+progenitors of the Babylonians, first appear before us in history;
+and it was on his buildings that the great king of the later Empire,
+Nebuchadnezzar, specially prided himself. When Herodotus visited Babylon
+he was struck chiefly by its extraordinary edifices; and it is the
+account which the Greek writers gave of these erections that has, more
+than anything else, procured for the Babylonians the fame that they
+possess and the position that they hold among the six or seven leading
+nations of the old world.
+
+The architecture of the Babylonians seems to have culminated in the
+Temple. While their palaces, their bridges, their walls, even their
+private houses were remarkable, their grandest works, their most
+elaborate efforts, were dedicated to the honor and service, not of man,
+but of God. The Temple takes in Babylonia the same sort of rank which it
+has in Egypt and in Greece. It is not, as in Assyria, a mere adjunct
+of the palace. It stands by itself, in proud independence, as the
+great building of a city, or a part of a city; it is, if not absolutely
+larger, at any rate loftier and more conspicuous than any other edifice:
+it often boasts a magnificent adornment: the value of the offerings
+which are deposited in it is enormous: in every respect it rivals the
+palace, while in some it has a decided preeminence. It draws all eyes
+by its superior height and sometimes by its costly ornamentation; it
+inspires awe by the religious associations which belong to it; finally,
+it is a stronghold as well as a place of worship, and may furnish a
+refuge to thousands in the time of danger.
+
+A Babylonian temple seems to have stood commonly within a walled
+enclosure. In the case of the great temple of Belus at Babylon, the
+enclosure is said to have been a square of two stades each way, or,
+in other words, to have contained an area of thirty acres. The temple
+itself ordinarily consisted of two parts. Its most essential feature
+was a _ziggurat_, or tower, which was either square, or at any rate
+rectangular, and built in stages, the smallest number of such stages
+being two, and the largest known number seven. At the summit of the
+tower was probably in every case a shrine, or chapel, of greater or
+less size, containing altars and images. The ascent to this was on the
+outside of the towers, which were entirely solid; and it generally wound
+round the different faces of the towers, ascending them either by means
+of steps or by an inclined plane. Special care was taken with regard to
+the emplacement of the tower, either its sides or its angles being
+made exactly to confront the cardinal points. It is said that the
+temple-towers were used not merely for religious purposes but also as
+observatories, a use with a view to which this arrangement of their
+position would have been serviceable.
+
+Besides the shrine at the summit of the temple-tower or ziggurat, there
+was commonly at the base of the tower, or at any rate somewhere
+within the enclosure, a second shrine or chapel, in which the ordinary
+worshipper, who wished to spare himself the long ascent, made his
+offerings. Here again the ornamentation was most costly, lavish use
+being made of the precious metals for images and other furniture. Altars
+of different sizes were placed in the open air in the vicinity of this
+lower shrine, on which were sacrificed different classes of victims,
+gold being used occasionally as the material of the altar.
+
+The general appearance of a Babylonian temple, or at any rate of its
+chief feature, the tower or _ziggurat_, will be best gathered from a
+more particular description of a single building of the kind; and the
+building which it will be most convenient to take for that purpose is
+that remarkable edifice which strikes moderns with more admiration than
+any other now existing in the country, and which has also been more
+completely and more carefully examined than any other Babylonian
+ruins--the Birs-i-Nimrud, or ancient temple of Nebo at Borsippa. The
+plan of this tower has been almost completely made out from data still
+existing on the spot; and a restoration of the original building may be
+given with a near approach to certainty. [PLATE XV., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XV.]
+
+
+Upon a platform of crude brick, raised a few feet above the level of
+the alluvial plain, was built the first or basement stage of the great
+edifice, an exact square, 272 feet each way, and and probably twenty-six
+feet in perpendicular height. On this was erected a second stage of
+exactly the same height, but a square of only 230 feet; which however
+was not placed exactly in the middle of the first, but further from its
+northeastern than its south-western edge, twelve feet only from the one
+and thirty feet from the other. The third stage, which was imposed in
+the same way upon the second, was also twenty-six feet high, and was a
+square of 188 feet. Thus far the plan had been uniform and without any
+variety; but at this point an alteration took place. The height of the
+fourth stage, instead of being twenty-six, was only fifteen feet. In
+other respects however the old numbers were maintained; the fourth stage
+was diminished equally with the others, and was consequently a square of
+146 feet. It was emplaced upon the stage below it exactly as the former
+stages had been. The remaining stages probably followed the same rule
+of diminution--the fifth being a square of 104, the sixth one of 24, and
+the seventh one of 20 feet. Each of these stages had a height of
+fifteen feet. Upon the seventh or final stage was erected the shrine
+or tabernacle, which was probably also fifteen feet high, and about
+the same length and breadth. Thus the entire height of the building,
+allowing three feet for the crude brick platform, was 150 feet.
+
+The ornamentation of the edifice was chiefly by means of color. The
+seven stages represented the Seven Spheres, in which moved (according
+to ancient Chaldaean astronomy) the seven planets. To each planet fancy,
+partly grounding itself upon fact, had from of old assigned a peculiar
+tint or hue. The Sun was golden, the Moon silver; the distant Saturn,
+almost beyond the region of light, was black; Jupiter was orange the
+fiery Mars was red; Venus was a pale Naples yellow; Mercury a deep blue.
+The seven stages of the tower, like the seven walls of Ecbatana, gave
+a visible embodiment to these fancies. The basement stage, assigned to
+Saturn, was blackened by means of a coating of bitumen spread over the
+face of the masonry; the second stage, assigned to Jupiter, obtained the
+appropriate orange color by means of a facing of burnt bricks of that
+hue; the third stage, that of Mars, was made blood-red by the use
+of half-burnt bricks formed of a bright red clay; the fourth stage,
+assigned to the Sun, appears to have been actually covered with thin
+plates of gold; the fifth, the stage of Venus, received a pale yellow
+tint from the employment of bricks of that hue; the sixth, the sphere of
+Mercury, was given an azure tint by vitrifaction, the whole stage having
+been subjected to an intense heat after it was erected, whereby the
+bricks composing it were converted into a mass of blue slag; the seventh
+stage, that of the Moon, was probably, like the fourth, coated with
+actual plates of metal. Thus the building rose up in stripes of varied
+color, arranged almost as nature's cunning arranges hues in the rainbow,
+tones of red coming first, succeeded by a broad stripe of yellow, the
+yellow being followed by blue. Above this the glowing silvery summit
+melted into the bright sheen of the sky. [PLATE XVI.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XVI.]
+
+
+The faces of the various stages were, as a general rule, flat and
+unbroken, unless it were by a stair or ascent, of which however there
+has been found no trace. But there were two exceptions to this general
+plainness. The basement stage was indented with a number of shallow
+squared recesses, which seem to have been intended for a decoration. The
+face of the third stage was weak on account of its material, which was
+brick but half-burnt. Here then the builders, not for ornament's sake,
+but to strengthen their work, gave to the wall the support of a number
+of shallow buttresses. They also departed from their usual practice,
+by substituting for the rigid perpendicular of the other faces a slight
+slope outwards for some distance from the base. These arrangements,
+which are apparently part of the original work, and not remedies applied
+subsequently, imply considerable knowledge of architectural principles
+on the part of the builders, and no little ingenuity in turning
+architectural resources to account.
+
+With respect to the shrine which was emplaced upon the topmost, or
+silver stage, little is definitely known. It appears to have been of
+brick; and we may perhaps conclude from the analogy of the old Chaldaean
+shrines at the summits of towers, as well as from that of the Belus
+shrine at Babylon, that it was richly ornamented both within and
+without; but it is impossible to state anything as to the exact
+character of the ornamentation.
+
+The tower is to be regarded as fronting to the north-east, the coolest
+side and that least exposed to the sun's rays from the time that they
+become oppressive in Babylonia. On this side was the ascent, which
+consisted probably of abroad staircase extending along the whole front
+of the building. The side platforms (those towards the south-east and
+north-west)--at any rate of the first and second stages, probably
+of all--were occupied by a series of chambers abutting upon the
+perpendicular wall, as the priests' chambers of Solomon's temple abutted
+upon the side walls of that building. In these were doubtless lodged the
+priests and other attendants upon the temple service. The side chambers
+seem sometimes to have communicated with vaulted apartments within
+the solid mass of the structure, like those of which we hear in the
+structure supporting the "hanging gardens." It is possible that there
+may have been internal stair-cases, connecting the vaulted apartments
+of one stage with those of another; but the ruin has not yet been
+sufficiently explored for us to determine whether or not there was such
+communication.
+
+The great Tower is thought to have been approached through a vestibule
+of considerable size. Towards the north-east the existing ruin
+is prolonged in an irregular manner and it is imagined that this
+prolongation marks the site of a vestibule or propylaeum, originally
+distinct from the tower, but now, through the crumbling down of both
+buildings, confused with its ruins. As no scientific examination has
+been made of this part of the mound, the above supposition can only be
+regarded as a conjecture. Possibly the excrescence does not so much mark
+a vestibule as a second shrine, like that which is said to have existed
+at the foot of the Belus Tower at Babylon. Till, however, additional
+researches have been made, it is in vain to think of restoring the plan
+or elevation of this part of the temple.
+
+From the temples of the Babylonians we may now pass to their
+palaces--constructions inferior in height and grandeur, but covering a
+greater space, involving a larger amount of labor, and admitting of more
+architectural variety. Unfortunately the palaces have suffered from the
+ravages of time even more than the temples, and in considering their
+plan and character we obtain little help from the existing remains.
+Still, something may be learnt of them from this source, and where
+it fails we may perhaps be allowed to eke out the scantiness of our
+materials by drawing from the elaborate descriptions of Diodorus such
+points as have probability in their favor.
+
+The Babylonian palace, like the Assyrian, and the Susianian, stood upon
+a lofty mound or platform. This arrangement provided at once for safety,
+for enjoyment, and for health. It secured a pure air, freedom from the
+molestation of insects, and a position only assailable at a few points.
+The ordinary shape of the palace mound appears to have been square;
+its elevation was probably not less than fifty or sixty feet. It was
+composed mainly of sun-dried bricks, which however were almost certainly
+enclosed externally by a facing of burnt brick, and may have been
+further strengthened within by walls of the same material, which perhaps
+traversed the whole mound. The entire mass seems to have been carefully
+drained, and the collected waters were conveyed through subterranean
+channels to the level of the plain at the mound's base. The summit
+of the platform was no doubt paved, either with stone or burnt
+brick--mainly, it is probable, with the latter; since the former
+material was scarce, and though a certain number of stone pavement slabs
+have been found, they are too rare and scattered to imply anything like
+the general use of stone paving. Upon the platform, most likely towards
+the centre, rose the actual palace, not built (like the Assyrian
+palaces) of crude brick faced with a better material, but constructed
+wholly of the finest and hardest burnt brick laid in a mortar of extreme
+tenacity, with walls of enormous thickness, parallel to the sides of the
+mound, and meeting each other at right angles. Neither the ground-plan
+nor the elevation of a Babylonian palace can be given; nor can even
+a conjectural restoration of such a building be made, since the small
+fragment of Nebuchadnezzar's palace which remains has defied all
+attempts to reduce it to system. We can only say that the lines of
+the building were straight; that the walls rose, at any rate to a
+considerable height, without windows; and that the flatness of the
+straight line was broken by numerous buttressses and pilasters. We
+have also evidence that occasionally there was an ornamentation of the
+building, either within or without, by means of sculptured stone slabs,
+on which were represented figures of a small size, carefully wrought.
+The general ornamentation, however, external as well as internal, we
+may well believe to have been such as Diodorus states, colored
+representations on brick of war-scenes, and hunting-scenes, the
+counterparts in a certain sense of those magnificent bas-reliefs which
+everywhere clothed the walls of palaces in Assyria. It has been already
+noticed that abundant remains of such representations have been found
+upon the Kasr mound. [PLATE XV., Fig. 2.] They seem to have alternated
+with cuneiform inscriptions, in white on a blue ground, or else with a
+patterning of rosettes in the same colors.
+
+Of the general arrangement of the royal palaces, of their height, their
+number of stories, their roofing, and their lighting, we know absolutely
+nothing. The statement made by Herodotus, that many of the private
+houses in the town had three or four stories, would naturally lead us
+to suppose that the palaces were built similarly; but no ancient author
+tells us that this was so. The fact that the walls which exist, though
+of considerable height, show no traces of windows, would seem to imply
+that the lighting, as in Assyria, was from the top of the apartment,
+either from the ceiling, or from apertures in the part of the walls
+adjoining the ceiling. Altogether, such evidence as exists favors
+the notion that the Babylonian palace, in its character and general
+arrangements, resembled the Assyrian, with only the two differences,
+that Babylonian was wholly constructed of burnt brick, while in the
+Assyrian the sun-dried material was employed to a large extent; and,
+further, that in Babylonia the decoration of the walls was made, not
+by slabs of alabaster, which did not exist in the country, but
+mainly--almost entirely--by colored representations upon the
+brickwork.
+
+Among the adjuncts of the principal palace at Babylon was the remarkable
+construction known to the Greeks and Romans as "the Hanging Garden." The
+accounts which, Diodorus, Strabo, and Q. Curtius give of this structure
+are not perhaps altogether trustworthy; still, it is probable that they
+are in the main at least founded on fact. We may safely believe that a
+lofty structure was raised at Babylon on several tiers of arches, which
+supported at the top a mass of earth, wherein grew, not merely flowers
+and shrubs, but trees of a considerable size. The Assyrians had been in
+the habit of erecting structures of a somewhat similar kind, artificial
+elevations to support a growth of trees and shrubs; but they were
+content to place their garden at the summit of a single row of pillars
+or arches, and thus to give it a very moderate height. At Babylon the
+object was to produce an artificial imitation of a mountain. For this
+purpose several tiers of arches were necessary; and these appear to have
+been constructed in the manner of a Roman amphitheatre, one directly
+over another so that the outer wall formed from summit to base a single
+perpendicular line. Of the height of the structure various accounts are
+given, while no writer reports the number of the tiers of arches. Hence
+there are no sufficient data for a reconstruction of the edifice.
+
+Of the walls and bridge of Babylon, and of the ordinary houses of the
+people, little more is known than has been already reported in the
+general description of the capital. It does not appear that they
+possessed any very great architectural merit. Some skill was shown in
+constructing the piers of the bridge, which presented an angle to the
+current and then a curved line, along which the water slid gently.
+[PLATE XV., Fig. 3.] The loftiness of the houses, which were of three or
+four stories, is certainly surprising, since Oriental houses have very
+rarely more than two stories. Their construction, however, seems to have
+been rude; and the pillars especially--posts of palm, surrounded
+with wisps of rushes, and then plastered and painted--indicate a low
+condition of taste and a poor and coarse style of domestic architecture.
+
+The material used by the Babylonians in their constructions seems
+to have been almost entirely brick. Like the early Chaldaeans, they
+employed bricks of two kinds, both the ruder sun-dried sort, and the
+very superior kiln-baked article. The former, however, was only applied
+to platforms, and to the interior of palace mounds and of very thick
+walls, and was never made by the later people the sole material of a
+building. In every case there was at least a revetement of kiln-dried
+brick, while the grander buildings were wholly constructed of it. The
+baked bricks used were of several different qualities, and (within
+rather narrow limits) of different sizes. The finest quality of brick
+was yellow, approaching to our Stourbridge or fire-brick; another very
+hard kind was blue, approaching to black; the commoner and coarser
+sorts were pink or red, and these were sometimes, though rarely, but
+half-baked, in which case they were weak and friable. The shape was
+always square; and the dimensions varied between twelve and fourteen
+inches for the length and breadth, and between three and four inches
+for the thickness. [PLATE XVII., Fig. 1.] At the corners of buildings,
+half-bricks were used in the alternate rows, since otherwise the
+joinings must have been all one exactly over another. The bricks were
+always made with a mold, and were commonly stamped on one face with
+an inscription. They were, of course, ordinarily laid horizontally.
+Sometimes, however, there was a departure from this practice. Rows of
+bricks were placed vertically, separated from one another by single
+horizontal layers. This arrangement seems to have been regarded as
+conducing to strength, since it occurs only where there is an evident
+intention of supporting a weak construction by the use of special
+architectural expedients.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XVII.]
+
+
+The Babylonian builders made use of three different kinds of cement. The
+most indifferent was crude clay, or mud, which was mixed with chopped
+straw, to give it greater tenacity, and was applied in layers of
+extraordinary thickness. This was (it is probable) employed only where
+it was requisite that the face of the building should have a certain
+color. A cement superior to clay, but not of any very high value, unless
+as a preventive against damp, was bitumen, which was very generally used
+in basements and in other structures exposed to the action of water.
+Mortar, however, or lime cement was far more commonly employed than
+either of the others, and was of very excellent quality, equal indeed to
+the best Roman material.
+
+There can be no doubt that the general effect of the more ambitious
+efforts of the Babylonian architects was grand and imposing. Even now,
+in their desolation and ruin, their great size renders them impressive;
+and there are times and states of atmosphere under which they fill
+the beholder with a sort of admiring awe, akin to the feeling which is
+called forth by the contemplation of the great works of nature. Rude
+and inartificial in their idea and general construction, without
+architectural embellishment, without variety, without any beauty
+of form, they yet affect men by their mere mass, producing a direct
+impression of sublimity, and at the same time arousing a sentiment
+of wonder at the indomitable perseverance which from materials so
+unpromising could produce such gigantic results. In their original
+condition, when they were adorned with color, with a lavish display of
+the precious metals, with pictured representations of human life, and
+perhaps with statuary of a rough kind, they must have added to
+the impression produced by size a sense of richness and barbaric
+magnificence. The African spirit, which loves gaudy hues and costly
+ornament, was still strong among the Babylonians, even after they had
+been Semitized; and by the side of Assyria, her colder and more
+correct northern sister, Babylonia showed herself a true child of the
+south--rich, glowing, careless of the laws of taste, bent on provoking
+admiration by the dazzling brilliancy of her appearance.
+
+It is difficult to form a decided opinion as to the character of
+Babylonian mimetic art. The specimens discovered are so few, so
+fragmentary, and in some instances so worn by time and exposure, that
+we have scarcely the means of doing justice to the people in respect of
+this portion of their civilization. Setting aside the intaglios on
+seals and gems, which have such a general character of quaintness and
+grotesqueness, or at any rate of formality, that we can scarcely look
+upon many of them as the serious efforts of artists doing their best, we
+possess not half a dozen specimens of the mimetic art of the people in
+question. We have one sculpture in the round, one or two modelled clay
+figures, a few bas-reliefs, one figure of a king engraved on stone,
+and a few animal forms represented the same material. Nothing more has
+reached us but fragments of pictorial representations too small for
+criticism to pronounce upon, and descriptions of ancient writers too
+incomplete to be of any great value.
+
+The single Babylonian sculpture in the round which has come down to our
+times is the colossal lion standing over the prostrate figure of a
+man, which is still to be seen on the Kasr mound, as has been already
+mentioned. The accounts of travellers uniformly state that it is a work
+of no merit--either barbarously executed, or left unfinished by the
+sculptor--and probably much worn by exposure to the weather. A sketch
+made by a recent visitor and kindly communicated to the author, seems to
+show that, while the general form of the animal was tolerably well hit
+off, the proportions were in some respects misconceived, and the details
+not only rudely but incorrectly rendered. The extreme shortness of
+the legs and the extreme thickness of the tail are the most prominent
+errors; there is also great awkwardness in the whole representation of
+the beast's shoulder. The head is so mutilated that it is impossible
+to do more than conjecture its contour. Still the whole figure is not
+without a certain air of grandeur and majesty. [PLATE XVII., Fig. 3.]
+
+The human appears to be inferior to the animal form. The prostrate man
+is altogether shapeless, and can never, it would seem, have been very
+much better than it is at the present time.
+
+Modelled figures in clay are of rare occurrence. The best is one figured
+by Ker Porter, which represents a mother with a child in her arms. The
+mother is seated in a natural and not ungraceful attitude on a rough
+square pedestal. She is naked except for a hood, or mantilla, which
+covers the head, shoulders, and back, and a narrow apron which hangs
+down in front. She wears earrings and a bracelet. The child, which
+sleeps on her left shoulder, wears a shirt open in front, and a short
+but full tunic, which is gathered into plaits. Both figures are in
+simple and natural taste, but the limbs of the infant are somewhat too
+thin and delicate. The statuette is about three inches and a half high,
+and shows signs of having been covered with a tinted glaze. [PLATE
+XVII., Fig. 2.]
+
+The single figure of a king which we possess is clumsy and ungraceful.
+It is chiefly remarkable for the elaborate ornamentation of the
+head-dress and the robes, which have a finish equal to that of the best
+Assyrian specimens. The general proportions are not bad; but the form is
+stiff, and the drawing of the right hand is peculiarly faulty, since it
+would be scarcely possible to hold arrows in the manner represented.
+[PLATE XVIII., Fig. 2.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VXIII.]
+
+
+The engraved animal forms have a certain amount of merit. The figure
+of a dog sitting, which is common on the "black stones," is drawn with
+spirit; [PLATE XVIII., Fig. 1.] and a bird, sometimes regarded as a
+cock, but more resembling a bustard, is touched with a delicate hand,
+and may be pronounced superior to any Assyrian representation of the
+feathered tribe. [PLATE XVIII., Fig. 3.] The hound on a bas-relief,
+given in the first volume of this work, is also good; and the cylinders
+exhibit figures of goats, cows, deer, and even monkeys, which are
+truthful and meritorious. [PLATE XIX., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XIX.]
+
+
+It has been observed that the main characteristic of the engravings
+on gems and cylinders, considered as works of mimetic art, is their
+quaintness and grotesqueness. A few specimens, taken almost at random
+from the admirable collection of M. Felix Lajard, will sufficiently
+illustrate this feature. In one the central position is occupied by
+a human figure whose left arm has two elbow-joints, while towards the
+right two sitting figures threaten one another with their fists, in the
+upper quarter, and in the lower two nondescript animals do the same with
+their jaws. [PLATE XVIII., Fig. 4.] The entire drawing of this design
+seems to be intentionally rude. The faces of the main figures are
+evidently intended to be ridiculous; and the heads of the two animals
+are extravagantly grotesque. On another cylinder three nondescript
+animals play the principal part. One of them is on the point of taking
+into his mouth the head of a man who vainly tries to escape by flight.
+Another, with the head of a pike, tries to devour the third, which has
+the head of a bird and the body of a goat. This kind intention seems to
+be disputed by a naked man with a long beard, who seizes the fish-headed
+monster with his right hand, and at the same time administers from
+behind a severe kick with his right foot. The heads of the three main
+monsters, the tail and trousers of the principal one, and the whole of
+the small figure in front of the flying man, are exceedingly quaint, and
+remind one of the pencil of Fuseli. [PLATE XIX., Fig. 3.] The third of
+the designs approaches nearly to the modern caricature. It is a drawing
+in two portions. The upper line of figures represents a procession of
+worshippers who bear in solemn state their offerings to a god. In the
+lower line this occupation is turned to a jest. Nondescript animals
+bring with a serio-comic air offerings which consist chiefly of game,
+while a man in a mask seeks to steal away the sacred tree from the
+temple wherein the scene is enacted. [PLATE XIX., Fig. 4.]
+
+It is probable that the most elaborate and most artistic of the
+Babylonian works of art were of a kind which has almost wholly perished.
+What bas-relief was to the Assyrian, what painting is to moderns, that
+enamelling upon brick appears to have been to the people of Babylon. The
+mimetic power, which delights in representing to itself the forms and
+actions of men, found a vent in this curious byway of the graphic
+art; and the images of the Chaldaeans, portrayed upon the wall, with
+vermilion, and other hues, formed the favorite adornment of palaces and
+public buildings, at once employing the artist, gratifying the taste of
+the native connoisseur, and attracting the admiration of the foreigner.
+
+The artistic merit of these works can only be conjectured. The
+admiration of the Jews, or even that of Diodorus, who must be viewed
+here as the echo of Ctesias, is no sure test; for the Jews were a people
+very devoid of true artistic appreciation; and Ctesias was bent on
+exaggerating the wonders of foreign countries to the Greeks. The fact of
+the excellence of Assyrian art at a somewhat earlier date lends however
+support to the view that the wall-painting of the Babylonians had some
+real artistic excellence. We can scarcely suppose that there was any
+very material difference, in respect of taste and aesthetic power,
+between the two cognate nations, or that the Babylonians under
+Nebuchadnezzar fell very greatly short of the Assyrians under
+Asshur-bani-pal. It is evident that the same subjects--war scenes and
+hunting scenes--approved themselves to both people; and it is likely
+that their treatment was not very different. Even in the matter
+of color, the contrast was not sharp nor strong; for the Assyrians
+partially colored their bas-reliefs.
+
+Tho tints chiefly employed by the Babylonians in their colored
+representations were white, blue, yellow, brown, and black. The blue was
+of different shades, sometimes bright and deep, sometimes exceedingly
+pale. The yellow was somewhat dull, resembling our yellow ochre. The
+brown was this same hue darkened. In comparatively rare instances the
+Babylonians made use of a red, which they probably obtained with some
+difficulty. Objects were colored, as nearly as possible, according to
+their natural tints--water a light blue, ground yellow, the shafts of
+spears black, lions a tawny brown, etc. No attempt was made to shade
+the figures or the landscape, much less to produce any general effect
+by means of _chiaroscuro_; but the artist trusted for his effect to
+a careful delineation of forms, and a judicious arrangement of simple
+hues.
+
+Considerable metallurgic knowledge and skill were shown in the
+composition of the pigments, and the preparation and application of
+the glaze wherewith they are covered. The red used was a sub-oxide of
+copper; the yellow was sometimes oxide of iron, sometimes antimoniate of
+lead--the Naples yellow of modern artists; the blue was either cobalt or
+oxide of copper; the white was oxide of tin. Oxide of load was added in
+some cases, not as a coloring matter, but as a flux, to facilitate the
+fusion of the glaze. In other cases the pigment used was covered with a
+vitreous coat of an alkaline silicate of alumina.
+
+The pigments were not applied to an entirely flat surface. Prior to the
+reception of the coloring matter and the glaze, each brick was modelled
+by the hand, the figures being carefully traced out, and a slight
+elevation given to the more important objects. A very low bas-relief was
+thus produced, to which the colors were subsequently applied, and the
+brick was then baked in the furnace.
+
+It is conjectured that the bricks were not modelled singly and
+separately. A large mass of clay was (it is thought) taken, sufficient
+to contain a whole subject, or at any rate a considerable portion of
+a subject. On this the modeller made out his design in low relief. The
+mass of clay was then cut up into bricks, and each brick was taken and
+painted separately with the proper colors, after which they were all
+placed in the furnace and baked. When baked, they were restored to their
+original places in the design, a thin layer of the finest mortar serving
+to keep them in place.
+
+From the mimetic art of the Babylonians, and the branches of knowledge
+connected with it, we may now pass to the purely mechanical arts--as the
+art by which hard stones were cut, and those of agriculture, metallurgy,
+pottery, weaving, carpet-making, embroidery, and the like.
+
+The stones shaped, bored, and engraved by Babylonian artisans were
+not merely the softer and more easily worked kinds, as alabaster,
+serpentine, and lapis-lazuli, but also the harder sorts-cornelian,
+agate, quartz, jasper, sienite, loadstone, and green felspar or
+amazon-stone. These can certainly not have been cut without emery, and
+scarcely without such devices as rapidly revolving points, or discs, of
+the kind used by modern lapidaries. Though the devices are in general
+rude, the work is sometimes exceedingly delicate, and implies a complete
+mastery over tools and materials, as well as a good deal of artistic
+power. As far as the mechanical part of the art goes, the Babylonians
+may challenge comparison with the most advanced of the nations of
+antiquity; they decidedly excel the Egyptians, and fall little, if at
+all, short of the Greeks and Romans.
+
+The extreme minuteness of the work in some of the Babylonian seals and
+gems raises a suspicion that they must have been engraved by the help of
+a powerful magnifying-glass. A lens has been found in Assyria; and there
+is much reason to believe that the convenience was at least as well
+known in the lower country. Glass was certainly in use, and was cut into
+such shapes as were required. It is at any rate exceedingly likely that
+magnifying-glasses, which were undoubtedly known to the Greeks in the
+time of Aristophanes, were employed by the artisans of Babylon during
+the most flourishing period of the Empire.
+
+Of Babylonian metal-work we have scarcely any direct means of judging.
+The accounts of ancient authors imply that the Babylonians dealt freely
+with the material, using gold and silver for statues, furniture, and
+utensils, bronze for gates and images, and iron sometimes for the
+latter. We may assume that they likewise employed bronze and iron for
+tools and weapons, since those metals were certainly so used by the
+Assyrians. Lead was made of service in building; where iron was also
+employed, if great strength was needed. The golden images are said to
+have been sometimes solid, in which case we must suppose them to have
+been cast in a mold; but undoubtedly in most cases the gold was a mere
+external covering, and was applied in plates, which were hammered into
+shape upon some cheaper substance below. Silver was no doubt used
+also in plates, more especially when applied externally to walls, or
+internally to the woodwork of palaces; but the silver images, ornamental
+figures, and utensils of which we hear, were most probably solid. The
+bronze works must have been remarkable. We are told that both the town
+and the palace gates were of this material, and it is implied that the
+latter were too heavy to be opened in the ordinary manner. Castings
+on an enormous scale would be requisite for such purposes; and the
+Babylonians must thus have possessed the art of running into a single
+mold vast masses of metal. Probably the gates here mentioned were
+solid; but occasionally, it would seem, the Babylonians had gates of a
+different kind, composed of a number of perpendicular bars, united by
+horizontal ones above and below [as in PLATE XIX., Fig. 2.]. They had
+also, it would appear, metal gateways of a similar character.
+
+The metal-work of personal ornaments, such as bracelets and armlets, and
+again that of dagger handles, seems to have resembled the work of the
+Assyrians.
+
+Small figures in bronze were occasionally cast by the Babylonians, which
+were sometimes probably used as amulets, while perhaps more generally
+they wore mere ornaments of houses, furniture, and the like. Among these
+may be noticed figures of dogs in a sitting posture, much resembling the
+dog represented among the constellations, figures of men, grotesque
+in character, and figures of monsters. An interesting specimen, which
+combines a man and a monster, was found by Sir R. Ker Porter at Babylon.
+[PLATE XX., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XX.]
+
+
+The pottery of the Babylonians was of excellent quality, and is scarcely
+to be distinguished from the Assyrian, which it resembles alike in form
+and in material. The bricks of the best period were on the whole better
+than any used in the sister country, and may compare for hardness and
+fineness with the best Roman. The earthenware is of a fine terra-cotta,
+generally of a light red color, and slightly baked, but occasionally of
+a yellow hue, with a tinge of green. It consists of cups, jars, vases,
+and other vessels. They appear to have been made upon the wheel, and
+are in general unornamented. From representations upon the cylinders, it
+appears that the shapes were often elegant. Long and narrow vases with
+thin necks seem to have been used for water vessels; these had rounded
+or pointed bases, and required therefore the support of a stand. Thin
+jugs were also in use, with slight elegant handles. It is conjectured
+that sometimes modelled figures may have been introduced at the sides as
+handles to the vases; but neither the cylinders nor the extant remains
+confirm this supposition. The only ornamentation hitherto observed
+consists in a double band which seems to have been carried round some of
+the vases in an incomplete spiral. The vases sometimes have two handles;
+but they are plain and small, adding nothing to the beauty of the
+vessels. Occasionally the whole vessel is glazed with a rich blue color.
+[PLATE XX., Fig. 3.]
+
+The Babylonians certainly employed glass for vessels for a small size.
+They appear not to have been very skilful blowers, since their bottles
+are not unfrequently misshappen. [PLATE XX., Fig. 3.] They generally
+stained their glass with, some coloring matter, and occasionally
+ornamented it with a ribbing. Whether they were able to form masses
+of glass of any considerable size, whether they used it, like the
+Egyptians, for beads and bugles, or for mosaics, is uncertain. If we
+suppose a foundation in fact for Pliny's story of the great emerald (?)
+presented by a king of Babylon to an Egyptian Pharaoh, we must conclude
+that very considerable masses of glass were produced by the Babylonians,
+at least occasionally; for the said emerald, which can scarcely have
+been of any other material, was four cubits (or six feet) long and three
+cubits (or four and a half feet) broad.
+
+Of all the productions of the Babylonians none obtained such, high
+repute in ancient times as their textile fabrics. Their carpets
+especially were of great celebrity, and were largely exported to foreign
+countries. They were dyed of various colors, and represented objects
+similar to those found on the gems, as griffins and such like monsters.
+Their position in the ancient world may be compared to that which is
+now borne by the fabrics of Turkey and Persia, which are deservedly
+preferred to those of all other countries.
+
+Next to their carpets, the highest, character was borne by their
+muslins. Formed of the finest cotton, and dyed of the most brilliant
+colors, they seemed to the Oriental the very best possible material for
+dress. The Persian kings preferred them for their own wear; and they
+had an early fame in foreign countries at a considerable distance from
+Babylonia. It is probable that they were sometimes embroidered with
+delicate patterns, such as those which may be seen on the garments of
+the early Babylonian kings.
+
+Besides woollen and cotton fabrics, the Babylonians also manufactured
+a good deal of linen cloth, the principal seat of the manufacture being
+Borsippa. This material was produced, it is probable, chiefly for home
+consumption, long linen robes being generally worn by the people.
+
+From the arts of the Babylonians we may now pass to their science--an
+obscure subject, but one which possesses more than common interest. If
+the classical writers were correct in their belief that Chaldaea was
+the birthplace of Astronomy, and that their own astronomical science was
+derived mainly from this quarter, it must be well worth inquiry what the
+amount of knowledge was which the Babylonians attained on the subject,
+and what were the means whereby they made their discoveries.
+
+On the broad flat plains of Chaldsea, where the entire celestial
+hemisphere is continually visible to every eye, and the clear
+transparent atmosphere shows night after night the heavens gemmed with
+countless stars, each shining with a brilliancy unknown in our moist
+northern climes, the attention of man was naturally turned earlier than
+elsewhere to these luminous bodies, and attempts were made to grasp, and
+reduce to scientific form, the array of facts which nature presented to
+the eye in a confused and tangled mass. It required no very long course
+of observation to acquaint men with a truth, which at first sight none
+would have suspected--namely, that the luminous points whereof the sky
+was full were of two kinds, some always maintaining the same position
+relatively to one another, while others were constantly changing their
+places, and as it were wandering about the sky. It is certain that the
+Babylonians at a very early date distinguished from the fixed stars
+those remarkable five, which, from their wandering propensities, the
+Greeks called the "planets," and which are the only erratic stars that
+the naked eye, or that even the telescope, except at a very high power,
+can discern. With these five they were soon led to class the Moon, which
+was easily observed to be a wandering luminary, changing her place among
+the fixed stars with remarkable rapidity. Ultimately, it came to be
+perceived that the Sun too rose and set at different parts of the year
+in the neighborhood of different constellations, and that consequently
+the great luminary was itself also a wanderer, having a path in the sky
+which it was possible, by means of careful observation, to mark out.
+
+But to do this, to mark out with accuracy the courses of the Sun and
+Moon among the fixed stars, it was necessary, or at least convenient, to
+arrange the stars themselves into groups. Thus, too, and thus only, was
+it possible to give form and order to the chaotic confusion in which
+the stars seem at first sight to lie, owing to the irregularity of
+their intervals, the difference in their magnitude, and their apparent
+countlessness. The most uneducated eye, when raised to the starry
+heavens on a clear night, fixes here and there upon groups of stars: in
+the north, Cassiopeia, the Great Bear, the Pleiades--below the Equator,
+the Southern Cross--must at all times have impressed those who beheld
+them with a certain sense of unity. Thus the idea of a "constellation"
+is formed; and this once done, the mind naturally progresses in the same
+direction, and little by little the whole sky is mapped out into certain
+portions or districts to which names are given--names taken from some
+resemblance, real or fancied, between the shapes of the several groups
+and objects familiar to the early observers. This branch of practical
+astronomy is termed "uranography" by moderns; its utility is very
+considerable; thus and thus only can we particularize the individual
+stars of which we wish to speak; thus and thus only can we retain in
+our memory the general arrangement of the stars and their positions
+relatively to each other.
+
+There is reason to believe that in the early Babylonian astronomy
+the subject of uranography occupied a prominent place. The Chaldaean
+astronomers not only seized on and named those natural groups which
+force themselves upon the eye, but artificially arranged the whole
+heavens into a certain number of constellations or asterisms. The very
+system of uranography which maintains itself to the present day on our
+celestial globes and maps, and which is still acknowledged--albeit under
+protest--in the nomenclature of scientific astronomers, came in all
+probability from this source, reaching us from the Arabians, who took
+it from the Greeks who derived it from the Babylonians. The Zodiacal
+constellations at any rate, or those through which the sun's course lies
+would seem to have had this origin; and many of them may be distinctly
+recognized on Babylonian monuments which are plainly of a stellar
+character. The accompanying representation, taken from a conical black
+stone in the British Museum [PLATE XX., Fig. 2.], and belonging to the
+twelfth century before our era, is not perhaps, strictly speaking, a
+zodiac, but it is almost certainly an arrangement of constellations
+according to the forms assigned them in Babylonian uranography. [PLATE
+XXI.] The Ram, the Bull, the Scorpion, the Serpent, the Dog, the Arrow,
+the Eagle or Vulture may all be detected on the stone in question, as
+may similar forms variously arranged on other similar monuments.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXI.]
+
+
+The Babylonians called the Zodiacal constellations the "Houses of the
+Sun," and distinguished from them another set of asterisms, which they
+denominated the "Houses of the Moon." As the Sun and Moon both move
+through the sky in nearly the same plane, the path of the Moon merely
+crossing and recrossing that of the Sun, but never diverging from it
+further than a few degrees, it would seem that these "Houses of the
+Moon," or lunar asterisms, must have been a division of the Zodiacal
+stars different from that employed with respect to the sun, either
+in the number of the "Houses," or in the point of separation between
+"House" and "House."
+
+The Babylonians observed and calculated eclipses; but their power of
+calculation does not seem to have been based on scientific knowledge,
+nor to have necessarily implied sound views as to the nature of eclipses
+or as to the size, distance, and real motions of the heavenly bodies.
+The knowledge which they possessed was empirical. Their habits of
+observation led them to discover the period of 223 lunations or 18 years
+10 days, after which eclipses--especially those of the the moon--recur
+again in the same order. Their acquaintance with this cycle would enable
+them to predict lunar eclipses with accuracy for many ages, and solar
+eclipses without much inaccuracy for the next cycle or two.
+
+That the Babylonians carefully noted and recorded eclipses is witnessed
+by Ptolemy, who had access to a continuous series of such observations
+reaching back from his own time to B.C. 747. Five of these--all eclipses
+of the moon--were described by Hipparchus from Babylonian sources, and
+are found to answer all the requirements of modern science. They belong
+to the years B.C. 721, 720, 621, and 523. One of them, that of B.C. 721,
+was total at Babylon. The others were partial, the portion of the moon
+obscured varying from one digit to seven.
+
+There is no reason to think that the observation of eclipses by the
+Babylonians commenced with Nabonassar. Ptolemy indeed implies that the
+series extant in his day went no higher; but this is to be accounted for
+by the fact, which Berosus mentioned, that Nabonassar destroyed, as
+far as he was able, the previously existing observations, in order that
+exact chronology might commence with his own reign.
+
+Other astronomical achievements of the Babylonians were the following.
+They accomplished a catalogue of the fixed stars, of which the Greeks
+made use in compiling their stellar tables. They observed and recorded
+their observations upon occultations of the planets by the sun and moon.
+They invented the _gnomon_ and the _polos_, two kinds of sundial, by
+means of which they were able to measure time during the day, and to
+fix the true length of the solar day, with sufficient accuracy. They
+determined correctly within a small fraction the length of the synodic
+revolution of the moon. They knew that the true length of the solar
+year was 365 days and a quarter, nearly. They noticed comets, which they
+believed to be permanent bodies, revolving in orbits like those of
+the planets, only greater. They ascribed eclipses of the sun to the
+interposition of the moon between the sun and the earth. They had
+notions not far from the truth with respect to the relative distance
+from the earth of the sun, moon, and planets. Adopting, as was natural,
+a geocentric system, they decided that the Moon occupied the position
+nearest to the earth; that beyond the Moon was Mercury, beyond Mercury
+Venus, beyond Venus Mars, beyond Mars Jupiter, and beyond Jupiter, in
+the remotest position of all, Saturn. This arrangement was probably
+based upon a knowledge, more or less exact, of the periodic times which
+the several bodies occupy in their (real or apparent) revolutions. From
+the difference in the times the Babylonians assumed a corresponding
+difference in the size of the orbits, and consequently a greater or less
+distance from the common centre.
+
+Thus far the astronomical achievements of the Babylonians rest upon
+the express testimony of ancient writers--a testimony confirmed in many
+respects by the monuments already deciphered. It is suspected that, when
+the astronomical tablets which exist by hundreds in the British Museum
+come to be thoroughly understood, it will be found that the acquaintance
+of the Chaldaean sages with astronomical phenomena, if not also with
+astronomical laws, went considerably beyond the point at which we should
+place it upon the testimony of the Greek and Roman writers. There is
+said to be distinct evidence that they observed the four satellites of
+Jupiter, and strong reason to believe that they were acquainted likewise
+with the seven satellites of Saturn. Moreover, the general laws of the
+movements of the heavenly bodies seem to have been so far known to
+them that they could state by anticipation the position of the various
+planets throughout the year.
+
+In order to attain the astronomical knowledge which they seem to have
+possessed, the Babylonians must undoubtedly have employed a certain
+number of instruments. The invention of sun-dials, as already observed,
+is distinctly assigned to them. Besides these contrivances for measuring
+time during the day, it is almost certain that they must have possessed
+means of measuring time during the night. The clepsydra, or water-clock,
+which was in common use among the Greeks as early as the fifth century
+before our era, was probably introduced into Greece from the East,
+and is likely to have been a Babylonian invention. The astrolabe, an
+instrument for measuring the altitude of stars above the horizon, which
+was known to Ptolemy, may also reasonably be assigned to them. It has
+generally been assumed that they were wholly ignorant of the telescope.
+But if the satellites of Saturn are really mentioned, as it is thought
+that they are, upon some of the tablets, it will follow--strange as it
+may seem to us--that the Babylonians possessed optical instruments of
+the nature of telescopes, since it is impossible, even in the clear and
+vapor-loss sky of Chaldaea, to discern the faint moons of that distant
+planet without lenses. A lens, it must be remembered, with a fair
+magnifying power, has been discovered among the Mesopotamian ruins.
+A people ingenious enough to discover the magnifying-glass would be
+naturally led on to the invention of its opposite. When once lenses
+of the two contrary kinds existed, the elements of a telescope were in
+being. We could not assume from these data that the discovery was made;
+but if it shall ultimately be substantiated that bodies invisible to the
+naked eye were observed by the Babylonians, we need feel no difficulty
+in ascribing to them the possession of some telescopic instrument.
+
+The astronomical zeal of the Babylonians was in general, it must be
+confessed, no simple and pure love of an abstract science. A school of
+pure astronomers existed among them; but the bulk of those who engaged
+in the study undoubtedly pursued it in the belief that the heavenly
+bodies had a mysterious influence, not only upon the seasons, but upon
+the lives and actions of men--an influence which it was possible to
+discover and to foretell by prolonged and careful observation. The
+ancient writers, Biblical and other, state this fact in the strongest
+way; and the extant astronomical remains distinctly confirm it.
+The great majority of the tablets are of an astrological character,
+recording the supposed influence of the heavenly bodies, singly, in
+conjunction, or in opposition, upon all sublunary affairs, from the fate
+of empires to the washing of hands or the paring of nails. The modern
+prophetical almanac is the legitimate descendant and the sufficient
+representative of the ancient Chaldee Ephemeris, which was just as
+silly, just as pretentious, and just as worthless.
+
+The Chaldee astrology was, primarily and mainly, genethlialogical.
+It inquired under what aspect of the heavens persons were born, or
+conceived, and, from the position of the celestial bodies at one or
+other of these moments, it professed to deduce the whole life and
+fortunes of the individual. According to Diodorus, it was believed
+that a particular star or constellation presided over the birth of each
+person, and thenceforward exercised over his life a special malign or
+benignant influence. But his lot depended, not on this star alone, but
+on the entire aspect of the heavens at a certain moment. To cast the
+horoscope was to reproduce this aspect, and then to read by means of it
+the individual's future.
+
+Chaldee astrology, was not, however, limited to genethlialogy. The
+Chaldaeans professed to predict from the stars such things as the
+changes of the weather, high winds and storms, great heats, the
+appearance of comets, eclipses, earthquakes, and the like. They
+published lists of luck and unlucky days, and tables showing what aspect
+of the heavens portended good or evil to particular countries. Curiously
+enough, it appears that they regarded their art as locally limited to
+the regions inhabited by themselves and their kinsmen, so that while
+they could boldly predict storm, tempest, failing or abundant crops,
+war, famine, and the like, for Syria, Babylonia, and Susiana, they could
+venture on no prophecies with respect to other neighboring lands, as
+Persia, Media, Armenia.
+
+A certain amount of real meteorological knowledge was probably mixed
+up with the Chaldaean astrology. Their calendars, like modern almanacs,
+boldly predicted the weather for fixed days in the year. They must
+also have been mathematicians to no inconsiderable extent, since their
+methods appear to have been geometrical. It is said that the Greek
+mathematicians often quoted with approval the works of their Chaldaean
+predecessors, Ciden, Naburianus, and Sudinus. Of the nature and extent
+of their mathematical acquirements, no account, however, can be given,
+since the writers who mention them enter into no details on the subject.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. MANNERS AND CUSTOMS.
+
+
+"Girded with girdles upon their loins, exceeding in dyed attire upon
+their heads, all of them princes to look to, after the manner of the
+Babylonians of Chaldaea, the land of their nativity."--Ezek. xxiii. 15.
+
+
+The manners and customs of the Babylonians, though not admitting of that
+copious illustration from ancient monuments which was found possible in
+the case of Assyria, are yet sufficiently known to us, either from the
+extant remains or from the accounts of ancient writers of authority, to
+furnish materials for a short chapter. Herodotus, Strabo, Diodorus, and
+Nicolas of Damascus, present us with many interesting traits of this
+somewhat singular people; the sacred writers contemporary with the acme
+of the nation add numerous touches; while the remains, though scanty,
+put distinctly and vividly before our eyes a certain number of curious
+details.
+
+Herodotus describes with some elaboration the costume of the Babylonians
+in his day. He tells us that they wore a long linen gown reaching down
+to their feet, a woollen gown or tunic above this, a short cloak or cape
+of a white color, and shoes like those of the Boeotians. Their hair they
+allowed to grow long, but confined it by a head-band or a turban; and
+they always carried a walking-stick with a carving of some kind on
+the handle. This portraiture, it is probable, applies to the richer
+inhabitants of the capital, and represents the Babylonian gentleman
+of the fifth century before our era, as he made his appearance in the
+streets of the metropolis.
+
+The cylinders seem to show that the ordinary Babylonian dress was
+less complicated. The worshipper who brings an offering to a god is
+frequently represented with a bare head, and wears apparently but
+one garment, a tunic generally ornamented with a diagonal fringe, and
+reaching from the shoulder to a little above the knee. The tunic is
+confined round the waist by a belt. [PLATE XXII., Fig. 1.] Richer
+worshippers, who commonly present a goat, have a fillet or headband, not
+a turban, round the head. They wear generally the same sort of tunic
+as the others; but over it they have a long robe, shaped like a modern
+dressing-gown, except that it has no sleeves, and does not cover the
+right shoulder. [PLATE XXII., Fig. 1.] In a few instances only we see
+underneath this open gown a long inner dress or robe, such as that
+described by Herodotus. [PLATE XXII., Fig. 2.] A cape or tippet of the
+kind which he describes is worn sometimes by a god, but is never seen,
+it is believed, in any representation of a mortal.
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXII.]
+
+
+The short tunic, worn by the poorer worshippers, is seen also in a
+representation (hereafter to be given) of hunters attacking a lion. A
+similar garment is worn by the man--probably a slave--who accompanies
+the dog, supposed to represent an Indian hound; and also by a warrior,
+who appears on one of the cylinders conducting six foreign captives.
+[PLATE XXII., Fig. 4.] There is consequently much reason to believe that
+such a tunic formed the ordinary costume of the common people, as it
+does at present of the common Arab inhabitants of the country. It left
+the arms and right shoulder bare, covering only the left. Below the belt
+it was not made like a frock but lapped over in front, being in fact
+not so much a garment as a piece of cloth wrapped round the body.
+Occasionally it is represented as patterned; but this is somewhat
+unusual. [PLATE XXII., Fig. 3.]
+
+In lieu of the long robe reaching to the feet, which seems to have
+been the ordinary costume of the higher classes, we observe sometimes
+a shorter, but still a similar garment--a sort of coat without sleeves,
+fringed down both sides, and reaching only a little below the knee. The
+worshippers who wear this robe have in most cases the head adorned with
+a fillet. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 1.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXIII.]
+
+
+It is unusual to find any trace of boots or shoes in the representations
+of Babylonians. A shoe patterned with a sort of check work was worn
+by the king; and soldiers seem to have worn a low boot in their
+expeditions. But with rare exceptions the Babylonians are represented
+with bare feet on the monuments; and if they commonly wore shoes in the
+time of Herodotus, we may conjecture that they had adopted the practice
+from the example of the Medes and Persians. A low boot, laced in front,
+was worn by the chiefs of the Susianians. Perhaps the "peculiar shoe" of
+the Babylonians was not very different. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 1.]
+
+The girdle was an essential feature of Babylonian costume, common to
+high and low, to the king and to the peasant. It was a broad belt,
+probably of leather, and encircled the waist rather high up. The warrior
+carried his daggers in it; to the common man it served the purpose of
+keeping in place the cloth which he wore round his body. According to
+Herodotus, it was also universal in Babylonia to carry a seal and a
+walking-stick.
+
+Special costumes, differing considerably from those hitherto described,
+distinguished the king and the priests. The king wore a long gown,
+somewhat scantily made, but reaching down to the ankles, elaborately
+patterned and fringed. Over this, apparently, he had a close-fitting
+sleeved vest, which came down to the knees, and terminated in a set of
+heavy tassels. The girdle was worn outside the outer vest, and in war
+the monarch carried also two cross-belts, which perhaps supported his
+quiver. The upper vest was, like the under one, richly adorned with
+embroidery. From it, or from the girdle, depended in front a single
+heavy tassel attached by a cord, similar to that worn by the early kings
+of Assyria.
+
+Tho tiara of the monarch was very remarkable. It was of great height,
+nearly cylindrical, but with a slight tendency to swell out toward the
+crown, which was ornamented with a row of feathers round its entire
+circumference. The space below was patterned with rosettes, sacred
+trees, and mythological figures. From the centre of the crown there rose
+above the feathers a projection resembling in some degree the projection
+which distinguishes the tiara of the Assyrian kings, the rounded, and
+not squared, at top. This head-dress, which has a heavy appearance, was
+worn low on the brow, and covered nearly all the back of the head. It
+can scarcely have been composed of a heaver material than cloth or felt.
+Probably it was brilliantly colored.
+
+The monarch wore bracelets, but (apparently) neither necklaces nor
+earrings. Those last are assigned by Nicolas of Damascus to a Babylonian
+governor; and they were so commonly used by the Assyrians that we
+can scarcely suppose them unknown to their kindred and neighbors. The
+Babylonian monuments, however, contain no traces of earrings as worn by
+men, and only a few doubtful ones of collars or necklaces; whence we
+may at any rate conclude that neither were worn at all generally.
+The bracelets which encircle the royal wrist resemble the most common
+bracelet of the Assyrians, consisting of a plain band, probably of
+metal, with a rosette in the centre.
+
+The dress of the priests was a long robe or gown, flounced and striped,
+over which they seem to have worn an open jacket of a similar character.
+A long scarf or riband depended from behind down their backs. They
+carried on their heads an elaborate crown or mitre, which is assigned
+also to many of the gods. In lieu of this mitre, we find sometimes,
+though rarely, a horned cap; and, in one or two instances, a mitre of a
+different kind. In all sacrificial and ceremonial acts the priests seem
+to have worn their heads covered. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 6.]
+
+On the subject of the Babylonian military costume our information is
+scanty and imperfect. In the time of Herodotus the Chaldaeans seem to
+have had the same armature as the Assyrians--namely, bronze helmets,
+linen breastplates, shields, spears, daggers, and maces or clubs; and,
+at a considerably earlier date, we find in Scripture much the same
+arms, offensive and defensive, assigned them. There is, however, one
+remarkable difference between the Biblical account and that given by
+Herodotus. The Greek historian says nothing of the use of bows by the
+Chaldaeans; while in Scripture the bow appears as their favorite weapon,
+that which principally renders them formidable. The monuments are on
+this point thoroughly in accordance with Scripture. The Babylonian king
+already represented carries a bow and two arrows. The soldier conducting
+captives has a bow an arrow, and a quiver. A monument of an earlier
+date, which is perhaps rather Proto-Chaldaean than pure Babylonian, yet
+which has certain Babylonian characteristics, makes the arms of a king
+a bow and arrow, a club (?), and a dagger. In the marsh fights of
+the Assyrians, where their enemies are probably Chaldaeans of the low
+country, the bow is the sole weapon which we see in use.
+
+The Babylonian bow nearly resembles the ordinary curved bow of the
+Assyrians. It has a knob at either extremity, over which the string
+passes, and is thicker towards the middle than at the two ends; the bend
+is slight, the length when strung less than four feet. [PLATE XXIII.,
+Fig. 2.] The length of the arrow is about three feet. It is carefully
+notched and feathered, and has a barbed point. The quiver, as
+represented in the Assyrian sculptures, has nothing remarkable about
+it; but the single extant Babylonian representation makes it terminate
+curiously with a large ornament resembling a spearhead. It is difficult
+to see the object of this appendage, which must have formed no
+inconsiderable addition to the weight of the quiver. [PLATE XXIII., Fig.
+3.]
+
+Babylonian daggers were short, and shaped like the Assyrian; but their
+handles were less elegant and less elaborately ornamented. They were
+worn in the girdle (as they are at the present day in all eastern
+countries) either in pairs or singly. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 3.]
+
+Other weapons of the Babylonians, which we may be sure they used in
+war, though the monuments do not furnish any proof of the fact, were the
+spear and the bill or axe. These weapons are exhibited in combination
+upon one of the most curious of the cylinders, where a lion is disturbed
+in his meal off an ox by two rustics, one of whom attacks him in front
+with a spear, while the other seizes his tail and assails him in the
+rear with an axe. [PI. XXIII., Fig. 5.] With the axe here represented
+may be compared another, which is found on a clay tablet brought from
+Sinkara, and supposed to belong to the early Chaldaean period.30 The
+Sinkara axe has a simple square blade: the axe upon the cylinder has a
+blade with long curved sides and a curved edge; while, to balance the
+weight of the blade, it has on the lower side three sharp spikes. The
+difference between the two implements marks the advance of mechanical
+art in the country between the time of the first and that of the fourth
+monarchy. [PLATE XXIII., Fig. 4.]
+
+Babylonian armies seem to have been composed, like Assyrian, of three
+elements--infantry, cavalry, and chariots. Of the chariots we appear
+to have one or two representations upon the cylinders, but they are too
+rudely carved to be of much value. It is not likely that the chariots
+differed much either in shape or equipment from the Assyrian, unless
+they were, like those of Susiana, ordinarily drawn by mules. A peculiar
+car, four-wheeled, and drawn by four horses, with an elevated platform
+in front and a seat behind for the driver, which the cylinders
+occasionally exhibit, is probably not a war-chariot, but a sacred
+vehicle, like the tensa or thensa of the Romans. [PLATE XXIV., Fig. 2.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXIV.]
+
+
+The Prophet Habakkuk evidently considered the cavalry of the Babylonians
+to be their most formidable arm. "They are terrible and dreadful," he
+said; "from them shall proceed judgment and captivity; their horses
+also are swifter than the leopards, and are more fierce than the evening
+wolves; and their horsemen shall spread themselves, and their horsemen
+shall come from far; they shall fly, as the eagle that hasteth to
+eat." Similarly Ezekiel spoke of the "desirable young men, captains
+and rulers, great lords and renowned; all of them riding upon horses,"
+Jeremiah couples the horses with the chariots, as if he doubted whether
+the chariot force or the cavalry were the more to be dreaded. "Behold,
+he shall come up as clouds, and his chariot shall be as a whirlwind; his
+horses are swifter than eagles. Woe unto us! for we are spoiled." In the
+army of Xerxes the Babylonians seem to have served only on foot, which
+would imply that they were not considered in that king's time to furnish
+such good cavalry as the Persians, Medes, Cissians, Indians, and
+others, who sent contingents of horse. Darius, however, in the Behistun
+inscription, speaks of Babylonian horsemen; and the armies which overran
+Syria, Palestine, and Egypt, seem to have consisted mainly of horse.
+The Babylonian armies, like the Persian, were vast hosts, poorly
+disciplined, composed not only of native troops, but of contingents
+from the subject nations, Cissians, Elamites, Shuhites, Assyrians, and
+others. They marched with vast noise and tumult, spreading themselves
+far and wide over the country which they were invading, plundering
+and destroying on all sides. If their enemy would consent to a pitched
+battle, they were glad to engage with him; but, more usually, their
+contests resolved themselves into a succession of sieges, the bulk of
+the population attacked retreating to their strongholds, and offering
+behind walls a more or less protracted resistance. The weaker towns were
+assaulted with battering-rams; against the stronger, mounds were raised,
+reaching nearly to the top of the walls, which were then easily scaled
+or broken down. A determined persistence in sieges seems to have
+characterized this people, who did not take Jerusalem till the third,
+nor Tyre till the fourteenth year.
+
+In expeditions it sometimes happened that a question arose as to the
+people or country next to be attacked. In such cases it appears that
+recourse was had to divination, and the omens which were obtained
+decided whither the next effort of the invader should be directed.
+Priests doubtless accompanied the expeditions to superintend the
+sacrifices and interpret them on such occasions. According to Diodorus,
+the priests in Babylonia were a caste, devoted to the service of the
+native deities and the pursuits of philosophy, and held in high honor by
+the people. It was their business to guard the temples and serve at
+the altars of the gods, to explain dreams and prodigies, to understand
+omens, to read the warnings of the stars, and to instruct men how to
+escape the evils threatened in those various ways, by purifications,
+incantations, and sacrifices. They possessed a traditional knowledge
+which had come down from father to son, and which none thought of
+questioning. The laity looked up to them as the sole possessors of a
+recondite wisdom of the last importance to humanity.
+
+With these statements of the lively but inaccurate Sicilian those of the
+Book of Daniel are very fairly, if not entirely, in accordance. A class
+of "wise men" is described as existing at Babylon, foremost among whom
+are the Chaldaeans; they have a special "learning," and (as it would
+seem) a special "tongue;" their business is to expound dreams and
+prodigies; they are in high favor with the monarch, and are often
+consulted by him. This body of "wise men" is subdivided into four
+classes--"Chaldaeans, magicians, astrologers, and soothsayers"--a
+subdivision which seems to be based upon difference of occupation. It is
+not distinctly stated that they are priests; nor does it seem that
+they were a caste; for Jews are enrolled among their number, and Daniel
+himself is made chief of the entire body. But they form a very distinct
+order, and constitute a considerable power in the state; they have
+direct communication with the monarch, and they are believed to possess,
+not merely human learning, but a supernatural power of predicting future
+events. High civil office is enjoyed by some of their number.
+
+Notices agreeing with these, but of less importance, are contained in
+Herodotus and Strabo. Herodotus speaks of the Chaldaeans as "priests;"
+Strabo says that they were "philosophers," who occupied themselves
+principally in astronomy. The latter writer mentions that they were
+divided into sects, who differed one from another in their doctrines. He
+gives the names of several Chaldaeans whom the Greek mathematicians
+were in the habit of quoting. Among them is a Seleucus, who by his name
+should be a Greek.
+
+From these various authorities we may assume that there was in Babylon,
+as in Egypt, and in later Persia, a distinct priest class, which enjoyed
+high consideration. It was not, strictly speaking, a caste. Priests
+may have generally brought up their sons to the occupation; but other
+persons, even foreigners (and if foreigners, then _a fortiori_ natives),
+could be enrolled in the order, and attain its highest privileges.
+It was at once a sacerdotal and a learned body. It had a literature,
+written in peculiar language, which its members were bound to study.
+This language and this literature were probably a legacy from the old
+times of the first (Turano-Cushite) kingdom, since even in Assyria it
+is found that the literature was in the main Turanian, down to the very
+close of the empire. Astronomy, astrology, and mythology were no doubt
+the chief subjects which the priests studied; but history, chronology,
+grammar, law, and natural science most likely occupied some part of
+their attention. Conducting everywhere the worship of the gods, they
+were of course scattered far and wide through the country; but they had
+certain special seats of learning, corresponding perhaps in some sort to
+our universities, the most famous of which were Erech or Orchoe (Warka),
+and Borsippa, the town represented by the modern Birs-i-Nimrud. They
+were diligent students, not wanting in ingenuity, and not content merely
+to hand down the wisdom of their ancestors. Schools arose among them;
+and a boldness of speculation developed itself akin to that which we
+find among the Greeks. Astronomy, in particular, was cultivated with a
+good deal of success; and stores were accumulated of which the Greeks in
+later times understood and acknowledged the value.
+
+In social position the priest class stood high. They had access to the
+monarch: they were feared and respected by the people; the offerings of
+the faithful made them wealthy; their position as interpreters of the
+divine will secured them influence. Being regarded as capable of civil
+employment, they naturally enough obtained frequently important offices,
+which added to their wealth and consideration.
+
+The mass of the people in Babylonia were employed in the two pursuits
+of commerce and agriculture. The commerce was both foreign and domestic.
+Great numbers of the Babylonians were engaged in the manufacture of
+those textile fabrics, particularly carpets and muslins, which Babylonia
+produced not only for her own use, but also for the consumption of
+foreign countries. Many more must have been employed as lapidaries in
+the execution of those delicate engravings on hard stone, wherewith the
+seal, which every Babylonian carried, was as a matter of course adorned.
+The ordinary trades and handicrafts practised in the East no doubt
+flourished in the country. A brisk import and export trade was
+constantly kept up, and promoted a healthful activity throughout the
+entire body politic. Babylonia is called "a land of traffic" by
+Ezekiel, and Babylon "a city of merchants." Isaiah says "theory of the
+Chaldaeans" was "in their ships." The monuments show that from very
+early times the people of the low country on the borders of the Persian
+Gulf were addicted to maritime pursuits, and navigated the gulf freely,
+if they did not even venture on the open ocean. And AEschylus is a
+witness that the nautical character still attached to the people after
+their conquest by the Persians; for he calls the Babylonians in the army
+of Xerxes "navigators of ships."
+
+The Babylonian import trade, so far as it was carried on by themselves,
+seems to have been chiefly with Arabia, with the islands in the Persian
+Gulf, and directly or indirectly with India. From Arabia they must have
+imported the frankincense which they used largely in their religious
+ceremonies; from the Persian Gulf they appear to have derived pearls,
+cotton, and wood for walking sticks from India they obtained dogs and
+several kinds of gems. If we may believe Strabo, they had a colony
+called Gerrha, most favorably situated on the Arabian coast of the gulf,
+which was a great emporium, and conducted not only the trade between
+Babylonia and the regions to the south, but also that which passed
+through Babylonia into the more nothern districts. The products of the
+various countries of Western Asia flowed into Babylonia down the courses
+of the rivers. From Armenia, or rather Upper Mesopotamia, came wine,
+gems, emery, and perhaps stone for building; from Phoenicia, by way
+of Palmyra and Thapsacus, came tin, perhaps copper, probably musical
+instruments, and other objects of luxury; from Media and the countries
+towards the east came fine wool, lapis-lazuli, perhaps silk, and
+probably gold and ivory. But these imports seem to have been brought to
+Babylonia by foreign merchants rather than imported by the exertions of
+native traders. The Armenians, the Phoenicians, and perhaps the Greeks,
+used for the conveyance of their goods the route of the Euphrates. The
+Assyrians, the Paretaceni, and the Medes probably floated theirs down
+the Tigris and its tributaries.
+
+A large-probably the largest-portion of the people must have been
+engaged in the occupations of agriculture. Babylonia was, before all
+things, a grain-producing country--noted for a fertility unexampled
+elsewhere, and to moderns almost incredible. The soil was a deep and
+rich alluvium, and was cultivated with the utmost care. It grew chiefly
+wheat, barley millet, and sesame, which all nourished with wonderful
+luxuriance. By a skilful management of the natural water supply, the
+indispensable fluid was utilized to the utmost, and conveyed to every
+part of the country. Date-groves spread widely over the land, and
+produced abundance of an excellent fruit.
+
+For the cultivation of the date nothing was needed but a proper water
+supply, and a little attention at the time of fructification. The male
+and female palm are distinct trees, and the female cannot produce fruit
+unless the pollen from the male comes in contact with its blossoms. If
+the male and the female trees are grown in proper proximity, natural
+causes will always produce a certain amount of impregnation. But
+to obtain a good crop, art may be serviceably applied. According to
+Herodotus, the Babylonians were accustomed to tie the branches of
+the male to those of the female palm. This was doubtless done at the
+blossoming time, when it would have the effect he mentions, preventing
+the fruit of the female, or date-producing palms, from falling off.
+
+The date palm was multiplied in Babylonia by artificial means. It was
+commonly grown from seed, several stones being planted together for
+greater security; But occasionally it was raised from suckers or
+cuttings. It was important to plant the seeds and cuttings in a sandy
+soil; and if nature had not sufficiently impregnated the ground with
+saline particles, salt had to be applied artificially to the soil
+around as a dressing. The young plants needed a good deal of attention.
+Plentiful watering was required; and transplantation was desirable at
+the end of both the first and second year. The Babylonians are said
+to have transplanted their young trees in the height of summer; other
+nations preferred the springtime.
+
+For the cultivation of grain the Babylonians broke up their land with
+the plough; to draw which they seem to have employed two oxen, placed
+one before the other, in the mode still common in many parts of England.
+The plough had two handles, which the ploughman guided with his two
+hands. It was apparently of somewhat slight construction. The tail rose
+from the lower part of one of the handles, and was of unusual length.
+[PLATE XXIV., Fig. 3.]
+
+It is certain that dates formed the main food of the inhabitants, The
+dried fruit, being to them the staff of life, was regarded by the Greeks
+as their "bread." It was perhaps pressed into cakes, as is the common
+practice in the country at the present day. On this and goat's milk,
+which we know to have been in use, the poorer class, it is probable,
+almost entirely subsisted. Palm-wine, the fermented sap of the tree, was
+an esteemed, but no doubt only an occasional beverage. It was pleasant
+to the taste, but apt to leave a headache behind it. Such vegetables
+as gourds, melons, and cucumbers, must have been cheap, and may have
+entered into the diet of the common people. They were also probably the
+consumers of the "pickled bats," which (according to Strabo) were eaten
+by the Babylonians.
+
+In the marshy regions of the south there were certain tribes whose
+sole, or at any rate whose chief, food was fish. Fish abound in these
+districts, and are readily taken either with the hook or in nets. The
+mode of preparing this food was to dry it in the sun, to pound it fine,
+strain it through a sieve, and then make it up into cakes, or into a
+kind of bread.
+
+The diet of the richer classes was no doubt varied and luxurious.
+Wheaten bread, meats of various kinds, luscious fruits, fish, game,
+loaded the board; and wine, imported from abroad was the usual beverage.
+The wealthy Babylonians were fond of drinking to excess; their banquets
+were magnificent, but generally ended in drunkenness; they were not,
+however, mere scenes of coarse indulgence, but had a certain refinement,
+which distinguishes them from the riotous drinking-bouts of the less
+civilized Modes. Music was in Babylonia a recognized accompaniment of
+the feast; and bands of performers, entering with the wine, entertained
+the guests with concerted pieces. A rich odor of perfume floated around,
+for the Babylonians were connoisseurs in unguents. The eye was delighted
+with a display of gold and silver plate. The splendid dresses of the
+guests, the exquisite carpets and hangings, the numerous attendants,
+gave an air of grandeur to the scene, and seemed half to excuse the
+excess of which too many were guilty.
+
+A love of music appears to have characterized both the Babylonians and
+their near neighbors and kinsmen, the Susianians. In the sculptured
+representations of Assyria, the Susianians are shown to have possessed
+numerous instruments, and to have organized large bands of performers.
+The Prophet Daniel and the historian Ctesias similarly witness to the
+musical taste of the Babylonians, which had much the same character.
+Ctesias said that Annarus (or Nannarus), a Babylonian noble, entertained
+his guests at a banquet with music performed by a company of 150 women.
+Of these a part sang, while the rest played upon instruments, some using
+the pipe, others the harp, and a certain number the psaltery. These same
+instruments are assigned to the Babylonians by the prophet Daniel, who,
+however, adds to them three more--viz., the horn, the sambuca, and an
+instrument called the sumphonia, or "symphony." It is uncertain whether
+the horn intended was straight, like the Assyrian, or curved, like the
+Roman cornu and lituus. The pipe was probably the double instrument,
+played at the end, which was familiar to the Susianians and Assyrians.
+The harp would seem to have resembled the later harp of the Assyrians;
+but it had fewer strings, if we may judge from a representation upon
+a cylinder. Like the Assyrian, it was carried under one arm, and was
+played by both hands, one on either side of the strings. [PLATE XXV.,
+Fig. 3.]
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XXV.]
+
+
+The character of the remaining instruments is more doubtful. The sambuca
+seems to have been a large harp, which rested on the ground, like the
+harps of the Egyptians. The psaltery was also a stringed instrument,
+and, if its legitimate descendant is the modern santour, we may presume
+that it is represented in the hands of a Susianian musician on the
+monument which is our chief authority for the Oriental music of the
+period. The symphonia is thought by some to be the bagpipe, which is
+called sampogna by the modern Italians: by others it is regarded as a
+sort of organ.
+
+The Babylonians used music, not merely in their private entertainments,
+but also in their religious ceremonies. Daniel's account of their
+instruments occurs casually in his mention of Nebuchadnezzar's
+dedication of a colossal idol of gold. The worshippers were to prostrate
+themselves before the idol as soon as they heard the music commence,
+and were probably to continue in the attitude of worship until the sound
+ceased.
+
+The seclusion of women seems scarcely to have been practised in
+Babylonia with as much strictness as in most Oriental countries. The
+two peculiar customs on which Herodotus descants at length--the public
+auction of the marriageable virgins in all the towns of the empire, and
+the religious prostitution authorized in the worship of Beltis--were
+wholly incompatible with the restraints to which the sex has commonly
+submitted in the Eastern world. Much modesty can scarcely have belonged
+to those whose virgin charms were originally offered in the public
+market to the best bidder, and who were required by their religion, at
+least once in their lives, openly to submit to the embraces of a man
+other than their husband. It would certainly seem that the sex had
+in Babylonia a freedom--and not only a freedom, but also a
+consideration--unusual in the ancient world, and especially rare in
+Asia. The stories of Semiramis and Nitocris may have in them no great
+amount of truth; but they sufficiently indicate the belief of the
+Greeks as to the comparative publicity allowed to their women by the
+Babylonians.
+
+The monuments accord with the view of Babylonian manners thus opened to
+us. The female form is not eschewed by the Chaldaean artists. Besides
+images of a goddess (Beltis or Ish-tar) suckling a child, which are
+frequent, we find on the cylinders numerous representations of women,
+engaged in various employments. Sometimes they are represented in a
+procession, visiting the shrine of a goddess, to whom they offer their
+petitions, by the mouth of one of their number, or to whom they bring
+their children for the purpose, probably, of placing them under her
+protection [PLATE XXV., Fig. 5.], sometimes they may be seen amusing
+themselves among birds and flowers in a garden, plucking the fruit from
+dwarf palms, and politely handing it to one another. [PLATE XXV., Fig.
+4.] Their attire is in every case nearly the same; they wear a long but
+scanty robe, reaching to the ankles, ornamented at the bottom with a
+fringe and apparently opening in front. The upper part of the dress
+passes over only one shoulder. It is trimmed round the top with a fringe
+which runs diagonally across the chest, and a similar fringe edges the
+dress down the front where it opens. A band or fillet is worn round the
+head, confining the hair, which is turned back behind the head, and tied
+by a riband, or else held up by the fillet.
+
+Female ornaments are not perceptible on the small figures of
+the cylinders; but from the modelled image in clay, of which a
+representation has been already given, we learn that bracelets and
+earrings of a simple character were worn by Babylonian women, if they
+were not by the men. On the whole, however, female dress seems to have
+been plain and wanting in variety, though we may perhaps suspect that
+the artists do not trouble themselves to represent very accurately such
+diversities of apparel as actually existed.
+
+From a single representation of a priestess it would seem that women
+of that class wore nothing but a petticoat, thus exposing not only the
+arms, but the whole of the body as far as the waist.
+
+The monuments throw a little further light on the daily life of the
+Babylonians. A few of their implements, as saws and hatchets, are
+represented. [PLATE XXV., Fig. 2]; and from the stools, the chairs, the
+tables, and stands for holding water-jars which occur occasionally on
+the cylinders, we may gather that the fashion of their furniture
+much resembled that of their northern neighbors, the Assyrians. It is
+needless to dwell on this subject, which presents no novel features,
+and has been anticipated by the discussion on Assyrian furniture in the
+first volume. The only touch that can be added to what was there said
+is that in Babylonia, the chief--almost the sole-material employed for
+furniture was the wood of the palm-tree, a soft and light fabric which
+could be easily worked, and which had considerable strength, but did not
+admit of a high finish.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. RELIGION.
+
+
+The Religion of the later Babylonians differed in so few respects from
+that of the early Chaldaeans, their predecessors in the same country,
+that it will be unnecessary to detain the reader with many observations
+on the subject. The same gods were worshipped in the same temples and
+with the same rites--the same cosmogony was taught and held--the same
+symbols were objects of religious regard--even the very dress of the
+priests was maintained unaltered; and, could Urukh or Chedorlaomer have
+risen from the grave and revisited the shrines wherein they sacrificed
+fourteen centuries earlier, they would have found but little to
+distinguish the ceremonies of their own day from those in vogue
+under the successors of Nabopolassar. Some additional splendor in the
+buildings, the idols, and perhaps the offerings, some increased use
+of music as a part of the ceremonial, some advance of corruption with
+respect to priestly impostures and popular religious customs might
+probably have been noticed; but otherwise the religion of Nabonidus and
+Belshazzar was that of Urukh and Ilgi, alike in the objects and the mode
+of worship, in the theological notions entertained and the ceremonial
+observances taught and practised.
+
+The identity of the gods worshipped during the entire period is
+sufficiently proved by the repair and restoration of the ancient temples
+under Nebuchadnezzar, and their re-dedication (as a general rule) to
+the same deities. It appears also from the names of the later kings and
+nobles, which embrace among their elements the old divine appellations.
+Still, together with this general uniformity, we seem to see a certain
+amount of fluctuation--a sort of fashion in the religion, whereby
+particular gods were at different times exalted to a higher rank in the
+Pantheon, and were sometimes even confounded with other deities commonly
+regarded as wholly distinct from them. Thus Nebuchadnezzar devoted
+himself in an especial way to Merodach, and not only assigned him titles
+of honor which implied his supremacy over all the remaining gods, but
+even identified him with the great Bel, the ancient tutelary god of the
+capital. Nabonidus, on the other hand, seems to have restored Bel to his
+old position, re-establishing the distinction between him and Merodach,
+and preferring to devote himself to the former.
+
+A similar confusion occurs between the goddesses Beltis and Nana or
+Ishtar, though this is not peculiar to the later kingdom. It may perhaps
+be suspected from such instances of connection and quasi-convertibility,
+that an esoteric doctrine, known to the priests and communicated by
+them to the kings, taught the real identity of the several gods and
+goddesses, who may have been understood by the better instructed to
+represent, not distinct and separate beings, but the several phases
+of the Divine Nature. Ancient polytheism had, it may be surmised, to a
+great extent this origin, the various names and titles of the Supreme,
+which designated His different attributes or the different spheres of
+His operation, coming by degrees to be misunderstood, and to pass, first
+with the vulgar, and at last with all but the most enlightened, for the
+appellations of a number of gods.
+
+The chief objects of Babylonian worship were Bel, Merodach, and Nebo.
+Nebo, the special deity of Borsippa, seems to have been regarded as a
+sort of powerful patron-saint under whose protection it was important
+to place individuals. During the period of the later kingdom, no divine
+element is so common in names. Of the seven kings who form the entire
+list, three certainly, four probably, had appellations composed with it.
+The usage extended from the royal house to the courtiers; and such names
+as Nebu-zar-adan, Samgar-Nebo, and Nebushazban, show the respect which
+the upper class of citizens paid to this god. It may even be suspected
+that when Nebuchadnezzar's Master of the Eunuchs had to give Babylonian
+names to the young Jewish princes whom he was educating, he designed to
+secure for one of them this powerful patron, and consequently called
+him Abed-Nebo--the servant of Nebo--a name which the later Jews, either
+disdaining or not understanding, have corrupted into the Abed-nogo of
+the existing text.
+
+Another god held in peculiar honor by the Babylonians was Nergal.
+Worshipped at Cutha as the tutelary divinity of the town, he was also
+held in repute by the people generally. No name is more common on the
+cylinder seals. It is sometimes, though not often, an element in the
+names of men, as in "Nergal-shar-ezer, the Eab-mag," and (if he be a
+different person) in Neriglissar, the king.
+
+Altogether, there was a strong local element in the religion of the
+Babylonians. Bel and Merodach were in a peculiar way the gods of
+Babylon, Nebo of Borsippa, Nergal of Cutha, the Moon of Ur or Hur,
+Beltis of Niffer, Hea or Hoa of Hit, Ana of Erech, the Sun of Sippara.
+Without being exclusively honored at a single site, the deities in
+question held the foremost place each in his own town. There especially
+was worship offered to them; there was the most magnificent of their
+shrines. Out of his own city a god was not greatly respected, unless by
+those who regarded him as their special personal protector.
+
+The Babylonians worshipped their gods indirectly, through images.
+Each shrine had at least one idol, which was held in the most pious
+reverence, and was in the minds of the vulgar identified with the god.
+It seems to have been believed by some that the actual idol ate and
+drank the offerings. Others distinguished between the idol and the god,
+regarding the latter as only occasionally visiting the shrine where he
+was worshipped. Even these last, however, held gross anthropomorphic
+views, since they considered the god to descend from heaven in order to
+hold commerce with the chief priestess. Such notions were encouraged by
+the priests, who furnished the inner shrine in the temple of Bel with a
+magnificent couch and a golden table, and made the principal priestess
+pass the night in the shrine on certain occasions.
+
+The images of the gods were of various materials. Some were of wood,
+others of stone, others again of metal; and these last were either
+solid or plated. The metals employed were gold, silver, brass, or rather
+bronze, and iron. Occasionally the metal was laid over a clay model.
+Sometimes images of one metal were overlaid with plates of another, as
+was the case with one of the great images of Bel, which was originally
+of silver but was coated with gold by Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+The worship of the Babylonians appears to have been conducted with much
+pomp and magnificence. A description has been already given of their
+temples. Attached to these imposing structures was, in every case, a
+body of priests; to whom the conduct of the ceremonies and the custody
+of the treasures were intrusted. The priests were married, and lived
+with their wives and children, either in the sacred structure itself,
+or in its immediate neighborhood. They were supported either by lands
+belonging to the temple, or by the offerings of the faithful. These
+consisted in general of animals, chiefly oxen and goats; but other
+valuables were no doubt received when tendered. The priest always
+intervened between the worshipper and the deities, presenting him to
+them and interceding with uplifted hands on his behalf.
+
+In the temple of Bel at Babylon, and probably in most of the other
+temples both there and elsewhere throughout the country, a great
+festival was celebrated once in the course of each year. We know little
+of the ceremonies with which these festivals were accompanied; but
+we may presume from the analogy of other nations that there were
+magnificent processions on these occasions, accompanied probably with
+music and dancing. The images of the gods were perhaps exhibited either
+on frames or on sacred vehicles. Numerous victims were sacrificed; and
+at Babylon it was customary to burn on the great altar in the precinct
+of Bel a thousand talents' weight of frankincense. The priests no doubt
+wore their most splendid dresses; the multitude was in holiday costume;
+the city was given up to merry-making. Everywhere banquets were held. In
+the palace the king entertained his lords; in private houses there was
+dancing and revelling. Wine was freely drunk; passion Was excited; and
+the day, it must be feared, too often terminated in wild orgies, wherein
+the sanctions of religion were claimed for the free indulgence of the
+worst sensual appetites. In the temples of one deity excesses of this
+description, instead of being confined to rare occasions, seem to have
+been of every-day occurrence. Each woman was required once in her life
+to visit a shrine of Beltis, and there remain till some stranger cast
+money in her lap and took her away with him. Herodotus, who seems to
+have visited the disgraceful scene, describes it as follows. "Many women
+of the wealthier sort, who are too proud to mix with the others, drive
+in covered carriages to the precinct, followed by a goodly train of
+attendants, and there take their station. But the larger number seat
+themselves within the holy inclosure with wreaths of string about their
+heads--and here there is always a great crowd, some coming and others
+going. Lines of cord mark out paths in all directions among the woman;
+and the strangers pass along them to make their choice. A women who
+has once taken her seat is not allowed to return home till one of the
+strangers throws a silver coin into her lap, and takes her with
+him beyond the holy ground. When he throws the coin, he says these
+words--'The goddess Mylitta (Beltis) prosper thee.' The silver coin may
+be of any size; it cannot be refused; for that is forbidden by the law,
+since once thrown it is sacred. The woman goes with the first man who
+throws her money, and rejects no one. When she has gone with him, and
+so satisfied the goddess, she returns home; and from that time forth
+no gift, however great, will prevail with her. Such of the women as are
+tall and beautiful are soon released; but others, who are ugly, have to
+stay a long time before they can fulfil the law. Some have even waited
+three or four years in the precinct." The demoralizing tendency of this
+religious prostitution can scarcely be overrated.
+
+Notions of legal cleanliness and uncleanliness, akin to those prevalent
+among the Jews, are found to some extent in the religious system of the
+Babylonians. The consummation of the marriage rite made both the man
+and the woman impure, as did every subsequent act of the same kind.
+The impurity was communicated to any vessel that either might touch. To
+remove it, the pair were required first to sit down before a censer of
+burning incense, and then to wash themselves thoroughly. Thus only could
+they re-enter into the state of legal cleanness. A similar impurity
+attached to those who came into contact with a human corpse. The
+Babylonians are remarkable for the extent to which they affected
+symbolism in religion. In the first place they attached to each god a
+special mystic number, which is used as his emblem and may even stand
+for his name in an inscription. To the gods of the First Triad-Ami, Bel,
+and Hea or Hoa--were assigned respectively the numbers 60, 50, and 40;
+to those of the Second Triad--the Moon, the Sun and the Atmosphere--were
+given the other integers, 30, 20, and 10 (or perhaps six). To Beltis was
+attached the number 15, to Nergal 12, to Bar or Nin (apparently) 40, as
+to Hoa; but this is perhaps doubtful. It is probable that every god,
+or at any rate all the principle deities, had in a similar way some
+numerical emblem. Many of these are, however, as yet undiscovered.
+
+Further, each god seems to have had one or more emblematic signs by
+which he could be pictorially symbolized. The cylinders are full of such
+forms, which are often crowded into every vacant space where room
+could be found for them. A certain number can be assigned definitely to
+particular divinities. Thus a circle, plain or crossed, designates the
+Sun-god, San or Shamas; a six-rayed or eight-rayed star the Sun-goddess,
+Gula or Anunit; a double or triple thunderbolt the Atmospheric god, Vul;
+a serpent probably Hoa; a naked female form Nana or Ishtar; a fish Bar
+or Nin-ip. But besides these assignable symbols, there are a vast number
+with regard to which we are still wholly in the dark. Among these may
+
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 229]
+
+
+tree, an ox, a bee, a spearhead. A study of the inscribed cylinders
+shows these emblems to have no reference to the god or goddess named
+in the inscription upon them. Each, apparently, represents a distinct
+deity; and the object of placing them upon a cylinder is to imply the
+devotion of the man whose seal it is to other deities besides those
+whose special servant he considers himself. A single cylinder sometimes
+contains as many as eight or ten such emblems. The principal temples
+of the gods had special sacred appellations. The great temple of Bel
+at Babylon was known as Bit-Saggath, that of the same god at Niffer as
+Kharris-Nipra. that of Beltis at Warka (Erech) as Bit-Ana, that of
+the sun at Sippara as Bit-Parra, that of Anunit at the same place as
+Bit-Ulmis, that of Nebo at Borsippa as Bit-Tsida, etc. It is seldom that
+these names admit of explanation. They had come down apparently from
+the old Chaldaean times, and belonged to the ancient (Turanian) form of
+speech; which is still almost unintelligible. The Babylonians themselves
+probably in few cases understood their meaning. They used the words
+simply as proper names, without regarding them as significative.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. HISTORY AND CHRONOLOGY.
+
+
+The history of the Babylonian Empire commences with Nabopolassar,
+who appears to have mounted the throne in the year B.C. 625; but to
+understand the true character of the kingdom which he set up, its
+traditions and its national spirit, we must begin at a far earlier date.
+We must examine, in however incomplete and cursory a manner, the middle
+period of Babylonian history, the time of obscurity and comparative
+insignificance, when the country was as a general rule, subject to
+Assyria, or at any rate played but a secondary part in the affairs of
+the East. We shall thus prepare the way for our proper subject, while at
+the same time we shall link on the history of the Fourth to that of
+the First Monarchy, and obtain a second line of continuous narrative,
+connecting the brilliant era of Cyaxares and Nebuchadnezzar with the
+obscure period of the first Cushite kings.
+
+It has been observed that the original Chaldaean monarchy lasted,
+under various dynasties from about B.C. 2400 to B.C. 1300, when it was
+destroyed by the Assyrians, who became masters of Babylonia under the
+first Tiglathi-Nin, and governed it for a short time from their own
+capital. Unable, however, to maintain this unity very long, they appear
+to have set up in the country an Assyrian dynasty, over which they
+claimed and sometimes exercised a kind of suzerainty, but which was
+practically independent and managed both the external and internal
+affairs of the kingdom at its pleasure. The first king of this dynasty
+concerning whom we have any information is a Nebuchadnezzar, who was
+contemporary with the Assyrian monarch Asshur-ris-ilim, and made two
+attacks upon his territories. The first of these was by the way of
+the Diyaleh and the outlying Zagros hills, the line taken by the great
+Persian military road in later times. The second was directly across the
+plain. If we are to believe the Assyrian historian who gives an account
+of the campaigns, both attacks were repulsed, and after his second
+failure the Babylonian monarch fled away into his own country hastily.
+We may perhaps suspect that a Babylonian writer would have told a
+different story. At any rate Asshur-ris-ilim was content to defend his
+own territories and did not attempt to retaliate upon his assailant. It
+was not till late in the reign of his son and successor, Tiglath-Pileser
+I., that any attempt was made to punish the Babylonians for their
+audacity. Then, however, that monarch invaded the southern kingdom,
+which had passed into the hands of a king named Merodach-iddin-akhi,
+probably a son of Nebuchadnezzar. After two years of fighting, in which
+he took Eurri-Galzu (Akkerkuf), the two Sipparas, Opis, and even
+Babylon itself, Tiglath-Pileser retired, satisfied apparently with his
+victories; but the Babylonian monarch was neither subdued nor daunted.
+Hanging on the rear of the retreating force, he harassed it by cutting
+off its baggage, and in this way he became possessed of certain Assyrian
+idols, which he carried away as trophies to Babylon. War
+continued between the two countries during the ensuing reigns of
+Merodach-shapik-ziri in Babylon and Asshur-bil-kala in Assyria, but with
+no important successes, so far as appears, on either side.
+
+The century during which these wars took place between Assyria and
+Babylonia, which corresponds with the period of the later Judges in
+Israel, is followed by an obscure interval, during which but little is
+known of either country. Assyria seems to have been at this time in
+a state of great depression. Babylonia, it may be suspected, was
+flourishing; but as our knowledge of its condition comes to us almost
+entirely through the records of the sister country, which here fail
+us, we can only obtain a dim and indistinct vision of the greatness now
+achieved by the southern kingdom. A notice of Asshur-izir-pal's seems
+to imply that Babylon, during the period in question, enlarged her
+territories at the expense of Assyria, and another in Macrobius, makes
+it probable that she held communications with Egypt. Perhaps these two
+powers, fearing the growing strength of Assyria, united against her,
+and so checked for a while that development of her resources which they
+justly dreaded.
+
+However, after two centuries of comparative depression, Assyria once
+more started forward, and Babylonia was among the first of her neighbors
+whom she proceeded to chastise and despoil. About the year B.C. 880
+Asshur-izir-pal led an expedition to the south-east and recovered the
+territory which, had been occupied by the Babylonians during the period
+of weakness. Thirty years later, his son, the Black-Obelisk king, made
+the power of Assyria still more sensibly felt. Taking advantage of
+the circumstance that a civil war was raging in Babylonia between the
+legitimate monarch Merodach-sum-adin, and his young brother, he marched
+into the country, took a number of the towns, and having defeated and
+slain the pretender, was admitted into Babylon itself. From thence he
+proceeded to overrun Chaldaea, or the district upon the coast, which
+appears at this time to have been independent of Babylon, and governed
+by a number of petty kings. The Babylonian monarch probably admitted the
+suzerainty of the invader, but was not put to any tribute. The Chaldaean
+chiefs, however, had to submit to this indignity. The Assyrian monarch
+returned to his capital, having "struck terror as far as the sea." Thus
+Assyrian influence was once more extended over the whole of the southern
+country, and Babylonia resumed her position of a secondary power,
+dependent on the great monarchy of the north.
+
+But she was not long allowed to retain even the shadow of an autonomous
+rule. In or about the year B.C. 821 the son and successor of the
+Black-Obelisk king, apparently without any pretext, made a fresh
+invasion of the country. Mero-dach-belatzu-ikm, the Babylonian monarch,
+boldly met him in the field, but was defeated in two pitched battles (in
+the latter of which he had the assistance of powerful allies) and was
+forced to submit to his antagonist. Babylon, it is probable, became at
+once an Assyrian tributary, and in this condition she remained till
+the troubles which came upon Assyria towards the middle of the eighth
+century B.C. gave an opportunity for shaking off the hated yoke. Perhaps
+the first successes were obtained by Pul, who, taking advantage of
+Assyria's weakness under Asshur-dayan III. (ab. B.C. 770), seems to
+have established a dominion over the Euphrates valley and Western
+Mesopotamia, from which he proceeded to carry his arms into Syria and
+Palestine. Or perhaps Pul's efforts merely, by still further weakening
+Assyria, paved the way for Babylon to revolt, and Nabonassar, who became
+king of Babylon in B.C. 747, is to be regarded as the re-establisher
+of her independence. In either case it is apparent that the recovery of
+independence was accompanied, or rapidly followed, by a disintegration
+of the country, which was of evil omen for its future greatness. While
+Nabonassar established himself at the head of affairs in Babylon, a
+certain Yakin, the father of Merodach-Baladan, became master of the
+tract upon the coast; and various princes, Nadina, Zakiru, and others,
+at the same time obtained governments, which they administered in their
+own name towards the north. The old Babylonian kingdom was broken up;
+and the way was prepared for that final subjugation which was ultimately
+affected by the Sargonids.
+
+Still, the Babylonians seemed to have looked with complacency on this
+period, and they certainly made it an era from which to date their later
+history. Perhaps, however, they had not much choice in this matter.
+Nabonassar was a man of energy and determination. Bent probably on
+obliterating the memory of the preceding period of subjugation, he
+"destroyed the acts of the kings who had preceded him;" and the result
+was that the war of his accession became almost necessarily the era from
+which subsequent events had to be dated.
+
+Nabonassar appears to have lived on friendly terms with Tiglath-Pileser,
+the contemporary monarch of Assyria, who early in his reign invaded the
+southern country, reduced several princes of the districts about Babylon
+to subjection, and forced Merodach-Baladan, who had succeeded his
+father, Yakin, in the low region, to become his tributary. No war seems
+to have been waged between Tiglath-Pileser and Nabonassar. The king of
+Babylon may have seen with satisfaction the humiliation of his immediate
+neighbors and rivals, and may have felt that their subjugation rather
+improved than weakened his own position. At any rate it tended to place
+him before the nation as their only hope and champion--the sole barrier
+which protected their country from a return of the old servitude.
+
+Nabonassar held the throne of Babylon for fourteen years, from B.C. 747
+to B.C. 733. It has generally been supposed that this period is the same
+with that regarded by Herodotus as constituting the reign of Semiramis.
+As the wife or as the mother of Nabonassar, that lady (according to
+many) directed the affairs of the Babylonian state on behalf of her
+husband or her son. The theory is not devoid of a certain plausibility,
+and it is no doubt possible that it may be true; but at present it is
+a mere conjecture, wholly unconfirmed by the native records; and we may
+question whether on the whole it is not more probable that the Semiramis
+of Herodotus is misplaced. In a former volume it was shown that a
+Semiramis flourished in Assyria towards the end of the ninth and the
+beginning of the eighth centuries B.C.---during the period, that is,
+of Babylonian subjection to Assyria. She may have been a Babylonian
+princess, and have exercised an authority in the southern capital. It
+would seem therefore to be more probable that she is the individual whom
+Herodotus intends, though he has placed her about half a century too
+late, than that there were two persons of the same name within so short
+a time, both queens, and both ruling in Mesopotamia.
+
+Nabonassar was succeeded in the year B.C. 733 by a certain Nadius,
+who is suspected to have been among the independent princes reduced
+to subjection by Tiglath-Pileser in his Babylonian expedition. Nadius
+reigned only two years--from B.C. 733 to B.C. 731--when he was succeeded
+by Ghinzinus and Porus, two princes whose joint rule lasted from
+B.C. 731 to B.C. 726. They were followed by an Elulseus, who has
+been identified with the king of that name called by Menander king of
+Tyre--the Luliya of the cuneiform inscriptions; but it is in the highest
+degree improbable that one and the same monarch should have borne sway
+both in Phoenicia and Chaldaea at a time when Assyria was paramount
+over the whole of the intervening country. Elulseus therefore must
+be assigned to the same class of utterly obscure monarchs with his
+predecessors, Porus, Chinzinus, and Nadius; and it is only with
+Merodach-Baladan, his successor, that the darkness becomes a little
+dispelled, and we once more see the Babylonian throne occupied by a
+prince of some reputation and indeed celebrity.
+
+Merodach-Baladan was the son of a monarch, who in the troublous times
+that preceded, or closely followed, the era of Nabonassar appears to
+have made himself master of the lower Babylonian territory--the true
+Chaldaea--and to have there founded a capital city, which he
+called after his own name, Bit-Yakin. On the death of his father
+Merodach-Baladan inherited this dominion; and it is here that we first
+find him, when, during the reign of Nabonassar, the Assyrians under
+Tiglath-Pileser II. invade the country. Forced to accept the position
+of Assyrian tributary under this monarch, to whom he probably looked
+for protection against the Babylonian king, Nabonassar, Merodach-Baladan
+patiently bided his time, remaining in comparative obscurity during the
+two reigns of Tiglath-Pileser and Shalmaneser his successor, and only
+emerging contemporaneously with the troubles which ushered in the
+dynasty of the Sargonids. In B.C. 721--the year in which Sargon made
+himself master of Nineveh--Merodach-Baladan extended his authority
+over the upper country, and was recognized as king of Babylon. Here he
+maintained himself for twelve years; and it was probably at some point
+of time within this space that he sent embassadors to Hezekiah at
+Jerusalem, with orders to inquire into the particulars of the curious
+astronomical marvel, or miracle, which had accompanied the sickness and
+recovery of that monarch. It is not unlikely that the embassy, whereof
+this was the pretext, had a further political object. Morodach-Baladan,
+aware of his inability to withstand singly the forces of Assyria, was
+probably anxious to form a powerful league against the conquering state,
+which threatened to absorb the whole of Western Asia into its dominion.
+Hezekiah received his advances favorably, as appears by the fact that he
+exhibited to him all his treasures. Egypt, we may presume, was cognizant
+of the proceedings, and gave them her support. An alliance, defensive if
+not also offensive, was probably concluded between Egypt and Judaea on
+the one hand, Babylon, Susiana, and the Aramaean tribes of the middle
+Euphrates on the other. The league would have been formidable but for
+one circumstance--Assyria lay midway between the allied states, and
+could attack either moiety of the confederates separately at her
+pleasure. And the Assyrian king was not slow to take advantage of his
+situation. In two successive years Sargon marched his troops against
+Egypt and against Babylonia, and in both directions carried all before
+him. In Egypt he forced Sabaco to sue for peace. In Babylonia (B.C.
+710) he gained a great victory over Merodach-Baladan and his allies,
+the Aramaeans and Susianians, took Bit-Yakin, into which the defeated
+monarch had thrown himself, and gained possession of his treasures and
+his person. Upon this the whole country submitted; Merodach-Baladan
+was carried away captive into Assyria; and Sargon himself, mounting the
+throne, assumed the title-rarely taken by an Assyrian monarch of "King
+of Babylon."
+
+But this state of things did not continue long. Sargon died in the year
+B.C. 704, and coincident with his death we find a renewal of troubles in
+Babylonia. Assyria's yoke was shaken off; various pretenders started
+up; a son of Sargon and brother of Sennacherib re-established Assyrian
+influence for a brief space; but fresh revolts followed. A certain
+Hagisa became king of Babylon for a month. Finally, Merodach-Baladan,
+again appeared upon the scene, having escaped from his Assyrian prison,
+murdered Hagisa, and remounted the throne from which he had been deposed
+seven years previously. But the brave effort to recover independence
+failed. Sennacherib in his second year, B.C. 703, descended upon
+Babylonia, defeated the army which Merodach-Baladan brought against him,
+drove that monarch himself into exile, after a reign of six months, and
+re-attached his country to the Assyrian crown. From this time to
+the revolt of Nabopolassar--a period of above three quarters of a
+century--Babylonia with few and brief intervals of revolt, continued
+an Assyrian fief. The assyrian kings governed her either by means
+of viceroys, such as Belibus, Regibelus, Mesesimordachus, and
+Saos-duchinus, or directly in their own persons, as was the case during
+the reign of Esarhaddon, and during the later years of Asshur-bani-pal.
+
+The revolts of Babylon during this period have been described at length
+in the history of Assyria. Two fall into the reign of Sennacherib,
+one into that of Asshur-bani-pal, his grandson. In the former,
+Merodach-Baladan, who had not yet given up his pretensions to the lower
+country, and a certain Susub, who was acknowledged as king at Babylon,
+were the leaders. In the latter, Saos-duchinus, the Assyrian viceroy,
+and brother of Asshur-bani-pal, the Assyrian king, seduced from
+his allegiance by the hope of making himself independent headed the
+insurrection. In each case the struggle was brief, being begun and
+ended within the year. The power of Assyria at this time so vastly
+preponderated over that of her ancient rival that a single campaign
+sufficed on each occasion of revolt to crush the nascent insurrection.
+
+A tabular view of the chronology of this period is appended.
+
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 237]
+
+
+Having thus briefly sketched the history of the kingdom of Babylon from
+its conquest by Tiglathi-Nin to the close of the long period of Assyrian
+predominance in Western Asia, we may proceed to the consideration of the
+"Empire." And first, as to the circumstances of its foundation.
+
+When the Medes first assumed an aggressive attitude towards Assyria,
+and threatened the capital with a siege, Babylonia apparently remained
+unshaken in her allegiance. When the Scythian hordes spread themselves
+over Upper Mesopotamia and wasted with fire and sword the fairest
+regions under Assyrian rule, there was still no defection in this
+quarter. It was not till the Scythic ravages were over, and the Medes
+for the second time poured across Zagros into Adiabene, resuming the
+enterprise from which they had desisted at the time of the Scythic
+invasion, that the fidelity of the Southern people wavered.
+Simultaneously with the advance of the Medes against the Assyrian
+capital from the east, we hear of a force threatening it from the south,
+a force which can only have consisted of Susianians, of Babylonians,
+or of both combined. It is probable that the emissaries of Cyaxares had
+been busy in this region for some time before his second attack took
+place, and that by a concerted plan while the Medes debouched from the
+Zagros passes, the south rose in revolt and sent its hasty levies along
+the valley of the Tigris.
+
+In this strait the Assyrian king deemed it necessary to divide his
+forces and to send a portion against the enemy which was advancing from
+the south, while with the remainder he himself awaited the coming of the
+Medes. The troops detached for the former service he placed under the
+command of a certain Nabopolassar? (Nabu-pal-uzur), who was probably
+an Assyrian nobleman of high rank and known capacity. Nabopolassar had
+orders to proceed to Babylon, of which he was probably made viceroy, and
+to defend the southern capital against the rebels. We may conclude that
+he obeyed these orders so far as to enter Babylon and install himself
+in office; but shortly afterwards he seems to have made up his mind
+to break faith with his sovereign, and aim at obtaining for himself
+an independent kingdom out of the ruins of the Assyrian power. Having
+formed this resolve, his first step was to send an embassy to Cyaxares,
+and to propose terms of alliance, while at the same time he arranged
+a marriage between his own son, Nebuchadnezzar, and Amuhia, or Amyitis
+(for the name is written both ways), the daughter of the Median
+monarch.
+
+Cyaxares gladly accepted the terms offered; the young persons were
+betrothed; and Nabopolassar immediately led, or sent, a contingent of
+troops to join the Medes, who took an active part in the great siege
+which resulted in the capture and destruction of the Assyrian capital.
+
+A division of the Assyrian Empire between the allied monarchs followed.
+While Cyaxares claimed for his own share Assyria Proper and the various
+countries dependent on Assyria towards the north and the north-west,
+Nabopolassar was rewarded by his timely defection, not merely by
+independence but by the transfer to his government of Susiana on the
+one hand and of the valley of the Euphrates, Syria, and Palestine on
+the other. The transfer appears to have been effected quietly, the
+Babylonian yoke being peacefully accepted in lieu of the Assyrian
+without the necessity arising for any application of force. Probably
+it appeared to the subjects of Assyria, who had been accustomed to a
+monarch holding his court alternately at Nineveh and at Babylon, that
+the new power was merely a continuation of the old, and the monarch a
+legitimate successor of the old line of Ninevite kings.
+
+Of the reign of Nabopolassar the information which has come down to
+us is scanty. It appears by the canon of Ptolemy that he dated his
+accession to the throne from the year B.C. 625, and that his reign
+lasted twenty-one years, from B.C. 625 to B.C. 604. During the greater
+portion of this period the history of Babylon is a blank. Apparently the
+"golden city" enjoyed her new position at the head of an empire too much
+to endanger it by aggression; and, her peaceful attitude provoking no
+hostility, she was for a while left unmolested by her neighbors. Media,
+bound to her by formal treaty as well as by dynastic interests, could be
+relied upon as a firm friend; Persia was too weak, Lydia too remote, to
+be formidable; in Egypt alone was there a combination of hostile feeling
+with military strength such as might have been expected to lead speedily
+to a trial of strength; but Egypt was under the rule of an aged and wary
+prince, one trained in the school of adversity, whose years forbade his
+engaging in any distant enterprise, and whose prudence led him to think
+more of defending his own country than of attacking others. Thus, while
+Psammetichus lived, Babylon had little to fear from any quarter, and
+could afford to "give herself to pleasures and dwell carelessly."
+
+The only exertion which she seems to have been called upon to make
+during her first eighteen years of empire resulted from the close
+connection which had been established between herself and Media.
+Cyaxares, as already remarked, proceeded from the capture of Nineveh to
+a long series of wars and conquests. In some, if not in all, of these he
+appears to have been assisted by the Babylonians, who were perhaps bound
+by treaty to furnish a contingent as often as he required it, Either
+Nabopolassar himself, or his son Nebuchadnezzar, would lead out the
+troops on such occasions; and thus the military spirit of both prince
+and people would be pretty constantly exercised.
+
+It was as the leader of such a contingent that Nabopolassar was able
+on one occasion to play the important part of peacemaker in one of the
+bloodiest of all Cyaxares' wars. After five years' desperate fighting
+the Medes and Lydians were once more engaged in conflict when an eclipse
+of the sun took place. Filled with superstitious dread the two armies
+ceased to contend, and showed a disposition for reconciliation, of which
+the Babylonian monarch was not slow to take advantage. Having consulted
+with Syennesis of Cilicia, the foremost man of the allies on the other
+side, and found him well disposed to second his efforts, he proposed
+that the sword should be returned to the scabbard, and that a conference
+should be held to arrange terms of peace. This timely interference
+proved effectual. A peace was concluded between the Lydians and the
+Medes, which was cemented by a royal intermarriage: and the result
+was to give to Western Asia, where war and ravage had long been almost
+perpetual, nearly half a century of tranquillity.
+
+Successful in his mediation, almost beyond his hopes, Nabopolassar
+returned from Asia Minor to Babylon. He was now advanced in years,
+and would no doubt gladly have spent the remainder of his days in
+the enjoyment of that repose which is so dear to those who feel the
+infirmities of age creeping upon them. But Providence had
+ordained otherwise. In B.C. 610--probably the very year of the
+eclipse--Psammetichus died, and was succeeded by his son Neco, who was
+in the prime of life and who in disposition was bold and enterprising.
+This monarch very shortly after his accession cast a covetous eye upon
+Syria, and in the year B.C. 608, having made vast preparations, he
+crossed his frontier and invaded the territories of Nabopolassar.
+Marching along the usual route, by the _Shephilah_ and the plain of
+Esdraelon, he learned, when he neared Megiddo, that a body of troops was
+drawn up at that place to oppose him, Josiah, the Jewish king, regarding
+himself as bound to resist the passage through his territories of an
+army hostile to the monarch of whom he held his crown, had collected his
+forces, and, having placed them across the line of the invader's march,
+was calmly awaiting in this position the approach of his master's enemy.
+Neco hereupon sent ambassadors to persuade Josiah to let him pass,
+representing that he had no quarrel with the Jews, and claiming a
+divine sanction to his undertaking. But nothing could shake the Jewish
+monarch's sense of duty; and Neco was consequently forced to engage with
+him, and to drive his troops from their position. Josiah, defeated and
+mortally wounded, returned to Jerusalem, where he died. Neco pressed
+forward through Syria to the Euphrates; and carrying all before him,
+established his dominion over the whole tract lying between Egypt on
+the one hand, and the "Great River" upon the other. On his return three
+months later he visited Jerusalem, deposed Jehoahaz, a younger son of
+Josiah, whom the people had made king, and gave the crown to Jehoiakim,
+his elder brother. It was probably about this time that he besieged and
+took Gaza, the most important of the Philistine towns next to Ashdod.
+
+The loss of this large and valuable territory did not at once arouse the
+Babylonian monarch from his inaction or induce him to make any effort
+for its recovery. Neco enjoyed his conquests in quiet for the space
+of at least three full years. At length, in the year B.C. 605,
+Nabopolassar, who felt himself unequal to the fatigues of a campaign,
+resolved to entrust his forces to Nebuchadnezzar, his son, and to send
+him to contend with the Egyptians. The key of Syria at this time was
+Carchemish, a city situated on the right bank of the Euphrates, probably
+near the site which was afterwards occupied by Hierapolis. Here
+the forces of Neco were drawn up to protect his conquests, and here
+Nebuchadnezzar proceeded boldly to attack them. A great battle was
+fought in the vicinity of the river, which was utterly disastrous to the
+Egyptians, who "fled away" in confusion, and seem not to have ventured
+on making a second stand. Nebuchadnezzar rapidly recovered the lost
+territory, received the submission of Jehoiakim, king of Judah, restored
+the old frontier line, and probably pressed on into Egypt itself, hoping
+to cripple or even to crush his presumptuous adversary. But at this
+point he was compelled to pause. News arrived from Babylon that
+Nabopolassar was dead; and the Babylonian prince, who feared a disputed
+succession, having first concluded a hasty arrangement with Neco,
+returned at his best speed to his capital.
+
+Arriving probably before he was expected, he discovered that his fears
+were groundless. The priests had taken the direction of affairs during
+his absence, and the throne had been kept vacant for him by the Chief
+Priest, or Head of the Order. No pretender had started up to dispute his
+claims. Doubtless his military prestige, and the probability that the
+soldiers would adopt his cause, had helped to keep back aspirants; but
+perhaps it was the promptness of his return, as much as anything, that
+caused the crisis to pass off without difficulty.
+
+Nebuchadnezzar is the great monarch of the Babylonian Empire, which,
+lasting only 88 years--from B.C. 625 to B.C. 538--was for nearly half
+the time under his sway. Its military glory is due chiefly to him, while
+the constructive energy, which constitutes its especial characteristic,
+belongs to it still more markedly through his character and genius.
+It is scarcely too much to say that, but for Nebuchadnezzar, the
+Babylonians would have had no place in history. At any rate, their
+actual place is owing almost entirely to this prince, who to the
+military talents of an able general added a grandeur of artistic
+conception and a skill in construction which place him on a par with the
+greatest builders of antiquity.
+
+We have no complete, or even general account of Nebuchadnezzar's wars.
+Our chief, our almost sole, information concerning them is derived from
+the Jewish writers. Consequently, those wars only which interested these
+writers, in other words those whose scene is Palestine or its immediate
+vicinity, admit of being placed before the reader. If Nebuchadnezzar had
+quarrels with the Persians, or the Arabians, or the Medes, or the tribes
+in Mount Zagros, as is not improbable, nothing is now known of their
+course or issue. Until some historical document belonging to his time
+shall be discovered, we must be content with a very partial knowledge
+of the external history of Babylon during his reign. We have a tolerably
+full account of his campaigns against the Jews, and some information
+as to the general course of the wars which he carried on with Egypt and
+Phoenicia; but beyond these narrow limits we know nothing.
+
+It appears to have been only a few years after Nebuchadnezzar's
+triumphant campaign against Neco that renewed troubles broke out in
+Syria. Phoenicia revolted under the leadership of Tyre; and about the
+same time Jehoiakim, the Jewish king, having obtained a promise of aid
+from the Egyptians, renounced his allegiance. Upon this, in his seventh
+year (B.C. 598), Nebuchadnezzar proceeded once more into Palestine
+at the head of a vast army, composed partly of his allies, the Medes,
+partly of his own subjects. He first invested Tyre; but, finding that
+city too strong to be taken by assault, he left a portion of his army to
+continue the siege, while he himself pressed forward against Jerusalem.
+On his near approach, Jehoiakim, seeing that the Egyptians did not care
+to come to his aid, made his submission; but Nebuchadnezzar punished his
+rebellion with death, and, departing from the common Oriental practice,
+had his dead body treated with indignity. At first he placed upon the
+throne Jehoia-chin, the son of the late monarch, a youth of eighteen;
+but three months later, becoming suspicious (probably not without
+reason) of this prince's fidelity, he deposed him and had him brought
+a captive to Babylon, substituting in his place his uncle, Zedekiah,
+a brother of Jehoiakim and Jehoahaz. Meanwhile the siege of Tyre was
+pressed, but with little effect. A blockade is always tedious; and the
+blockade of an island city, strong in its navy, by an enemy unaccustomed
+to the sea, and therefore forced to depend mainly upon the assistance of
+reluctant allies, must have been a task of such extreme difficulty that
+one is surprised it was not given up in despair. According to the Tyrian
+historians their city resisted all the power of Nebuchadnezzar for
+thirteen years. If this statement is to be relied on, Tyre must have
+been still uncaptured, when the time came for its sister capital to make
+that last effort for freedom in which it perished.
+
+After receiving his crown from Nebuchadnezzar, Zedekiah continued for
+eight years to play the part of a faithful vassal. At length, however,
+in the ninth year, he fancied he saw a way to independence. A young and
+enterprising monarch, Uaphris--the Apries of Herodotus--had recently
+mounted the Egyptian throne. If the alliance of this prince could be
+secured, there was, Zedekiah thought, a reasonable hope that the yoke
+of Babylon might be thrown off and Hebrew autonomy re-established. The
+infatuated monarch did not see that, do what he would, his country
+had no more than a choice of masters, that by the laws of political
+attraction Judaea must gravitate to one or other of the two great
+states between which it had the misfortune of lying. Hoping to free his
+country, he sent ambassadors to Uaphris, who were to conclude a treaty
+and demand the assistance of a powerful contingent, composed of both
+foot and horse. Uaphris received the overture favorably; and Zedekiah at
+once revolted from Babylon, and made preparations to defend himself with
+vigor. It was not long before the Babylonians arrived. Determined to
+crush the daring state, which, weak as it was, had yet ventured to
+revolt against him now for the fourth time, Nebuchadnezzar came in
+person, "he and all his host," against Jerusalem, and after overcoming
+and pillaging the open country, "built forts" and besieged the city.
+Uaphris, upon this, learning the danger of his ally, marched out of
+Egypt to his relief; and the Babylonian army, receiving intelligence
+of his approach, raised the siege and proceeded in quest of their new
+enemy. According to Josephus a battle was fought, in which the Egyptians
+were defeated; but it is perhaps more probable that they avoided an
+engagement by a precipitate retreat into their own country. At any
+rate the attempt effectually to relieve Jerusalem failed. After a brief
+interval the siege was renewed; a complete blockade was established; and
+in a year and a half from the time of the second investment, the city
+fell.
+
+Nebuchadnezzar had not waited to witness this success of his arms.
+The siege of Tyre was still being pressed at the date of the second
+investment of Jerusalem, and the Chaldaean monarch had perhaps thought
+that his presence on the borders of Phoenicia was necessary to animate
+his troops in that quarter. If this was his motive in withdrawing from
+the Jewish capital, the event would seem to have shown that he judged
+wisely. Tyre, if it fell at the end of its thirteen years' siege,
+must have been taken in the very year which followed the capture of
+Jerusalem, B.C. 585. We may suppose that Nebuchadnezzar, when he quitted
+Jerusalem and took up his abode at Eiblah in the Coele-Syrian valley,
+turned his main attention to the great Phoenician city, and made
+arrangements which caused its capture in the ensuing year.
+
+The recovery of these two important cities secured to the Babylonian
+monarch the quiet possession thenceforth of Syria and Palestine. But
+still he had not as yet inflicted any chastisement upon Egypt; though
+policy, no less than honor, required that the aggressions of this
+audacious power should be punished. If we may believe Josephus, however,
+the day of vengeance was not very long delayed. Within four years of the
+fall of Tyre, B.C. 581, Nebuchadnezzar, he tells us, invaded Egypt, put
+Uaphris, the monarch who had succored Zedekiah, to death, and placed
+a creature of his own upon the throne. Egyptian history, it is true,
+forbids our accepting this statement as correct in all its particulars.
+Uaphris appears certainly to have reigned at least as late as B.C.
+569, and according to Herodotus, he was put to death, not by a foreign
+invader, but by a rebellious subject. Perhaps we may best harmonize the
+conflicting statements on the subject by supposing that Josephus has
+confounded two distinct invasions of Egypt, one made by Nebuchadnezzar
+in his twenty-third year, B.C. 581, which had no very important
+consequences, and the other eleven years later, B.C. 570, which
+terminated in the deposition of Uaphris, and the establishment on
+the throne of a new king, Amasis, who received a nominal royalty from
+Chaldaean monarch.
+
+Such--as far as they are known--were the military exploits of this great
+king. He defeated Neco, recovered Syria, crushed rebellion in Judaea,
+took Tyre, and humiliated Egypt. According to some writers his successes
+did not stop here. Megasthenes made him subdue most of Africa, and
+thence pass over into Spain and conquer the Iberians. He even went
+further, and declared that, on his return from these regions, he settled
+his Iberian captives on the shores of the Euxine in the country between
+Armenia and the Caucasus! Thus Nebuchadnezzar was made to reign over an
+empire extending from the Atlantic to the Caspian, and from the Caucasus
+to the Great Sahara.
+
+The victories of Nebuchadnezzar were not without an effect on his home
+administration and on the construction of the vast works with which his
+name is inseparably associated. It was through them that he obtained
+that enormous command of "naked human strength" which enabled him,
+without undue oppression of his own people, to carry out on the grandest
+scale his schemes for at once beautifying and benefiting his kingdom.
+From the time when he first took the field at the head of an army
+he adopted the Assyrian system of forcibly removing almost the whole
+population of a conquered country, and planting it in a distant part
+of his dominions. Crowds of captives--the produce of his various
+wars--Jews, Egyptians, Phoenicians, Syrians, Ammonites, Moabites, were
+settled in various parts of Mesopotamia, more especially about Babylon.
+From these unfortunates forced labor was as a matter of course required;
+and it seems to have been chiefly, if not solely, by their exertions
+that the magnificent series of great works was accomplished, which
+formed the special glory of the Fourth Monarchy.
+
+The chief works expressly ascribed to Nebuchadnezzar by the ancient
+writers are the following: He built the great wall of Babylon, which,
+according to the lowest estimate, must have contained more than
+500,000,000 square feet of solid masonry, and must have required
+three or four times that number of bricks. He constructed a new and
+magnificent palace in the neighborhood of the ancient residence of the
+kings. He made the celebrated "Hanging Garden" for the gratification of
+his wife, Amyitis. He repaired and beautified the great temple of Belus
+at Babylon. He dug the huge reservoir near Sippara, said to have been
+140 miles in circumference, and 180 feet deep, furnishing it with
+flood-gates, through which its water could be drawn off for purposes
+of irrigation. He constructed a number of canals, among them the Nahr
+Malcha or "Royal River," a broad and deep channel which connected the
+Euphrates with the Tigris. He built quays and breakwaters along the
+shores of the Persian Gulf, and he at the same time founded the city of
+Diridotis or Teredon in the vicinity of that sea.
+
+To these constructions may be added, on the authority either of
+Nebuchadnezzar's own inscriptions or of the existing remains, the
+Birs-i-Nimrud, or great temple of Nebo at Bor-sippa; a vast reservoir
+in Babylon itself, called the Yapur-Shapu; an extensive embankment along
+the course of the Tigris, near Baghdad; and almost innumerable temples,
+walls, and other public buildings at Cutha, Sippara, Borsippa, Babylon,
+Chilmad, Bit-Digla, etc. The indefatigable monarch seems to have either
+rebuilt, or at least repaired, almost every city and temple throughout
+the entire country. There are said to be at least a hundred sites in
+the tract immediately about Babylon, which give evidence, by inscribed
+bricks bearing his legend, of the marvellous activity and energy of this
+king.
+
+We may suspect that among the constructions of Nebuchadnezzar was
+another great work, a work second in utility to none of those above
+mentioned, and requiring for its completion an enormous amount of labor.
+This is the canal called by the Arabs the _Kerek Saideh_, or canal of
+Saideh, which they ascribe to a wife of Nebuchadnezzar, a cutting
+400 miles in length, which commenced at Hit on the Euphrates, and was
+carried along the extreme western edge of the alluvium close to the
+Arabian frontier, finally falling into the sea at the head of the Bubian
+creek, about twenty miles to the west of the Shat el-Arab. The traces
+of this canal which still remain indicate a work of such magnitude
+and difficulty that we can scarcely ascribe it with probability to any
+monarch who has held the country since Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+The Pallacopas, or canal of Opa (Palga Opa), which left the Euphrates
+at Sippara (Mosaib) and ran into a great lake in the neighborhood of
+Borsippa, whence the lands in the neighborhood were irrigated, may also
+have been one of Nebuchadnezzar's constructions. It was an old canal,
+much out of repair, in the time of Alexander, and was certainly the
+work, not of the Persian conquerors, but of some native monarch anterior
+to Cyrus. The Arabs, who call it the Nahr Abba, regard it as the oldest
+canal in the country.
+
+Some glimpses into the private life and personal character of
+Nebuchadnezzar are afforded us by certain of the Old Testament writers.
+We see him in the Book of Daniel at the head of a magnificent Court,
+surrounded by "princes, governors, and captains, judges, treasurers,
+councillors, and sheriffs;" waited on by eunuchs selected with the
+greatest care, "well-favored" and carefully educated; attended, whenever
+he requires it, by a multitude of astrologers and other "wise men," who
+seek to interpret to him the will of Heaven. He is an absolute monarch,
+disposing with a word of the lives and properties of his subjects, even
+the highest. All offices are in his gift. He can raise a foreigner
+to the second place in the kingdom, and even set him over the entire
+priestly order. His wealth is enormous, for he makes of pure gold an
+image, or obelisk, ninety feet high and nine feet broad. He is religious
+after a sort, but wavers in his faith, sometimes acknowledging the
+God of the Jews as the only real deity, sometimes relapsing into an
+idolatrous worship, and forcing all his subjects to follow his example.
+Even then, however, his polytheism is of a kind which admits of a
+special devotion to a particular deity, who is called emphatically "his
+god." In temper he is hasty and violent, but not obstinate; his fierce
+resolves are taken suddenly and as suddenly repented of; he is moreover
+capable of bursts of gratitude and devotion, no less than of accesses of
+fury; like most Orientals, he is vainglorious but he can humble himself
+before the chastening hand of the Almighty; in his better moods he shows
+a spirit astonishing in one of his country and time--a spirit of real
+piety, self-condemnation, and self-abasement, which renders him one of
+the most remarkable characters in Scripture.
+
+A few touches of a darker hue must be added to this portrait of the
+great Babylonian king from the statements of another contemporary, the
+prophet Jeremiah. The execution of Jehoi-akim, and the putting out of
+Zedekiah's eyes, though acts of considerable severity, may perhaps be
+regarded as justified by the general practice of the age, and therefore
+as not indicating in Nebuchadnezzar any special ferocity of disposition.
+But the ill-treatment of Jehoiakim's dead body, the barbarity
+of murdering Zedekiah's sons before his eyes, and the prolonged
+imprisonment both of Zedekiah and of Jehoiachin, though the latter had
+only contemplated rebellion, cannot be thus excused. They were unusual
+and unnecessary acts, which tell against the monarch who authorized
+them, and must be considered to imply a real cruelty of disposition,
+such as is observable in Sargon and Asshur-bani-pal. Nebuchadnezzar, it
+is plain, was not content with such a measure of severity as was
+needed to secure his own interests, but took a pleasure in the wanton
+infliction of suffering on those who had provoked his resentment.
+
+On the other hand, we obtain from the native writer, Berosus, one
+amiable trait which deserves a cursory mention. Nebuchadnezzar was
+fondly attached to the Median princess who had been chosen for him as
+a wife by his father from political motives. Not content with ordinary
+tokens of affection, he erected, solely for her gratification, the
+remarkable structure which the Greeks called the "Hanging Garden."
+A native of a mountainous country, Amyitis disliked the tiresome
+uniformity of the level alluvium, and pined for the woods and hills
+of Media. It was to satisfy this longing by the best substitute which
+circumstances allowed that the celebrated Garden was made. Art strove
+to emulate nature with a certain measure of success, and the lofty rocks
+and various trees of this wonderful Paradise, if they were not a very
+close imitation of Median mountain scenery, were at any rate a pleasant
+change from the natural monotony of the Babylonian plain, and must have
+formed a grateful retreat for the Babylonian queen, whom they reminded
+at once of her husband's love and of the beauty of her native country.
+
+The most remarkable circumstance in Nebuchadnezzar's life remains to be
+noticed. Towards the close of his reign, when his conquests and probably
+most of his great works were completed, in the midst of complete
+tranquillity and prosperity, a sudden warning was sent him. He dreamt
+a strange dream, and when he sought to know its meaning, the Prophet
+Daniel was inspired to tell him that it portended his removal from the
+kingly office for the space of seven years, in consequence of a curious
+and very unusual kind of madness. This malady, which is not unknown to
+physicians, has been termed "Lycanthropy." It consists in the belief
+that one is not a man but a beast, in the disuse of language, the
+rejection of all ordinary human food, and sometimes in the loss of the
+erect posture and a preference for walking on all fours. Within a year
+of the time that he received the warning, Nebuchadnezzar was smitten.
+The great king became a wretched maniac. Allowed to indulge in his
+distempered fancy, he eschewed human habitations, lived in the open air
+night and day, fed on herbs, disused clothing, and became covered with
+a rough coat of hair. His subjects generally, it is probable, were not
+allowed to know of his condition, although they could not but be aware
+that he was suffering from some terrible malady. The queen most likely
+held the reins of power, and carried on the government in his name. The
+dream had been interpreted to mean that the lycanthropy would not be
+permanent; and even the date of recovery had been announced, only with
+a certain ambiguity. The Babylonians were thereby encouraged to await
+events, without taking any steps that would have involved them in
+difficulties if the malady ceased. And their faith and patience met
+with a reward. After suffering obscuration for the space of seven years,
+suddenly the king's intellect returned to him. His recovery was received
+with joy by his Court. Lords and councillors gathered about him. He once
+more took the government into his own hands, issued his proclamations,
+and performed the other functions of royalty. He was now an old man, and
+his reign does not seem to have been much prolonged; but "the glory of
+his kingdon," his "honor and brightness" returned; his last days were as
+brilliant as his first: his sun set in an unclouded sky, shorn of none
+of the rays that had given splendor to its noonday. Nebuchadnezzar
+expired at Babylon in the forty-fourth year of his reign, B.C. 561,
+after an illness of no long duration. He was probably little short of
+eighty years old at his death.
+
+The successor of Nebuchadnezzar was his son Evil-Mero-dach, who reigned
+only two years, and of whom very little is known. We may expect that the
+marvellous events of his father's life, which are recorded in the Book
+of Daniel, had made a deep impression upon him, and that he was thence
+inclined to favor the persons, and perhaps the religion, of the Jews.
+One of his first acts was to release the unfortunate Jehoiachin from the
+imprisonment in which he had languished for thirty-five years, and to
+treat him with kindness and respect. He not only recognized his royal
+rank, but gave him precedence over all the captive kings resident at
+Babylon. Josephus says that he even admitted Jehoiachin into the number
+of his most intimate friends. Perhaps he may have designed him some
+further advancement, and may in other respects have entertained projects
+which seemed strange and alarming to his subjects. At any rate he had
+been but two years upon the throne when a conspiracy was formed
+against him; he was accused of lawlessness and intemperance; his
+own brother-in-law, Neriglissar, the husband of a daughter of
+Nebuchadnezzar, headed the malcontents; and Evil-Merodach lost his life
+with his crown.
+
+Neriglissar, the successful conspirator, was at once acknowledged
+king. He is probably identical with the "Nergal-shar-ezer, Rab-Mag," of
+Jeremiah, who occupied a prominent position among the Babylonian nobles
+left to press the siege of Jerusalem when Nebuchadnezzar retired to
+Riblah. The title of "Rab-Mag," is one that he bears upon his bricks.
+It is doubtful what exactly his office was; for we have no reason to
+believe that there were at this time any Magi at Babylon; but it was
+certainly an ancient and very high dignity of which even kings might
+be proud. It is remarkable that Neriglissar calls himself the son of
+Bel-sum-iskun, "king of Babylon"--a monarch whose name does not appear
+in Ptolemy's list, but who is probably to be identified with a chieftain
+so called, who assumed the royal title in the troubles which preceded
+the fall of the Assyrian Empire.
+
+During his short reign of four years, or rather three years and a
+few months, Neriglissar had not time to distinguish himself by many
+exploits. So far as appears, he was at peace with all his neighbors, and
+employed his time principally in the construction of the Western
+Palace at Babylon, which was a large building placed at one corner of a
+fortified inclosure, directly opposite the ancient royal residence, and
+abutting on the Euphrates. If the account which Diodorus gives of this
+palace be not a gross exaggeration of the truth, it must have been a
+magnificent erection, elaborately ornamented with painting and sculpture
+in the best style of Babylonian art, though in size it may have been
+inferior to the old residence of the kings on the other side of the
+river.
+
+Neriglissar reigned from B.C. 559 to B.C. 556, and dying a natural death
+in the last-named year, left his throne to his son, Laborosoarchod,
+or Labossoracus. This prince, who was a mere boy, and therefore quite
+unequal to the task of governing a great empire in critical times, was
+not allowed to retain the crown many months. Accused by those
+about him--whether justly or unjustly we cannot say--of giving many
+indications of a bad disposition, he was deposed and put to death by
+torture. With him power passed from the House of Nabopolassar, which had
+held the throne for just seventy years.
+
+On the death of Laborosoarchod the conspirators selected one of their
+number, a certain Nabonadius or Nabannidochus, and invested him with the
+sovereignty. He was in no way related to the late monarch, and his claim
+to succeed must have been derived mainly from the part which he had
+played in the conspiracy. But still he was a personage of some rank, for
+his father had, like Neriglissar, held the important office of Rab Mag.
+It is probable that one of his first steps on ascending the throne was
+to connect himself by marriage with the royal house which had preceded
+him in the kingdom. Either the mother of the late king Laborosoarchod,
+and widow of Neriglissar, or possibly some other daughter of
+Nebuchadnezzar, was found willing to unite her fortune with those of the
+new sovereign, and share the dangers and the dignity of his position.
+Such a union strengthened the hold of the reigning monarch on the
+allegiance of his subjects, and tended still more to add stability to
+his dynasty. For as the issue of such a marriage would join in one the
+claims of both royal houses, he would be sure to receive the support of
+all parties in the state. Very shortly after the accession of Nabonadius
+(B.C. 555) he received an embassy from the far north-west. An important
+revolution had occurred on the eastern frontier of Babylonia three years
+before, in the reign of Neriglissar; but its effects only now began to
+make themselves felt among the neighboring nations. Had Cyrus, on taking
+the crown, adopted the policy of Astyages, the substitution of Persia
+for Media as the ruling Arian nation would have been a matter of small
+account. But there can be little doubt that he really entered at once
+on a career of conquest, Lydia, at any rate, felt herself menaced by the
+new power, and seeing the danger which threatened the other monarchies
+of the time, if they allowed the great Arian kingdom to attack them
+severally with her full force, proposed a league whereby the common
+enemy might, she thought, be resisted with success. Ambassadors seem
+to have been sent from Sardis to Babylon in the very year in which
+Nabonadius became king. He therefore had at once to decide whether he
+would embrace the offer made him, and uniting with Lydia and Egypt in
+a league against Persia, make that power his enemy, or refuse the
+proffered alliance and trust to the gratitude of Cyrus for the future
+security of his kingdom. It would be easy to imagine the arguments pro
+and contra which presented themselves to his mind at this conjuncture;
+but as they would be destitute of a historical foundation, it is perhaps
+best to state simply the decision at which he is known to have arrived.
+This was an acceptance of the Lydian offer. Nabonadius consented to join
+the proposed league; and a treaty was probably soon afterwards concluded
+between the three powers whereby they united in an alliance offensive
+and defensive against the Persians.
+
+Knowing that he had provoked a powerful enemy by this bold act, and
+ignorant how soon he might be called upon to defend his kingdom, from
+the entire force of his foe, which might be suddenly hurled against him
+almost at any moment, Nabonadius seems to have turned his attention at
+once to providing means of defence. The works ascribed by Herodotus to a
+queen, Nitocris, whom he makes the mother of Nabonadius (Labynetus)
+must be regarded as in reality constructions of that monarch himself,
+undertaken with the object of protecting Babylon from Cyrus. They
+consisted in part of defences within the city, designed apparently to
+secure it against an enemy who should enter by the river, in part of
+hydraulic works intended to obstruct the advances of an army by the
+usual route. The river had hitherto flowed in its natural bed through
+the middle of the town. Nabonadius confined the stream by a brick
+embankment carried the whole way along both banks, after which he built
+on the top of the embankment a wall of a considerable height, pierced
+at intervals by gateways, in which were set gates of bronze. He likewise
+made certain cuttings, reservoirs, and sluices at some distance from
+Babylon towards the north, which were to be hindrances to an enemy's
+march, though in what way is not very apparent. Some have supposed that
+besides these works there was further built at the same time a great
+wall which extended entirely across the tract between the two rivers--a
+huge barrier a hundred feet high and twenty thick--meant, like the Roman
+walls in Britain and the great wall of China, to be insurmountable by an
+unskillful foe; but there is ground for suspecting that this belief is
+ill-founded, having for its sole basis a misconception of Xenophon's.
+
+Nabonadius appears to have been allowed ample time to carry out to the
+full his system of defences, and to complete all his preparations.
+The precipitancy of Croesus, who plunged into a war with Persia
+single-handed, asking no aid from his allies, and the promptitude of
+Cyrus, who allowed him no opportunity of recovering from his first false
+step, had prevented Nabonadius from coming into actual collision with
+Persia in the early part of his reign. The defeat of Croesus in the
+battle of Pteria, the siege of Sardis, and its capture, followed so
+rapidly on the first commencement of hostilities, that whatever his
+wishes may have been, Nabonadius had it not in his power to give any
+help to his rash ally. Actual war was thus avoided at this time; and
+no collision having occurred, Cyrus could defer an attack on the great
+kingdom of the south until he had consolidated his power in the north
+and the northeast, which he rightly regarded as of the last importance.
+Thus fourteen years intervened between the capture of Sardis by the
+Persian arms and the commencement of the expedition against Babylon.
+
+When at last it was rumored that the Persian king had quitted Ecbatana
+(B.C. 539) and commenced his march to the south-west, Nabonadius
+received the tidings with indifference. His defences were completed: his
+city was amply provisioned; if the enemy should defeat him in the open
+field, he might retire behind his walls, and laugh to scorn all attempts
+to reduce his capital either by blockade or storm. It does not appear to
+have occurred to him that it was possible to protect his territory. With
+a broad, deep, and rapid river directly interposed between him and his
+foe, with a network of canals spread far and wide over his country, with
+an almost inexhaustible supply of human labor at his command for
+the construction of such dikes, walls, or cuttings as he should deem
+advisable, Nabonadius might, one would have thought, have aspired to
+save his land from invasion, or have disputed inch by inch his enemy's
+advance towards the capital. But such considerations have seldom had
+much force with Orientals, whose notions of war and strategy are even
+now of the rudest and most primitive description. To measure one's
+strength as quickly as possible with that of one's foe, to fight one
+great pitched battle in order to decide the question of superiority
+in the field, and then, if defeated, either to surrender or to retire
+behind walls, has been the ordinary conception of a commander's duties
+in the East from the time of the Ramesside kings to our own day. No
+special blame therefore attaches to Nabonadius for his neglect. He
+followed the traditional policy of Oriental monarchs in the course which
+he took. And his subjects had less reason to complain of his resolution
+than most others, since the many strongholds in Babylonia must have
+afforded them a ready refuge, and the great fortified district within
+which Babylon itself stood must have been capable of accommodating with
+ease the whole native population of the country.
+
+If we may trust Herodotus, the invader, having made all his preparations
+and commenced his march, came to a sudden pause midway between Ecbatana
+and Babylon. One of the sacred white horses, which drew the chariot of
+Ormazd, had been drowned in crossing a river; and Cyrus had thereupon
+desisted from his march, and, declaring that he would revenge himself
+on the insolent stream, had set his soldiers to disperse its waters into
+360 channels. This work employed him during the whole summer and autumn;
+nor was it till another spring had come that he resumed his expedition.
+To the Babylonians such a pause must have appeared like irresolution.
+They must have suspected that the invader had changed his mind and would
+not venture across the Tigris. If the particulars of the story reached
+them, they probably laughed at the monarch who vented his rage on
+inanimate nature, while he let his enemies escape scot free.
+
+Cyrus, however, had a motive for his proceedings which will appear
+in the sequel. Having wintered on the banks of the Gyndes in a mild
+climate, where tents would have been quite a sufficient protection to
+his army, he put his troops in motion at the commencement of spring,
+crossed the Tigris apparently unopposed, and soon came in sight of the
+capital. Here he found the Babylonian army drawn out to meet him under
+the command of Nabonadius himself, who had resolved to try the chance
+of a battle. An engagement ensued, of which we possess no details; our
+informants simply tell us that the Babylonian monarch was completely
+defeated, and that, while most of his army sought safety within the
+walls of the capital, he himself with a small body of troops threw
+himself into Borsippa, an important town lying at a short distance from
+Babylon towards the south-west. It is not easy to see the exact object
+of this movement. Perhaps Nabonadius thought that the enemy would
+thereby be obliged to divide his army, which might then more easily be
+defeated; perhaps he imagined that by remaining without the walls he
+might be able to collect such a force among his subjects and allies as
+would compel the beleaguering army to withdraw. Or, possibly, he merely
+followed an instinct of self-preservation, and fearing that the soldiers
+of Cyrus might enter Babylon with his own, if he fled thither, sought
+refuge in another city.
+
+It might have been supposed that his absence would have produced anarchy
+and confusion in the capital; but a step which he had recently
+taken with the object of giving stability to his throne rendered
+the preservation of order tolerably easy. At the earliest possible
+moment--probably when he was about fourteen--he had associated with him
+in the government his son, Belshazzar, or Bel-shar-uzur, the grandson
+of the great Nebuchadnezzar. This step, taken most likely with a view to
+none but internal dangers, was now found exceedingly convenient for
+the purposes of the war. In his father's absence Belshazzar took
+the direction of affairs within the city, and met and foiled for a
+considerable time all the assaults of the Persians. He was young and
+inexperienced, but he had the counsels of the queen-mother to guide and
+support him, as well as those of the various lords and officers of
+the court. So well did he manage the defence that after a while Cyrus
+despaired, and as a last resource ventured on a stratagem in which it
+was clear that he must either succeed or perish.
+
+Withdrawing the greater part of his army from the vicinity of the city,
+and leaving behind him only certain corps of observation, Cyrus marched
+away up the course of the Euphrates for a certain distance, and there
+proceeded to make a vigorous use of the spade. His soldiers could
+now appreciate the value of the experience which they had gained by
+dispersing the Gyndes, and perceive that the summer and autumn of the
+preceding year had not been wasted. They dug a channel or channels from
+the Euphrates, by means of which a great portion of its water would be
+drawn off, and hoped in this way to render the natural course of the
+river fordable.
+
+When all was prepared, Cyrus determined to wait for the arrival of a
+certain festival, during which the whole population were wont to engage
+in drinking and revelling, and then silently in the dead of night to
+turn the water of the river and make his attack. It fell out as he hoped
+and wished. The festival was held with even greater pomp and splendor
+than usual; for Belshazzar, with the natural insolence of youth, to
+mark his contempt of the besieging army, abandoned himself wholly to the
+delights of the season, and himself entertained a thousand lords in his
+palace. Elsewhere the rest of the population was occupied in feasting
+and dancing. Drunken riot and mad excitement held possession of the
+town; the siege was forgotten; ordinary precautions were neglected.
+Following the example of their king, the Babylonians gave themselves
+up for the night to orgies in which religious frenzy and drunken excess
+formed a strange and revolting medley.
+
+Meanwhile, outside the city, in silence and darkness, the Persians
+watched at the two points where the Euphrates entered and left the
+walls. Anxiously they noted the gradual sinking of the water in the
+river-bed; still more anxiously they watched to see if those within
+the walls would observe the suspicious circumstance and sound an alarm
+through the town. Should such an alarm be given, all their labors would
+be lost. If, when they entered the river-bed, they found the river-walls
+manned and the river-gates fast-locked, they would be indeed "caught in
+a trap." Enfiladed on both sides by an enemy whom they could neither
+see nor reach, they would be overwhelmed and destroyed by his missiles
+before they could succeed in making their escape. But, as they watched,
+no sounds of alarm reached them--only a confused noise of revel and
+riot, which showed that the unhappy townsmen were quite unconscious of
+the approach of danger.
+
+At last shadowy forms began to emerge from the obscurity of the deep
+river-bed, and on the landing-places opposite the river-gates scattered
+clusters of men grew into solid columns--the undefended gateways were
+seized--a war-shout was raised--the alarm was taken and spread--and
+swift runners started off to "show the King of Babylon that his city was
+taken at one end." In the darkness and confusion of the night a terrible
+massacre ensued. The drunken revellers could make no resistance. The
+king paralyzed with fear at the awful handwriting upon the wall, which
+too late had warned him of his peril, could do nothing even to check
+the progress of the assailants, who carried all before them everywhere.
+Bursting into the palace, a band of Persians made their way to the
+presence of the monarch, and slew him on the scene of his impious
+revelry. Other bands carried fire and sword through the town. When
+morning came, Cyrus found himself undisputed master of the city, which,
+if it had not despised his efforts, might with the greatest ease have
+baffled them.
+
+The war, however, was not even yet at an end. Nabonadius still held
+Borsippa, and, if allowed to remain unmolested, might have gradually
+gathered strength and become once more a formidable foe. Cyrus,
+therefore, having first issued his orders that the outer fortifications
+of Babylon should be dismantled, proceeded to complete his conquest by
+laying siege to the town where he knew that Nabonadius had taken refuge.
+That monarch, however, perceiving that resistance would be vain, did
+not wait till Borsippa was invested, but on the approach of his enemy
+surrendered himself. Cyrus rewarded his submission by kind and liberal
+treatment. Not only did he spare his life, but (if we may trust
+Abydenus) he conferred on him the government of the important province
+of Carmania.
+
+Thus perished the Babylonian empire. If we seek the causes of its fall,
+we shall find them partly in its essential military inferiority to
+the kingdom that had recently grown up upon its borders, partly in the
+accidental circumstance that its ruler at the time of the Persian attack
+was a man of no great capacity. Had Nebuchadnezzar himself, or a prince
+of his mental calibre, been the contemporary of Cyrus, the issue of the
+contest might have been doubtful. Babylonia possessed naturally vast
+powers of resistance--powers which, had they been made use of to the
+utmost, might have tired out the patience of the Persians. That lively,
+active, but not over-persevering people would scarcely have maintained
+a siege with the pertinacity of the Babylonians themselves or of
+the Egyptians. If the stratagem of Cyrus had failed--and its success
+depended wholly on the Babylonians exercising no vigilance--the capture
+of the town would have been almost impossible. Babylon was too large to
+be blockaded; its walls were too lofty to be scaled, and too massive to
+be battered down by the means possessed by the ancients. Mining in the
+soft alluvial soil would have been dangerous work, especially as the
+town ditch was deep and supplied with abundant water from the Euphrates.
+Cyrus, had he failed in his night attack, would probably have at once
+raised the siege; and Babylonian independence might perhaps in that case
+have been maintained down to the time of Alexander.
+
+Even thus, however, the "Empire" would not have been continued. So soon
+as it became evident that the Babylonians were no match for the Persians
+in the field, their authority over the subject nations was at an end.
+The Susianians, the tribes of the middle Euphrates, the Syrians, the
+Phoenicians, the Jews, the Idumseans, the Ammonites and Moabites, would
+have gravitated to the stronger power, even if the attack of Cyrus on
+Babylon itself had been repulsed. For the conquests of Cyrus in Asia
+Minor, the Oxus region, and Afghanistan, had completely destroyed the
+balance of power in Western Asia, and given to Persia a preponderance
+both in men and in resources against which the cleverest and most
+energetic of Babylonian princes would have struggled in vain. Persia
+must in any case have absorbed all the tract between Mount Zagros and
+the Mediterranean, except Babylonia Proper; and thus the successful
+defence of Babylon would merely have deprived the Persian Empire of a
+province.
+
+In its general character the Babylonian Empire was little more than
+a reproduction of the Assyrian. The same loose organization of the
+provinces under native kings rather than satraps almost universally
+prevailed, with the same duties on the part of suzerain and subjects and
+the same results of ever-recurring revolt and re-conquest. Similar
+means were employed under both empires to check and discourage
+rebellion--mutilations and executions of chiefs, pillage of the
+rebellious region, and wholesale deportation of its population. Babylon,
+equally with Assyria, failed to win the affections of the subject
+nations, and, as a natural result, received no help from them in her
+hour of need. Her system was to exhaust and oppress the conquered
+races for the supposed benefit of the conquerors, and to impoverish the
+provinces for the adornment and enrichment of the capital. The wisest of
+her monarch's thought it enough to construct works of public utility
+in Babylonia Proper, leaving the dependent countries to themselves, and
+doing nothing to develop their resources. This selfish system was, like
+most selfishness, short-sighted; it alienated those whom it would have
+been true policy to conciliate and win. When the time of peril came, the
+subject nations were no source of strength to the menaced empire, On
+the contrary, it would seem that some even turned against her and made
+common cause with the assailants.
+
+Babylonian civilization differed in many respects from Assyrian, to
+which however it approached more nearly than to any other known type.
+Its advantages over Assyrian were in its greater originality, its
+superior literary character, and its comparative width and flexibility.
+Babylonia seems to have been the source from which Assyria drew her
+learning, such as it was, her architecture, the main ideas of her
+mimetic art, her religious notions, her legal forms, and a vast number
+of her customs and usages. But Babylonia herself, so far as we know,
+drew her stores from no foreign country. Hers was apparently the genius
+which excogitated an alphabet--worked out the simpler problems
+of arithmetic--invented implements for measuring the lapse of
+time--conceived the idea of raising enormous structures with the poorest
+of all materials, clay--discovered the art of polishing, boring, and
+engraving gems--reproduced with truthfulness the outlines of human and
+animal forms--attained to high perfection in textile fabrics--studied
+with success the motions of the heavenly bodies--conceived of grammar
+as a science--elaborated a system of law--saw the value of an exact
+chronology--in almost every branch of science made a beginning, thus
+rendering it comparatively easy for other nations to proceed with the
+superstructure. To Babylonia, far more than to Egypt, we owe the art
+and learning of the Greeks. It was from the East, not from Egypt,
+that Greece derived her architecture, her sculpture, her science, her
+philosophy, her mathematical knowledge--in a word, her intellectual
+life. And Babylon was the source to which the entire stream of Eastern
+civilization may be traced. It is scarcely too much to say that, but
+for Babylon, real civilization might not even yet have dawned upon the
+earth. Mankind might never have advanced beyond that spurious and
+false form of it which in Egypt, India, China, Japan, Mexico, and Peru,
+contented the aspirations of the species.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+
+
+
+A. STANDARD INSCRIPTION OF NEBUCHADNEZZAR.
+
+
+The Inscription begins with the various titles of Nebuchadnezzar. It
+then contains prayers and invocations to the Gods, Merodach and Nebo.
+The extent of N.'s power is spoken of--it reaches from one sea to the
+other.
+
+An account is then given of the wonders of Babylon, viz.:
+
+1. The great temple of Merodach. (The mound of Babil is the tower or
+ziggurat of this.)
+
+2. The Borsippa temple (or Birs).
+
+3. Various other temples in Babylon and Borsippa.
+
+The subjoined description of the city follows: "The double inclosure
+which Nabopolassar my father had made but not completed, I finished.
+Nabopolassar made its ditch. With two long embankments of brick and
+mortar he bound its bed. He made the embankment of the Arahha. He lined
+the other side of the Euphrates with brick. He made a bridge (?) over
+the Euphrates, but did not finish its buttresses (?). From... (the name
+of a place) he made with bricks burnt as hard as stones, by the help
+of the great Lord Merodach, a way (for) a branch of the Shimat to the
+waters of the Yapur-Shapu, the great reservoir of Babylon, opposite to
+the gate of Nin.
+
+"The _Ingur-Bel_ and the _Nimiti-Bel_--the great double wall of
+Babylon--I finished. With two long embankments of brick and mortar I
+built the sides of its ditch. I joined it on with that which my father
+had made. I strengthened the city. Across the river to the west I
+built the wall of Babylon with brick. The Yapur-Shapu-the reservoir of
+Babylon--by the grace of Merodach I filled completely full of water.
+With bricks burnt as hard as stones, and with bricks in huge masses like
+mountains (?), the Yapur-Shapu, from the gate of Mula as far as Nana,
+who is the protectress of her votaries, by the grace of his godship
+(i.e. Merodach) I strengthened. With that which my father had made I
+joined it. I made the way of Nana, the protectress of her votaries.
+The great gates of the Ingur-Bel and the Nimiti-Bel-the reservoir of
+Babylon, at the time of the flood (lit. of fulness), inundated them.
+These gates I raised. Against the waters their foundations with brick
+and mortar I built. [Here follows a description of the gates, with
+various architectural details, an account of the decorations, hangings,
+etc.] For the delight of mankind I filled the reservoir. Behold! besides
+the Ingur-Bel, the impregnable fortification of Babylon. I constructed
+inside Babylon on the eastern side of the river a fortification such
+as no king had ever made before me, viz., a long rampart, 4000 ammas
+square, as an extra defence. I excavated the ditch: with brick and
+mortar I bound its bed; a long rampart at its head (?) I strongly built.
+I adorned its gates. The folding doors and the pillars I plated with
+copper. Against presumptuous enemies, who were hostile to the men of
+Babylon, great waters, like the waters of the ocean, I made use of
+abundantly. Their depths were like the depths of the vast ocean. I did
+not allow the waters to overflow, but the fulness of their floods I
+caused to flow on, restraining them with a brick embankment.... Thus I
+completely made strong the defences of Babylon. May it last forever!"
+
+[Here follows a similar account of works at Borsippa.] "In Babylon--the
+city which is the delight of my eyes, and which I have glorified--when
+the waters were in flood, they inundated the foundations of the great
+palace called Taprati-nisi, or 'the Wonder of Mankind;' (a palace) with
+many chambers and lofty towers; the high-place of Royalty; (situated) in
+the land of Babylon, and in the middle of Babylon; stretching from the
+Ingur-Bel to the bed of the Shebil, the eastern canal, (and) from
+the bank of the Sippara river, to the water of the Yapur-Shapu;
+which Nabopolassar my father built with brick and raised up; when the
+reservoir of Babylon was full, the gates of this palace were flooded.
+I raised the mound of brick on which it was built, and made smooth its
+platform. I cut off the floods of the water, and the foundations (of
+the palace) I protected against the water with bricks and mortar: and I
+finished it completely. Long beams I set up to support it: with pillars
+and beams plated with copper and strengthened with iron I built up its
+gates. Silver and gold, and precious stones whose names were almost
+unknown [here follow several unknown names of objects, treasures of the
+palace], I stored up inside, and placed there the treasure-house of
+my kingdom. Four years (?), the seat of my kingdom in the city...,
+which....did not rejoice (my) heart. In all my dominions I did not build
+a high-place of power; the precious treasures of my kingdom I did not
+lay up. In Babylon, buildings for myself and the honor of my kingdom I
+did not lay out. In the worship of Merodach my lord, the joy of my heart
+(?), in Babylon, the city of his sovereignty and the seat of my empire,
+I did not sing his praises (?), and I did not furnish his altars (i.e.
+with victims), nor did I clear out the canals." [Here follow further
+negative clauses.]
+
+"As a further defence in war, at the Ingur-Bel, the impregnable outer
+wall, the rampart of the Babylonians--with two strong lines of brick and
+mortar I made a strong fort, 400 ammas square inside the Nimiti-Bel,
+the inner defence of the Babylonians. Masonry of brick within them (the
+lines) I constructed. With the palace of my father I connected it. In a
+happy month and on an auspicious day its foundations I laid in the earth
+like.... I completely finished its top. In fifteen days I completed it,
+and made it the high-place of my kingdom. [Here follows a description of
+the ornamentation of the palace.] A strong fort of brick and mortar in
+strength I constructed. Inside the brick fortification another great
+fortification of long stones, of the size of great mountains, I made.
+Like Shedim I raised up its head. And this building I raised for a
+wonder; for the defence of the people I constructed it."
+
+
+
+
+B. ON THE MEANINGS OF BABYLONIAN NAMES.
+
+The names of the Babylonians, like those of the Assyrians, were
+significant. Generally, if not always, they were composed of at least
+two elements. These might be a noun in the nominative case with a verb
+following it, a noun in the nominative with a participle in apposition,
+or a word meaning "servant" followed by the name of a god. Under the
+first class came such names as "Bel-ipni"--"Bel has made (me)"--from Bel,
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 263]
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 264]
+
+[Illustration: PAGE 265]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Seven Great Monarchies Of The
+Ancient Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon, by George Rawlinson
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #16164 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/16164)
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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Seven Great Monarchies, by George Rawlinson, The Fourth Monarchy
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd7; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 2em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 20%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 25%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ pre { font-family: Times; font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
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+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient
+Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon, by George Rawlinson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 4. (of 7): Babylon
+ The History, Geography, And Antiquities Of Chaldaea,
+ Assyria, Babylon, Media, Persia, Parthia, And Sassanian
+ or New Persian Empire; With Maps and Illustrations.
+
+Author: George Rawlinson
+
+Illustrator: George Rawlinson
+
+Release Date: July 1, 2005 [EBook #16164]
+Last Updated: September 6, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SEVEN GREAT MONARCHIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE SEVEN GREAT MONARCHIES
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ OF THE ANCIENT EASTERN WORLD; OR, THE HISTORY, GEOGRAPHY, AND ANTIQUITIES
+ OF CHALDAEA, ASSYRIA BABYLON, MEDIA, PERSIA, PARTHIA, AND SASSANIAN, OR
+ NEW PERSIAN EMPIRE. <b> BY </b> <b> GEORGE RAWLINSON, M.A., </b> CAMDEN
+ PROFESSOR OF ANCIENT HISTORY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD IN THREE VOLUMES.
+ VOLUME II. WITH MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;EXTENT OF THE
+ EMPIRE.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CLIMATE
+ AND PRODUCTIONS.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2H_4_0004"> CHAPTER III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ PEOPLE.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2H_4_0005"> CHAPTER IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ CAPITAL.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ARTS
+ AND SCIENCES.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MANNERS
+ AND CUSTOMS.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HISTORY AND
+ CHRONOLOGY.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2H_APPE"> APPENDIX.</a></p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2H_4_0011"> A. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;STANDARD INSCRIPTION OF
+ NEBUCHADNEZZAR.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2H_4_0012"> B. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ON
+ THE MEANINGS OF BABYLONIAN NAMES.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ List of Illustrations
+ </h2>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0001"> Map </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0002"> Plate VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0003"> Plate VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0004"> Plate IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0005"> Plate X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0006"> Plate XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0007"> Plate XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0008"> Plate XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0009"> Page 182 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0010"> Plate XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0011"> Plate XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0012"> Plate XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0013"> Plate XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0014"> Plate XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0015"> Plate XIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0016"> Plate XX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0017"> Plate XXI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0018"> Plate XXII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0019"> Plate XXIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0020"> Plate XXIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0021"> Plate XXV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0022"> Page 229 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0023"> Page 237 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0024"> Page 263 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0025"> Page 264 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0026"> Page 265 </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE FOURTH MONARCHY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ BABYLONIA. <br /> <br /> <a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"></a>
+ <br /> <a href="images/map_vol2.jpg">ENLARGE TO FULL SIZE</a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="map_vol2b (129K)" src="images/map_vol2b.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> Click on the Map to enlarge to full size. <a name="link2HCH0001"
+ id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. EXTENT OF THE EMPIRE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Behold, a tree in the midst of the earth, and the height thereof was
+ great; the tree grew and was strong: and the height thereof reached unto
+ heaven, and the sight thereof to the end of all the earth.&rdquo;&mdash;Dan. iy.
+ 10, 11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The limits of Babylonia Proper, the tract in which the dominant power of
+ the Fourth Monarchy had its abode, being almost identical with those which
+ have been already described under the head of Chaldaea, will not require
+ in this place to be treated afresh, at any length. It needs only to remind
+ the reader that Babylonia Proper is that alluvial tract towards the mouth
+ of the two great rivers of Western Asia&mdash;the Tigris and the Euphrates&mdash;which
+ intervenes between the Arabian Desert on the one side, and the more
+ eastern of the two streams on the other. Across the Tigris the country is
+ no longer Babylonia, but Cissia, or Susiana&mdash;a distinct region, known
+ to the Jews as Elam&mdash;the habitat of a distinct people. Babylonia lies
+ westward of the Tigris, and consists of two vast plains or flats, one
+ situated between the two rivers, and thus forming the lower portion of the
+ &ldquo;Mesopotamia&rdquo; of the Greeks and Romans&mdash;the other interposed between
+ the Euphrates and Arabia, a long but narrow strip along the right bank of
+ that abounding river. The former of these two districts is shaped like an
+ ancient amphora, the mouth extending from Hit to Samarah, the neck lying
+ between Baghdad and Ctesiphon on the Tigris, Mohammed and Mosaib on the
+ Euphrates, the full expansion of the body occurring between Serut and El
+ Khithr, and the pointed base reaching down to Kornah at the junction of
+ the two streams. This tract, the main region of the ancient Babylonia, is
+ about 320 miles long, and from 20 to 100 broad. It may be estimated to
+ contain about 18,000 square miles. The tract west of the Euphrates is
+ smaller than this. Its length, in the time of the Babylonian Empire, may
+ be regarded as about 350 miles, its average width is from 25 to 30 miles,
+ which would give an area of about 9000 square miles. Thus the Babylonia of
+ Nabopolassar and Nebuchadnezzar may be regarded as covering a space of
+ 27,000 square miles&mdash;a space a little exceeding the area of the Low
+ countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The small province included within these limits&mdash;smaller than
+ Scotland or Ireland, or Portugal or Bavaria&mdash;became suddenly, in the
+ latter half of the seventh century B.C., the mistress of an extensive
+ empire. On the fall of Assyria, about B.C. 625, or a little later, Media
+ and Babylonia, as already observed, divided between them her extensive
+ territory. It is with the acquisitions thus made that we have now to deal.
+ We have to inquire what portion exactly of the previous dominions of
+ Assyria fell to the lot of the adventurous Nabopolassar, when Nineveh
+ ceased to be&mdash;what was the extent of the territory which was ruled
+ from Babylon in the latter portion of the seventh and the earlier portion
+ of the sixth century before our era?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the evidence which we possess on this point is threefold. It consists
+ of certain notices in the Hebrew Scriptures, contemporary records of
+ first-rate historical value; of an account which strangely mingles truth
+ with fable in one of the books of the Apocrypha; and of a passage of
+ Berosus preserved by Josephus in his work against Apion. The Scriptural
+ notices are contained in Jeremiah, in Daniel, and in the books of Kings
+ and Chronicles. From these sources we learn that the Babylonian Empire of
+ this time embraced on the one hand the important country of Susiana or
+ Elymais (Elam), while on the other it ran up the Euphrates at least as
+ high as Carchemish, from thence extending westward to the Mediterranean,
+ and southward to, or rather perhaps into, Egypt. The Apocryphal book of
+ Judith enlarges these limits in every direction. That the Nabuchodonosor
+ of that work is a reminiscence of the real Nebuchadnezzar there can be no
+ doubt. The territories of that monarch are made to extend eastward, beyond
+ Susiana, into Persia; northward to Nineveh; westward to Cilicia in Asia
+ Minor; and southward to the very borders of Ethiopia. Among the countries
+ under his sway are enumerated Elam, Persia, Assyria, Cilicia, Coele-Syria,
+ Syria of Damascus, Phoenicia, Galilee, Gilead, Bashan, Judsea, Philistia,
+ Goshen, and Egypt generally. The passage of Berosus is of a more partial
+ character. It has no bearing on the general question of the extent of the
+ Babylonian Empire, but, incidentally, it confirms the statements of our
+ other authorities as to the influence of Babylon in the West. It tells us
+ that Coele-Syria, Phoenicia, and Egypt, were subject to Nabopolassar, and
+ that Nebuchadnezzar ruled, not only over these countries, but also over
+ some portion of Arabia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From these statements, which, on the whole, are tolerably accordant, we
+ may gather that the great Babylonian Empire of the seventh century B.C.
+ inherited from Assyria all the southern and western portion of her
+ territory, while the more northern and eastern provinces fell to the share
+ of Media. Setting aside the statement of the book of Judith (wholly
+ unconfirmed as it is by any other authority), that Persia was at this time
+ subject to Babylon, we may regard as the most eastern portion of the
+ Empire the district of Susiana, which corresponded nearly with the modern
+ Khuzistan and Luristan. This acquisition advanced the eastern frontier of
+ the Empire from the Tigris to the Bakhtiyari Mountains, a distance of 100
+ or 120 miles. It gave to Babylon an extensive tract of very productive
+ territory, and an excellent strategic boundary. Khuzistan is one of the
+ most valuable provinces of modern Persia. It consists of a broad tract of
+ fertile alluvium, intervening between the Tigris and the mountains, well
+ watered by numerous large streams, which are capable of giving an abundant
+ irrigation to the whole of the low region. Above this is Luristan, a still
+ more pleasant district, composed of alternate mountain, valley, and upland
+ plain, abounding in beautiful glens, richly wooded, and full of gushing
+ brooks and clear rapid rivers. Much of this region is of course
+ uncultivable mountain, range succeeding range, in six or eight parallel
+ lines, as the traveller advances to the north-east; and most of the ranges
+ exhibiting vast tracts of bare and often precipitous rock, in the clefts
+ of which snow rests till midsummer. Still the lower flanks of the
+ mountains are in general cultivable, while the valleys teem with orchards
+ and gardens, and the plains furnish excellent pasture. The region closely
+ resembles Zagros, of which it is a continuation. As we follow it, however,
+ towards the south-east into the Bakhtiyari country, where it adjoins upon
+ the ancient Persia, it deteriorates in character; the mountains becoming
+ barer and more arid, and the valleys narrower and less fertile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the other acquisitions of Babylonia at this period lay towards the
+ west. They consisted of the Euphrates valley, above Hit; of Mesopotamia
+ Proper, or the country about the two streams of the Bilik and the Khabour;
+ of Syria, Phoenicia, Palestine, Idumasa, Northern Arabia, and part of
+ Egypt. The Euphrates valley from Hit to Balis is a tract of no great
+ value, except as a line of communication. The Mesopotamian Desert presses
+ it closely upon the one side, and the Arabian upon the other. The river
+ flows mostly in a deep bed between cliffs of marl, gypsum, and limestone,
+ or else between bare hills producing only a few dry sapless shrubs and a
+ coarse grass; and there are but rare places where, except by great
+ efforts, the water can be raised so as to irrigate, to any extent, the
+ land along either bank. The course of the stream is fringed by date-palms
+ as high as Anah, and above is dotted occasionally with willows, poplars,
+ sumacs, and the unfruitful palm-tree. Cultivation is possible in places
+ along both banks, and the undulating country on either side affords
+ patches of good pasture. The land improves as we ascend. Above the
+ junction of the Khabour with the main stream, the left bank is mostly
+ cultivable. Much of the land is flat and well-wooded, while often there
+ are broad stretches of open ground, well adapted for pasturage. A
+ considerable population seems in ancient times to have peopled the valley,
+ which did not depend wholly or even mainly on its own products, but was
+ enriched by the important traffic which was always passing up and down the
+ great river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mesopotamia Proper, or the tract extending from the head streams of the
+ Khabour about Mardin and Nisibin to the Euphrates at Bir, and thence
+ southwards to Karkesiyeh or Circesium, is not certainly known to have
+ belonged to the kingdom of Babylon, but may be assigned to it on grounds
+ of probability. Divided by a desert or by high mountains from the valley
+ of the Tigris, and attached by means of its streams to that of the
+ Euphrates, it almost necessarily falls to that power which holds the
+ Euphrates under its dominion. The tract is one of considerable extent and
+ importance. Bounded on the north by the range of hills which Strabo calls
+ Mons Masius, and on the east by the waterless upland which lies directly
+ west of the middle Tigris, it comprises within it all the numerous
+ affluents of the Khabour and Bilik, and is thus better supplied with water
+ than almost any country in these regions. The borders of the streams
+ afford the richest pasture, and the whole tract along the flank of Masius
+ is fairly fertile. Towards the west, the tract between the Khabour and the
+ Bilik, which is diversified by the Abd-el-Aziz hills, is a land of
+ fountains. &ldquo;Such,&rdquo; says Ibn Haukal, &ldquo;are not to be found elsewhere in all
+ the land of the Moslems, for there are more than three hundred pure
+ running brooks.&rdquo; Irrigation is quite possible in this region; and many
+ remains of ancient watercourses show that large tracts, at some distance
+ from the main streams, were formerly brought under cultivation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opposite to Mesopotamia Proper, on the west or right bank of the
+ Euphrates, lay Northern Syria, with its important fortress of Carchemish,
+ which was undoubtedly included in the Empire. This tract is not one of
+ much value. Towards the north it is mountainous, consisting of spurs from
+ Amanus and Taurus, which gradually subside into the desert a little to the
+ south of Aleppo. The bare, round-backed, chalky or rocky ranges, which
+ here continually succeed one another, are divided only by narrow tortuous
+ valleys, which run chiefly towards the Euphrates or the lake of Antioch.
+ This mountain tract is succeeded by a region of extensive plains,
+ separated from each other by low hills, both equally desolate. The soil is
+ shallow and stony; the streams are few and of little volume; irrigation is
+ thus difficult, and, except where it can be applied, the crops are scanty.
+ The pistachio-nut grows wild in places; Vines and olives are cultivated
+ with some success; and some grain is raised by the inhabitants; but the
+ country has few natural advantages, and it has always depended more upon
+ its possession of a carrying trade than on its home products for
+ prosperity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ West and south-west of this region, between it and the Mediterranean, and
+ extending southwards from Mount Amanus to the latitude of Tyre, lies Syria
+ Proper, the Coele-Syria of many writers, a long but comparatively narrow
+ tract of great fertility and value. Here two parallel ranges of mountains
+ intervene between the coast and the desert, prolific parents of a numerous
+ progeny of small streams. First, along the line of the coast, is the range
+ known as Libanusin the south, from lat. 33° 20&rsquo; to lat. 34° 40&rsquo;, and as
+ Bargylus in the north, from lat. 34° 45&rsquo; to the Orontes at Antioch, a
+ range of great beauty, richly wooded in places, and abounding in deep
+ glens, foaming brooks, and precipices of a fantastic form. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0002">[PLATE VII., Fig 2.]</a> More inland is
+ Antilibanus, culminating towards the south in Hermon, and prolonged
+ northward in the Jebel Shashabu, Jebel Biha, and Jebel-el-Ala, which
+ extends from near Hems to the latitude of Aleppo. More striking than even
+ Lebanon at its lower extremity, where Hermon lifts a snowy peak into the
+ air during most of the year, it is on the whole inferior in beauty to the
+ coast range, being bleaker, more stony, and less broken up by dells and
+ valleys towards the south, and tamer, barer, and less well supplied with
+ streams in its more northern portion. Between the two parallel ranges lies
+ the &ldquo;Hollow Syria,&rdquo; a long and broadish valley, watered by the two streams
+ of the Orontes and the &ldquo;Litany&rdquo; which, rising at no great distance from
+ one another, flow in opposite directions, one hurrying northwards nearly
+ to the flanks of Amanus, the other southwards to the hills of Galilee. Few
+ places in the world are more, remarkable, or have a more stirring history,
+ than this wonderful vale. Extending for above two hundred miles from north
+ to south, almost in a direct line, and without further break than an
+ occasional screen of low hills, it furnishes the most convenient line of
+ passage between Asia and Africa, alike for the journeys of merchants and
+ for the march of armies. Along this line passed Thothines and Barneses,
+ Sargon, and Sennacherib, Neco and Nebuchadnezzar, Alexander and his
+ warlike successors, Pompey, Antony, Kaled, Godfrey of Bouillon; along this
+ must pass every great army which, starting from the general seats of power
+ in Western Asia, seeks conquests in Africa, or which, proceeding from
+ Africa, aims at the acquisition of an Asiatic dominion. Few richer tracts
+ are to be found even in these most favored portions of the earth&rsquo;s
+ surface. Towards the south the famous El-Bukaa is a land of cornfields and
+ vineyards, watered by numerous small streams which fall into the Litany.
+ Towards the north El-Ghab is even more splendidly fertile, with a dark
+ rich soil, luxuriant vegetation, and water in the utmost abundance, though
+ at present it is cultivated only in patches immediately about the towns,
+ from fear of the Nusairiyeh and the Bedouins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate007.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Vii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Parallel with the southern part of the Coele-Syrian valley, to the west
+ and to the east, were two small but important tracts, usually regarded as
+ distinct states. Westward, between the heights of Lebanon and the sea, and
+ extending somewhat beyond Lebanon, both up and down the coast, was
+ Phoenicia, a narrow strip of territory lying along the shore, in length
+ from 150 to 180 miles, and in breadth varying from one mile to twenty.
+ This tract consisted of a mere belt of sandy land along the sea, where the
+ smiling palm-groves grew from which the country derived its name, of a
+ broader upland region along the flank of the hills, which was cultivated
+ in grain, and of the higher slopes of the mountains which furnished
+ excellent timber. Small harbors, sheltered by rocky projections, were
+ frequent along the coast. Wood cut in Lebanon was readily floated down the
+ many streams to the shore, and then conveyed by sea to the ports. A narrow
+ and scanty land made commerce almost a necessity. Here accordingly the
+ first great maritime nation of antiquity grew up. The Phoenician fleets
+ explored the Mediterranean at a time anterior to Homer, and conveyed to
+ the Greeks and the other inhabitants of Europe, and of Northern and
+ Western Africa, the wares of Assyria, Babylon, and Egypt. Industry and
+ enterprise reaped their usual harvest of success; the Phoenicians grew in
+ wealth, and their towns became great and magnificent cities. In the time
+ when the Babylonian Empire came into being, the narrow tract of Phoenicia&mdash;smaller
+ than many an English county&mdash;was among the most valuable countries of
+ Asia; and its possession was far more to be coveted than that of many a
+ land whose area was ten or twenty times as great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eastward of Antilibanus, in the tract between that range and the great
+ Syrian desert, was another very important district&mdash;the district
+ which the Jews called &ldquo;Aram-Dammesek,&rdquo; and which now forms the chief part
+ of the Pashalik of Damascus. From the eastern flanks of the Antilibanus
+ two great and numerous smaller streams flow down into the Damascene plain,
+ and, carrying with them that strange fertilizing power which water always
+ has in hot climates, convert the arid sterility of the desert into a
+ garden of the most wonderful beauty. The Barada and Awaaj, bursting by
+ narrow gorges from the mountain chain, scatter themselves in numerous
+ channels over the great flat, intermingling their waters, and spreading
+ them out so widely that for a circle of thirty miles the deep verdure of
+ Oriental vegetation replaces the red hue of the Hauran. Walnuts, planes,
+ poplars, cypresses, apricots, orange-trees, citrons, pomegranates, olives,
+ wave above; corn and grass of the most luxuriant growth, below. In the
+ midst of this great mass of foliage the city of Damascus &ldquo;strikes out the
+ white arms of its streets hither and thither&rdquo; among the trees, now hid
+ among them, now overtopping them with its domes and minarets, the most
+ beautiful of all those beautiful towns which delight the eye of the artist
+ in the East. In the south-west towers the snow-clad peak of Hermon,
+ visible from every part of the Damascene plain. West, north-west, and
+ north, stretches the long Antilibanus range, bare, gray, and flat-topped,
+ except where about midway in its course, the rounded summit of Jebel
+ Tiniyen breaks the uniformity of the line. Outside the circle of deep
+ verdure, known to the Orientals as El Merj (&ldquo;the Meadow&rdquo;), is a setting or
+ framework of partially cultivable land, dotted with clumps of trees and
+ groves, which extend for many miles over the plain. To the Damascus
+ country must also be reckoned those many charming valleys of Hermon and
+ Antilibanus which open out into it, sending their waters to increase its
+ beauty and luxuriance, the most remarkable of which are the long ravine of
+ the Barada, and the romantic Wady Halbon, whose vines produced the famous
+ beverage which Damascus anciently supplied at once to the Tyrian
+ merchant-princes and to the voluptuous Persian kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Below the Coelo-Syrian valley, towards the south, came Palestine, the Land
+ of Lands to the Christian, the country which even the philosopher must
+ acknowledge to have had a greater influence on the world&rsquo;s history than
+ any other tract which can be brought under a single ethnic designation.
+ Palestine&mdash;etymologically the country of the Philistines&mdash;was
+ somewhat unfortunately named. Philistine influence may possibly have
+ extended at a very remote period over the whole of it; but in historical
+ times that warlike people did but possess a corner of the tract, less than
+ one tenth of the whole&mdash;the low coast region from Jamnia to Gaza.
+ Palestine contained, besides this, the regions of Galilee, Samaria, and
+ Judaea, to the west of the Jordan, and those of Ituraea, Trachonitis,
+ Bashan, and Gilead, east of that river. It was a tract 140 miles long, by
+ from 70 to 100 broad, containing probably about 11,000 square miles. It
+ was thus about equal in size to Belgium, while it was less than Holland or
+ Hanover, and not much larger than the principality of Wales, with which it
+ has been compared by a recent writer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great natural division of the country is the Jordan valley. This
+ remarkable depression, commencing on the west flank of Hermon, runs with a
+ course which is almost due south from lat. 33° 25&rsquo; to lat. 31° 47&rsquo;, where
+ it is merged in the Dead Sea, which may be viewed, however, as a
+ continuation of the valley, prolonging it to lat. 31° 8&rsquo;. This valley is
+ quite unlike any other in the whole world. It is a volcanic rent in the
+ earth&rsquo;s surface, a broad chasm which has gaped and never closed up.
+ Naturally, it should terminate at Merom, where the level of the
+ Mediterranean is nearly reached. By some wonderful convulsion, or at any
+ rate by some unusual freak of Nature, there is a channel opened out from
+ Merom, which rapidly sinks below the sea level, and allows the stream to
+ flow hastily, down and still down, from Merom to Gennesareth, and from
+ Gennesareth to the Dead Sea, where the depression reaches its lowest
+ point, and the land, rising into a ridge, separates the Jordan valley from
+ the upper end of the Gulf of Akabah. The Jordan valley divides Palestine,
+ strongly and sharply, into two regions. Its depth, its inaccessibility
+ (for it can only be entered from the highlands on either side down a few
+ steep watercourses), and the difficulty of passing across it (for the
+ Jordan has but few fords), give it a separating power almost equal to that
+ of an arm of the sea. In length above a hundred miles, in width varying
+ from one mile to ten, and averaging some five miles, or perhaps six, it
+ must have been valuable as a territory, possessing, as it does, a rich
+ soil, abundant water, and in its lower portion a tropical climate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On either side of the deep Jordan cleft lies a highland of moderate
+ elevation, on the right that of Galilee, Samaria, and Judsea, on the left
+ that of Ituraea, Bashan, and Gilead. The right or western highland
+ consists of a mass of undulating hills, with rounded tops, composed of
+ coarse gray stone, covered, or scarcely covered, with a scanty soil, but
+ capable of cultivation in corn, olives, and figs. This region is most
+ productive towards the north, barer and more arid as we proceed southwards
+ towards the desert. The lowest portion, Judaea, is unpicturesque,
+ ill-watered, and almost treeless; the central, Samaria, has numerous
+ springs, some rich plains, many wooded heights, and in places quite a
+ sylvan appearance; the highest, Galilee, is a land of water-brooks,
+ abounding in timber, fertile and beautiful. The average height of the
+ whole district is from 1500 to 1800 feet above the Mediterranean. Main
+ elevations within it vary from 2500 to 4000 feet. The axis of the range is
+ towards the East, nearer, that is, to the Jordan valley than to the sea.
+ It is a peculiarity of the highland that there is one important break in
+ it. As the Lowland mountains of Scotland are wholly separated from the
+ mountains of the Highlands by the low tract which stretches across from
+ the Frith of Forth to the Frith of Clyde, or as the ranges of St. Gall and
+ Appenzell are divided off from the rest of the Swiss mountains by the flat
+ which extends from the Rhine at Eagatz to the same river at Waldshut, so
+ the western highland of Palestine is broken in twain by the famous &ldquo;plain
+ of Esdraelon,&rdquo; which runs from the Bay of Acre to the Jordan valley at
+ Beth-Shean or Scythopolis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ East of the Jordan no such depression occurs, the highland there being
+ continuous. It differs from the western highland chiefly in this&mdash;that
+ its surface, instead of being broken up into a confused mass of rounded
+ hills, is a table-land, consisting of a long succession of slightly
+ undulating plains. Except in Trachonitis and southern Ituraea, where the
+ basaltic rock everywhere crops out, the soil is rich and productive, the
+ country in places wooded with fine trees, and the herbage luxuriant. On
+ the west the mountains rise almost precipitously from the Jordan valley,
+ above which they tower to the height of 3000 or 4000 feet. The outline is
+ singularly uniform; and the effect is that of a huge wall guarding
+ Palestine on this side from the wild tribes of the desert. Eastward the
+ tableland slopes gradually, and melts into the sands of Arabia. Here water
+ and wood are scarce; but the soil is still good, and bears the most
+ abundant crops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, Palestine contains the tract from which it derives its name, the
+ low country of the Philistines, which the Jews called the <i>Shephelah</i>,
+ together with a continuation of this tract northwards to the roots of
+ Carmol, the district known to the Jews as &ldquo;Sharon,&rdquo; or &ldquo;the smooth place.&rdquo;
+ From Carmol to the Wady Sheriah, where the Philistine country ended, is a
+ distance of about one hundred miles, which gives the length of the region
+ in question. Its breadth between the shore and the highland varies from
+ about twenty-five miles, in the south, between Gaza and the hills of Dan,
+ to three miles, or less, in the north, between Dor and the border of
+ Manasseh. Its area is probably from 1400 to 1500 square miles, This low
+ strip is along its whole course divided into two parallel belts or
+ bands-the first a flat sandy tract along the shore, the Ramleh of the
+ modern Arabs; the second, more undulating, a region of broad rolling
+ plains rich in corn, and anciently clothed in part with thick woods,
+ watered by reedy streams, which flow down from the great highland. A
+ valuable tract is this entire plain, but greatly exposed to ravage. Even
+ the sandy belt will grow fruit-trees; and the towns which stand on it, as
+ Gaza, Jaffa, and Ashdod, are surrounded with huge groves of olives,
+ sycamores, and palms, or buried in orchards and gardens, bright with
+ pomegranates and orange-trees. The more inland region is of marvellous
+ fertility. Its soil is a rich loam, containing scarcely a pebble, which
+ yields year after year prodigious crops of grain&mdash;chiefly wheat&mdash;without
+ manure or irrigation, or other cultivation than a light ploughing.
+ Philistia was the granary of Syria, and was important doubly, first, as
+ yielding inexhaustible supplies to its conqueror, and secondly as
+ affording the readiest passage to the great armies which contended in
+ these regions for the mastery of the Eastern World.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ South of the region to which we have given the name of Palestine,
+ intervening between it and Egypt, lay a tract, to which it is difficult to
+ assign any political designation. Herodotus regarded it as a portion of
+ Arabia, which he carried across the valley of the Arabah and made abut on
+ the Mediterranean. To the Jews it was &ldquo;the land of the south&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ special country of the Amalekites. By Strabo&rsquo;s time it had come to be
+ known as Idumsea, or the Edomite country; and under this appellation it
+ will perhaps be most convenient to describe it here. Idumasa, then, was
+ the tract south and south-west of Palestine from about lat. 31° 10&rsquo;. It
+ reached westward to the borders of Egypt, which were at this time marked
+ by the Wady-el-Arish, southward to the range of Sinai and the Elanitic
+ Gulf, and eastward to the Great Desert. Its chief town was Petra, in the
+ mountains east of the Arabah valley. The character of the tract is for the
+ most part a hard gravelly and rocky desert; but occasionally there is good
+ herbage, and soil that admits of cultivation; brilliant flowers and
+ luxuriantly growing shrubs bedeck the glens and terraces of the Petra
+ range; and most of the tract produces plants and bushes on which camels,
+ goats, and even sheep will browse, while occasional palm groves furnish a
+ grateful shade and an important fruit. The tract divides itself into four
+ regions&mdash;first, a region of sand, low and flat, along the
+ Mediterranean, the Shephelah without its fertility; next, a region of hard
+ gravelly plain intersected by limestone ridges, and raised considerably
+ above the sea level, the Desert of El-Tin, or of &ldquo;the Wanderings;&rdquo; then
+ the long, broad, low valley of the Arabah, which rises gradually from the
+ Dead Sea to an imperceptible watershed, and then falls gently to the head
+ of the Gulf of Akabah, a region of hard sand thickly dotted with bushes,
+ and intersected by numerous torrent courses; finally a long narrow region
+ of mountains and hills parallel with the Arabah, constituting Idumsea
+ Proper, or the original Edom, which, though rocky and rugged, is full of
+ fertile glens, ornamented with trees and shrubs, and in places cultivated
+ in terraces. In shape the tract was a rude square or oblong, with its
+ sides nearly facing the four cardinal points, its length from the
+ Mediterranean to the Gulf of Akabah being 130 miles, and its width from
+ the Wady-el-Arish to the eastern side of the Petra mountains 120 miles.
+ The area is thus about 1560 square miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond the Wady-el-Arish was Egypt, stretching from the Mediterranean
+ southwards a distance of nearly eight degrees, or more than 550 miles. As
+ this country was not, however, so much a part of the Babylonian Empire as
+ a dependency lying upon its borders, it will not be necessary to describe
+ it in this place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One region, however, remains still unnoticed which seems to have been an
+ integral portion of the Empire. This is Palmyrene, or the Syrian Desert&mdash;the
+ tract lying between Coelo-Syria on the one hand and the valley of the
+ middle Euphrates on the other, and abutting towards the south on the great
+ Arabian Desert, to which it is sometimes regarded as belonging. It is for
+ the most part a hard sandy or gravelly plain, intersected by low rocky
+ ranges, and either barren or productive only of some sapless shrubs and of
+ a low thin grass. Occasionally, however, there are oases, where the
+ fertility is considerable. Such an oasis is the region about Palmyra
+ itself, which derived its name from the palm groves in the vicinity; here
+ the soil is good, and a large tract is even now under cultivation. Another
+ oasis is that of Karyatein, which is watered by an abundant stream, and is
+ well wooded, and productive of grain. The Palmyrene, however, as a whole
+ possesses but little value, except as a passage country. Though large
+ armies can never have traversed the desert even in this upper region,
+ where it is comparatively narrow, trade in ancient times found it
+ expedient to avoid the long detour by the Orontes Valley, Aleppo, and
+ Bambuk, and to proceed directly from Damascus by way of Palymra to
+ Thapsaeus on the Euphrates. Small bands of light troops also occasionally
+ took the same course; and the great saving of distance thus effected made
+ it important to the Babylonians to possess an authority over the region in
+ question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, then, in its geographical extent, was the great Babylonian Empire.
+ Reaching from Luristan on the one side to the borders of Egypt on the
+ other, its direct length from east to west was nearly sixteen degrees, or
+ about 980 miles, while its length for all practical purposes, owing to the
+ interposition of the desert between its western and its eastern provinces,
+ was perhaps not less than 1400 miles. Its width was very disproportionate
+ to this. Between Zagros and the Arabian Desert, where the width was the
+ greatest, it amounted to about 280 miles; between Amanus and Palmyra it
+ was 250; between the Mons Masius and the middle Euphrates it may have been
+ 200; in Syria and Idumsea it cannot have been more than 100 or 160. The
+ entire area of the Empire was probably from 240,000 to 250,000 square
+ miles&mdash;which is about the present size of Austria. Its shape may be
+ compared roughly to a gnomon, with one longer and one shorter arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It added to the inconvenience of this long straggling form, which made a
+ rapid concentration of the forces of the Empire impossible, that the
+ capital, instead of occupying a central position, was placed somewhat low
+ in the longer of the two arms of the gnomon, and was thus nearly 1000
+ miles removed from the frontier province of the west. Though in direct
+ distance, as the crow flies, Babylon is not more than 450 miles from
+ Damascus, or more than 520 from Jerusalem, yet the necessary detour by
+ Aleppo is so great that it lengthens the distance, in the one case by 250,
+ in the other by 380 miles. From so remote a centre it was impossible for
+ the life-blood to circulate very vigorously to the extremities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Empire was on the whole fertile and well-watered. The two great
+ streams of Western Asia&mdash;the Tigris and the Euphrates&mdash;which
+ afforded an abundant supply of the invaluable fluid to the most important
+ of the provinces, those of the south-east, have already been described at
+ length; as have also the chief streams of the Mesopotamian district, the
+ Belik and the Khabour. But as yet in this work no account has been given
+ of a number of important rivers in the extreme east and the extreme west,
+ on which the fertility, and so the prosperity, of the Empire very greatly
+ depended. It is proposed in the present place to supply this deficiency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The principle rivers of the extreme east were the Choaspes, or modern
+ Kerkhah, the Pasitigris or Eulseus, now the Kuran, the Hedyphon or
+ Hedypnus, now the Jerahi, and the Oroatis, at present the Tab or Hindyan.
+ Of these, the Oroatis, which is the most eastern, belongs perhaps more to
+ Persia than to Babylon; but its lower course probably fell within the
+ Susianian territory. It rises in the mountains between Shiraz and
+ Persepolis, about lat. 29° 45&rsquo;, long. 52° 35&rsquo; E.; and flows towards the
+ Persian Gulf with a course which is north-west to Failiyun, then nearly W.
+ to Zehitun, after which it becomes somewhat south of west to Hindyan, and
+ then S.W. by S. to the sea. The length of the stream, without counting
+ lesser windings, is 200 miles; its width at Hindyan, sixteen miles above
+ its mouth, is eighty yards, and to this distance it is navigable for boats
+ of twenty tons burthen. At first its waters are pure and sweet, but they
+ gradually become corrupted, and at Hindyan they are so brackish as not to
+ be fit for use. The Jerahi rises from several sources in the Kuh Margun, a
+ lofty and precipitous range, forming the continuation of the chain of
+ Zagros. about long. 50° to 51°, and lat. 31° 30&rsquo;. These head-streams have
+ a general direction from N.E. to S.W. The principal of them is the
+ Kurdistan river, which rises about fifty miles to the north-east of
+ Babahan and flowing south-west to that point, then bends round to the
+ north, and runs north-west nearly to the fort of Mungasht, where it
+ resumes its original direction, and receiving from the north-east the Abi
+ Zard, or &ldquo;Yellow River&rdquo;&mdash;a delightful stream of the coldest and
+ purest water possible&mdash;becomes known as the Jerahi, and carries a
+ large body of water as far as Fellahiyeh or Dorak. Near Dorak the waters
+ of the Jerahi are drawn off into a number of canals, and the river is thus
+ greatly diminished; but still the stream struggles on, and proceeds by a
+ southerly course towards the Persian Gulf, which it enters near Gadi in
+ long. 48° 52&rsquo;. The course of the Jerahi, exclusively of the smaller
+ windings, is about equal in length to that of the Tab or Hindyan. In
+ volume, before its dispersion, it is considerably greater than that river.
+ It has a breadth of about a hundred yards before it reaches Babahan, and
+ is navigable for boats almost from its junction with the Abi Zard. Its
+ size is, however, greatly reduced in its lower course, and travellers who
+ skirt the coast regard the Tab as the more important river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Kuran is a river very much exceeding in size both the Tab and the
+ Jerahi. It is formed by the junction of two large streams&mdash;the Dizful
+ river and the Kuran proper, or river of Shuster. Of these the Shuster
+ stream is the more eastern. It rises in the Zarduh Kuh, or &ldquo;Yellow
+ Mountain,&rdquo; in lat. 32°, long. 51°, almost opposite to the river Isfahan.
+ From its source it is a large stream. Its direction is at first to the
+ southeast, but after a while it sweeps round and runs considerably north
+ of west; and this course it pursues through the mountains, receiving
+ tributaries of importance from both sides, till, near Akhili, it turns
+ round to the south, and, cutting at a right angle the outermost of the
+ Zagros ranges, flows down with a course S.W. by S. nearly to Sinister,
+ where, in consequence of a bund or dam thrown across it, it bifurcates,
+ and passes in two streams to the right and to the left of the town. The
+ right branch, which earned commonly about two thirds of the water,
+ proceeds by a tortuous course of nearly forty miles, in a direction a very
+ little west of south, to its junction with the Dizful stream, which takes
+ place about two miles north of the little town of Bandi-kir. Just below
+ that town the left branch, called at present Abi-Gargar, which has made a
+ considerable bend to the east, rejoins the main stream, which thenceforth
+ flows in a single channel. The course of the Kuran from its source to its
+ junction with the Dizful branch, including main windings, is about 210
+ miles. The Dizful. branch rises from two sources, nearly a degree apart,
+ in lat. 33° 30&rsquo;. These streams run respectively south-east and south-west,
+ a distance of forty miles, to their junction near Bahrein, whence their
+ united waters flow in a tortuous course, with a general direction of
+ south, for above a hundred miles to the outer barrier of Zagros, which
+ they penetrate near the Diz fort, through a succession of chasms and
+ gorges. The course of the stream from this point is south-west through the
+ hills and across the plain, past Dizful, to the place where it receives
+ the Beladrud from the west, when it changes and becomes first south and
+ then southeast to its junction with the Shuster river near Bandi-kir. The
+ entire course of the Dizful stream to this point is probably not less than
+ 380 miles. Below Bandi-kir, the Kuran, now become &ldquo;a noble river,
+ exceeding in size the Tigris and Euphrates,&rdquo; meanders across the plain in
+ a general direction of S.S. W., past the towns of Uris, Ahwaz, and
+ Ismaili, to Sablah, when it turns more to the west, and passing
+ Mohammerah, empties itself into the Shat-el-Arab, about 22 miles below
+ Busra. The entire course of the Kuran from its most remote source,
+ exclusive of the lesser windings, is not less than 430 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Kerkhah (anciently the Choaspes) is formed by three streams of almost
+ equal magnitude, all of them rising in the most eastern portion of the
+ Zagros range. The central of the three flows from the southern flank of
+ Mount Elwand (Orontes), the mountain behind Hamadan (Ecbatana), and
+ receives on the right, after a course of about thirty miles, the northern
+ or Singur branch, and ten miles further on the southern or Guran branch,
+ which is known by the name of the Gamas-ab. The river thus formed flows
+ westward to Behistun, after which it bonds to the south-west, and then to
+ the south, receiving tributaries on both hands, and winding among the
+ mountains as far as the ruined city of Rudbar. Here it bursts through the
+ outer barrier of the great range, and, receiving the large stream of the
+ Kirrind from the north-west, flows S.S.E. and S.E. along the foot of the
+ range, between it and the Kebir Kuh, till it meets the stream of the
+ Abi-Zal, when it finally leaves the hills and flows through the plain,
+ pursuing a S.S.E. direction to the ruins of Susa, which lie upon its left
+ bank, and then turning to the S. S. W., and running in that direction to
+ the Shat-el-Arab, which it reaches about five miles below Kurnur. Its
+ length is estimated at above 500 miles; its width, at some distance above
+ its junction with the Abi-Zal, is from eighty to a hundred yards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The course of the Kerkhah was not always exactly such as is here
+ described. Anciently it appears to have bifurcated at Pai Pul, 18 or 20
+ miles N.W. of Susa, and to have sent a branch east of the Susa ruins,
+ which absorbed the Shapur, a small tributary of the Dizful stream, and ran
+ into the Kuran a little above Ahwaz. The remains of the old channel are
+ still to be traced; and its existence explains the confusion, observable
+ in ancient times, between the Kerkhah and the Kuran, to each of which
+ streams, in certain parts of their course, we find the name Eulseus
+ applied. The proper Eulseus was the eastern branch of the Kerkhah
+ (Choaspes) from Pai Pul to Ahwaz; but the name was naturally extended both
+ northwards to the Choaspes above Pai Pul and southwards to the Kuran below
+ Ahwaz. The latter stream was, however, known also, both in its upper and
+ its lower course, as the Pasitigris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the opposite side of the Empire the rivers were less considerable.
+ Among the most important may be mentioned the Sajur, a tributary of the
+ Euphrates, the Koweik, or river of Aleppo, the Orontes, or river of
+ Antioch, the Litany, or river of Tyre, the Barada, or river of Damascus,
+ and the Jordan, with its tributaries, the Jabbok and the Hieromax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sajur rises from two principle sources on the southern flanks of
+ Amanus, which, after running a short distance, unite a little to the east
+ of Ain-Tab. The course of the stream from the point of junction is
+ south-east. In this direction it flows in a somewhat tortuous channel
+ between two ranges of hills for a distance of about 30 miles to Tel
+ Khalid, a remarkable conical hill crowned by ruins. Here it receives an
+ important affluent&mdash;the Keraskat&mdash;from the west, and becomes
+ suitable for boat navigation. At the same time its course changes, and
+ runs eastward for about 12 miles; after which the stream again inclines to
+ the south, and keeping an E.S.E. direction for 14 or 15 miles, enters the
+ Euphrates by five mouths in about lat. 36° 37&rsquo;. The course of the river
+ measures probably about 65 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Koweik, or river of Aleppo (the Chalus of Xenophon), rises in the
+ hills south of Ain-Tab. Springing from two sources, one of which is known
+ as the Baloklu-Su, or &ldquo;Fish River,&rdquo; it flows at first eastward, as if
+ intending to join the Euphrates. On reaching the plain of Aleppo, however,
+ near Sayyadok-Koi, it receives a tributary from the north, which gives its
+ course a southern inclination; and from this point it proceeds in a south
+ and south-westerly direction, winding along the shallow bed which it has
+ scooped in the Aloppo plain, a distance of 60 miles, past Aleppo to
+ Kinnisrin, near the foot of the Jebel-el-Sis. Here its further progress
+ southward is barred, and it is forced to turn to the east along the foot
+ of the mountain, which it skirts for eight or ten miles, finally entering
+ the small lake or marsh of El Melak, in which it loses itself after a
+ source of about 80 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Orontes, the great river of Assyria, rises in the Buka&rsquo;a&mdash;the
+ deep valley known to the ancients as Coele-Syria Proper&mdash;springing
+ from a number of small brooks, which flow down from the Antilibanus range
+ between lat. 34° 5&rsquo; and lat. 34° 12&rsquo;. Its most remote source is near
+ Yunin, about seven mites N.N.E. of Baalbek. The stream flows at first N.W.
+ by W. into the plain, on reaching which it turns at a right-angle to the
+ northeast, and skirts the foot of the Antilibanus range as far as Lebweh,
+ where, being joined by a larger stream from the southeast,130 it takes its
+ direction and flows N.W. and then N. across the plain to the foot of
+ Lebanon. Here it receives the waters of a much more abundant fountain,
+ which wells out from the roots of that range, and is regarded by the
+ Orientals as the true &ldquo;head of the stream.&rdquo; Thus increased the river flows
+ northwards for a short space, after which it turns to the northeast, and
+ runs in a deep cleft along the base of Lebanon, pursuing this direction
+ for 15 or 16 miles to a point beyond Ribleh, nearly in lat. 34° 30&rsquo;. Here
+ the course of the river again changes, becoming slightly west of north to
+ the Lake of Hems (Buheiret-Hems), which is nine or ten miles below Ribleh.
+ Issuing from the Lake of Hems about lat. 34° 43&rsquo;, the Orontes once more
+ flows to the north east, and in five or six miles reaches Hems itself,
+ which it leaves on its right bank. It then flows for twenty miles nearly
+ due north, after which, on approaching Hama (Hamath), it makes a slight
+ bend to the east round the foot of Jebel Erbayn, and then entering the
+ rich pasture country of El-Ghab&rsquo; runs north-west and north to the &ldquo;Iron
+ Bridge&rdquo; (Jisr Hadid), in lat. 36° 11&rsquo;. Its course thus far has been nearly
+ parallel with the coast of the Mediterranean, and has lain between two
+ ranges of mountains, the more western of which has shut it out from the
+ sea. At Jisr Hadid the western mountains come to an end, and the Orontes,
+ sweeping round their base, runs first west and then south-west down the
+ broad valley of Antioch, in the midst of the most lovely scenery, to the
+ coast, which it reaches a little above the 36th parallel, in long. 35°
+ 55&rsquo;. The course of the Orontes, exclusive of lesser windings, is about 200
+ miles. It is a considerable stream almost from its source. At Hamah, more
+ than a hundred miles from its mouth, it is crossed by a bridge of thirteen
+ arches. At Antioch it is fifty yards in width, and runs rapidly. The
+ natives now call it the Nahr-el-Asy, or &ldquo;Rebel River,&rdquo; either from its
+ running in an opposite direction to all other streams of the country, or
+ (more probably) from its violence and impetuosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is one tributary of the Orontes which deserves a cursory mention.
+ This is the Kara Su, or &ldquo;Black River,&rdquo; which reaches it from the Aga
+ Denghis, or Bahr-el-Abiyad, about five miles below Jisr Hadid and four or
+ five above Antioch. This stream brings into the Orontes the greater part
+ of the water that is drained from the southern side of Amanus. It is
+ formed by a union of two rivers, the upper Kara Su and the Afrin, which
+ flow into the Aga Denghis (White Sea), or Lake of Antioch, from the
+ north-west, the one entering it at its northern, the other at its eastern
+ extremity. Both are considerable streams; and the Kara Su on issuing from
+ the lake carries a greater body of water than the Orontes itself, and thus
+ adds largely to the volume of that stream in its lower course from the
+ point of junction to the Mediterranean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Litany, or river of Tyre, rises from a source at no great distance
+ from the head springs of the Orontes. The almost imperceptible watershed
+ of the Buka&rsquo;a runs between Yunin and Baalbek, a few miles north of the
+ latter; and when it is once passed, the drainage of the water is
+ southwards. The highest permanent fountain of the southern stream seems to
+ be a small lake near Tel Hushben, which lies about six miles to the
+ south-west of the Baalbek ruins. Springing from this source the Litany
+ flows along the lower Buka&rsquo;a in a direction which is generally a little
+ west of south, receiving on either side a number of streamlets and rills
+ from Libanus and Anti-libanus, and giving out in its turn numerous canals
+ for irrigation, which fertilize the thirsty soil. As the stream descends
+ with numerous windings, but still with the same general course, the valley
+ of the Buka&rsquo;a contracts more and more, till finally it terminates in a
+ gorge, down which thunders the Litany&mdash;a gorge a thousand feet or
+ more in depth, and so narrow that in one place it is actually bridged over
+ by masses of rock which have fallen from the jagged sides. Narrower and
+ deeper grows the gorge, and the river chafes and foams through it,
+ gradually working itself round to the west, and so clearing a way through
+ the very roots of Lebanon to the low coast tract, across which it meanders
+ slowly, as if wearied with its long struggle, before finally emptying
+ itself into the sea. The course of the Litany may be roughly estimated at
+ from 70 to 75 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Barada, or river of Damascus, rises in the plain of Zebdany&mdash;the
+ very centre of the Antilibanus. It has its real permanent source in a
+ small nameless lake in the lower part of the plain, about lat. 33° 41&rsquo;;
+ but in winter it is fed by streams flowing from the valley above,
+ especially by one which rises in lat. 33° 46&rsquo;, near the small hamlet of
+ Ain Hawar. The course of the Barada from the small lake is at first
+ towards the east; but it soon sweeps round and flows-southward for about
+ four miles to the lower end of the plain, after which it again turns to
+ the east and enters a romantic glen, running between high cliffs, and
+ cutting through the main ridge of the Antilibanus between the Zebdany
+ plain and Suk, the Abila of the ancients. From Suk the river flows through
+ a narrow but lovely valley, in a course which has a general direction of
+ south-east, past Ain Fijoh (where its waters are greatly increased),
+ through a series of gorges and glens, to the point where the roots of the
+ Antilibanus sink down upon the plain, when it bursts forth from the
+ mountains and scatters. Channels are drawn from it on either side, and its
+ waters are spread far and wide over the Merj, which it covers with fine
+ trees and splendid herbage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One branch passes right through the city, cutting it in half. Others
+ irrigate the gardens and orchards both to the north and to the south.
+ Beyond the town the tendency to division still continues. The river,
+ weakened greatly through the irrigation, separates into three main
+ channels, which flow with divergent courses towards the east, and
+ terminate in two large swamps or lakes, the Bahret-esh-Shurkiyeh and the
+ Bahret-el-Kibli-yeh, at a distance of sixteen or seventeen miles from the
+ city. The Barada is a short stream, its entire course from the plain of
+ Zebdany not much exceeding forty miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Jordan is commonly regarded as flowing from two sources in the Huleh
+ or plain immediately above Lake Merom, one at Banias (the ancient Paneas),
+ the other at Tel-el-Kady, which marks the site of Laish or Dan. But the
+ true highest present source of the river is the spring near Hasbeiya,
+ called Nebaes-Hasbany, or Eas-en-Neba. This spring rises in the
+ torrent-course known as the Wady-el-Teim, which descends from the
+ north-western flank of Hermon, and runs nearly parallel with the great
+ gorge of the Litany, having a direction from north-east to south-west. The
+ water wells forth in abundance from the foot of a volcanic bluff, called
+ Eas-el-Anjah, lying directly north of Hasbeiya, and is immediately used to
+ turn a mill. The course of the streamlet is very slightly west of south
+ down the Wady to the Huleh plain, where it is joined, and multiplied
+ sevenfold, by the streams from Banais and Tel-el-Kady, becoming at once
+ worthy of the name of river. Hence it runs almost due south to the Merom
+ lake, which it enters in lat. 33° 7&rsquo;, through a reedy and marshy tract
+ which it is difficult to penetrate. Issuing from Merom in lat. 33° 3&rsquo;, the
+ Jordan flows at first sluggishly southward to &ldquo;Jacob&rsquo;s Bridge,&rdquo; passing
+ which, it proceeds in the same direction, with a much swifter current down
+ the depressed and narrow cleft between Merom and Tiberias, descending at
+ the rate of fifty feet in a mile, and becoming (as has been said) a sort
+ of &ldquo;continuous waterfall.&rdquo; Before reaching Tiberias its course bends
+ slightly to the west of south for about two miles, and it pours itself
+ into that &ldquo;sea&rdquo; in about lat. 32° 53&rsquo;. Quitting the sea in lat. 32° 42&rsquo;,
+ it finally enters the track called the Ghor, the still lower chasm or
+ cleft which intervenes between Tiberias and the upper end of the Dead Sea.
+ Here the descent of the stream becomes comparatively gentle, not much
+ exceeding three feet per mile; for though the direct distance between the
+ two lakes is less than seventy miles, and the entire fall above 600 feet,
+ which would seem to give a descent of nine or ten feet a mile, yet, as the
+ course of the river throughout this part of its career is tortuous in the
+ extreme, the fall is really not greater than above indicated. Still it is
+ sufficient to produce as many as twenty-seven rapids, or at the rate of
+ one to every seven miles. In this part of its course the Jordan receives
+ two important tributaries, each of which seems to deserve a few words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Jarmuk, or Sheriat-el-Mandhur, anciently the Hiero-max, drains the
+ water, not only from Gaulonitis or Jaulan, the country immediately east
+ and south-east of the sea of Tiberias, but also from almost the whole of
+ the Hauran. At its mouth it is 130 feet wide, and in the winter it brings
+ down a great body of water into the Jordan. In summer, however, it shrinks
+ up into an inconsiderable brook, having no more remote sources than the
+ perennial springs at Mazarib, Dilly, and one or two other places on the
+ plateau of Jaulan. It runs through a fertile country, and has generally a
+ deep course far below the surface of the plain; ere falling into the
+ Jordan it makes its way through a wild ravine, between rugged cliffs of
+ basalt, which are in places upwards of a hundred feet in height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Zurka, or Jabbok, is a stream of the same character with the Hieromax,
+ but of inferior dimensions and importance. It drains a considerable
+ portion of the land of Gilead, but has no very remote sources, and in
+ summer only carries water through a few miles of its lower course. In
+ winter, on the contrary, it is a roaring stream with a strong current, and
+ sometimes cannot be forded. The ravine through which it flows is narrow,
+ deep, and in some places wild. Throughout nearly its whole course it is
+ fringed by thickets of cane and oleander, while above, its banks are
+ clothed with forests of oak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Jordan receives the Hieromax about four or five miles below the point
+ where it issues from the Sea of Tiberias, and the Jabbok about half-way
+ between that lake and the Dead Sea. Augmented by these streams, and others
+ of less importance from the mountains on either side, it becomes a river
+ of considerable size, being opposite Beth-shan (Beisan) 140 feet wide, and
+ three feet deep, and averaging, in its lower course, a width of ninety
+ with a depth of eight or nine feet. Its entire course, from the fountain
+ near Hasbeiya to the Dead Sea, including the passage of the two lakes
+ through which it flows, is, if we exclude meanders, about 130, if we
+ include them, 360 miles. It is calculated to pour into the Dead Sea
+ 6,090,000 tons of water daily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides these rivers the Babylonian territory comprised a number of
+ important lakes. Of these some of the more eastern have been described in
+ a former volume: as the Bahr-i-Nedjif in Lower Chaldsea, and the Lake of
+ Khatouniyeh in the tract between the Sinjar and the Khabour. It was
+ chiefly, however, towards the west that sheets of water abounded: the
+ principal of these were the Sabakhah, the Bahr-el-Melak, and the Lake of
+ Antioch in Upper Syria; the Bahr-el-Kades, or Lake of Hems, in the central
+ region; and the Damascus lakes, the Lake of Merom, the Sea of Galilee or
+ Tiberias, and the Dead Sea, in the regions lying furthest to the south. Of
+ these the greater number were salt, and of little value, except as
+ furnishing the salt of commerce; but four&mdash;the Lake of Antioch, the
+ Bahr-el-Kades, the Lake Merom, and the Sea of Galilee-were fresh-water
+ basins lying upon the courses of streams which ran through them; and these
+ not only diversified the scenery by their clear bright aspect, but were of
+ considerable value to the inhabitants, as furnishing them with many
+ excellent sorts of fish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the salt lakes the most eastern was the Sabakhah. This is a basin of
+ long and narrow form, lying on and just below the 36th parallel. It is
+ situated on the southern route from Balis to Aleppo, and is nearly equally
+ distant between the two places. Its length is from twelve to thirteen
+ miles; and its width, where it is broadest, is about five miles. It
+ receives from the north the waters of the Nahr-el-Dhahab, or &ldquo;Golden
+ River&rdquo; (which has by some been identified with the Daradax of Xenophon),
+ and from the west two or three insignificant streams, which empty
+ themselves into its western extremity. The lake produces a large quantity
+ of salt, especially after wet seasons, which is collected and sold by the
+ inhabitants of the surrounding country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bahr-el-Molak, the lake which absorbs the Koweik, or river of Aleppo,
+ is less than twenty miles distant from Lake Sabakhah, which it very much
+ resembles in its general character. Its ordinary length is about nine
+ miles, and its width three or four; but in winter it is greatly swollen by
+ the rains, and at that time it spreads out so widely that its
+ circumference sometimes exceeds fifty miles. Much salt is drawn from its
+ bed in the dry season, and a large part of Syria is hence supplied with
+ the commodity. The lake is covered with small islands, and greatly
+ frequented by aquatic birds-geese, ducks, flamingoes, and the like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lakes in the neighborhood of Damascus are three in number, and are all
+ of a very similar type. They are indeterminate in size and shape, changing
+ with the wetness or dryness of the season; and it is possible that
+ sometimes they may be all united in one. The most northern, which is
+ called the Bahret-esh-Shurkiyeh, receives about half the surplus water of
+ the Barada, together with some streamlets from the outlying ranges of
+ Antilibanus towards the north. The central one, called the
+ Bahret-el-Kibliyeh, receives the rest of the Barada water, which enters it
+ by three or four branches on its northern and western sides. The most
+ southern, known as Bahret-Hijaneh, is the receptacle for the stream of the
+ Awaaj, and takes also the water from the northern parts of the Ledjah, or
+ region of Argob. The three lakes are in the same line&mdash;a line which
+ runs from N.N.E. to S.S.W. They are, or at least were recently, separated
+ by tracts of dry land from two to four miles broad. Dense thickets of tall
+ reeds surround them, and in summer almost cover their surface. Like the
+ Bahr-el-Melak, they are a home for water-fowl, which flock to them in
+ enormous numbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By far the largest and most important of the salt lakes is the Great Lake
+ of the South&mdash;the Bahr Lut (&ldquo;Sea of Lot&rdquo;), or Dead Sea. This sheet of
+ water, which has always attracted the special notice and observation of
+ travellers, has of late years been scientifically surveyed by officers of
+ the American navy; and its shape, its size, and even its depth, are thus
+ known with accuracy. The Dead Sea is of an oblong form, and would be of a
+ very regular contour, were it not for a remarkable projection from its
+ eastern shore near its southern extremity. In this place, a long and low
+ peninsula, shaped like a human foot, projects into the lake, filling up
+ two thirds of its width, and thus dividing the expanse of water into two
+ portions, which are connected by a long and somewhat narrow passage. The
+ entire length of the sea, from north to south, is 46 miles: its greatest
+ width, between its eastern and its western shores, is 101 miles. The whole
+ area is estimated at 250 geographical square miles. Of this space 174
+ square miles belong to the northern portion of the lake (the true &ldquo;Sea&rdquo;),
+ 29 to the narrow channel, and 46 to the southern portion, which has been
+ called &ldquo;the back-water,&rdquo; or &ldquo;the lagoon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most remarkable difference between the two portions of the lake is the
+ contrast they present as to depth. While the depth of the northern portion
+ is from 600 feet, at a short distance from the mouth of the Jordan, to
+ 800, 1000, 1200, and even 1300 feet, further down, the depth of the lagoon
+ is nowhere more than 12 or 13 feet; and in places it is so shallow that it
+ has been found possible, in some seasons, to ford the whole way across
+ from one side to the other. The peculiarities of the Dead Sea, as compared
+ with other lakes, are its depression below the sea-level, its buoyancy,
+ and its extreme saltness. The degree of the depression is not yet
+ certainly known; but there is reason to believe that it is at least as
+ much at 1300 feet, whereas no other lake is known to be depressed more
+ than 570 feet. The buoyancy and the saltness are not so wholly
+ unparalleled. The waters of Lake Urumiyeh are probably as salt and as
+ buoyant; those of Lake Elton in the steppe east of the Wolga, and of
+ certain other Russian lakes, appear to be even salter. But with these few
+ exceptions (if they are exceptions), the Dead Sea water must be pronounced
+ to be the heaviest and saltest water known to us. More than one fourth of
+ its weight is solid matter held in solution. Of this solid matter nearly
+ one third is common salt, which is more than twice as much as is contained
+ in the waters of the ocean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the fresh-water lakes the largest and most important is the Sea of
+ Tiberias. This sheet of water is of an oval shape, with an axis, like that
+ of the Dead Sea, very nearly due north and south. Its greatest length is
+ about thirteen and its greatest width about six miles. Its extreme depth,
+ so far as has been ascertained, is 27 fathoms, or 165 feet. The Jordan
+ flows into its upper end turbid and muddy, and issues forth at its
+ southern extremity clear and pellucid. It receives also the waters of a
+ considerable number of small streams and springs, some of which are warm
+ and brackish; yet its own water is always sweet, cool, and transparent,
+ and, having everywhere a shelving pebbly beach, has a bright sparkling
+ appearance. The banks are lofty, and in general destitute of verdure. What
+ exactly is the amount of depression below the level of the Mediterranean
+ remains still, to some extent, uncertain; but it is probably not much less
+ than 700 feet. Now, as formerly, the lake produces an abundance of fish,
+ which are pronounced, by those who have partaken of them, to be
+ &ldquo;delicious.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nine miles above the Sea of Tiberias, on the course of the same stream, is
+ the far smaller basin known now as the Bahr-el Huleh, and anciently
+ (perhaps) as Merom. This is a mountain tarn, varying in size as the season
+ is wet or dry, but never apparently more than about seven miles long, by
+ five or six broad. It is situated at the lower extremity of the plain
+ called Huleh, and is almost entirely surrounded by flat marshy ground,
+ thickly set with reeds and canes, which make the lake itself almost
+ unapproachable. The depth of the Huleh is not known. It is a favorite
+ resort of aquatic birds, and is said to contain an abundant supply of
+ fish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bahr-el-Kades, or Lake of Hems, lies on the course of the Orontes,
+ about 139 miles N.N.E. of Merom, and nearly the same distance south of the
+ Lake of Antioch. It is a small sheet of water, not more than six or eight
+ miles long, and only two or three wide, running in the same direction with
+ the course of the river, which here turns from north to north-east.
+ According to Abulfeda and some other writers, it is mainly, if not wholly,
+ artificial, owing its origin to a dam or embankment across the stream,
+ which is from four to five hundred yards in length, and about twelve or
+ fourteen feet high. In Abulfeda&rsquo;s time the construction of the embankment
+ was ascribed to Alexander the Great, and the lake consequently was not
+ regarded as having had any existence in Babylonian times; but traditions
+ of this kind are little to be trusted, and it is quite possible that the
+ work above mentioned, constructed apparently with a view to irrigation,
+ may really belong to a very much earlier age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, in Northern Syria, 115 miles north of the Bahr-el-Kades, and
+ about 60 miles N.W.W. of the Bahr-el-Melak, is the Bahr-el-Abyad (White
+ Lake), or Sea of Antioch. <a href="#linkimage-0003">[PLATE. VIII., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ This sheet of water is a parallelogram, the angles of which face the
+ cardinal points: in its greater diameter it extends somewhat more than ten
+ miles, while it is about seven miles across. Its depth on the western
+ side, where it approaches the mountains, is six or eight feet; but
+ elsewhere it is generally more shallow, not exceeding three or four feet.
+ It lies in a marshy plain called El-Umk, and is thickly fringed with reeds
+ round the whole of its circumference. From the silence of antiquity, some
+ writers have imagined that it did not exist in ancient times; but the
+ observations of scientific travellers are opposed to this theory. The lake
+ abounds with fish of several kinds, and the fishery attracts and employs a
+ considerable number of the natives who dwell near it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate008.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Viii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Besides these lakes, there were contained within the limits of the Empire
+ a number of petty tarns, which do not merit particular description. Such
+ were the Bahr-el-Taka, and other small lakes on the right bank of the
+ middle Orontes, the Birket-el-Limum in the Lebanon, and the Birket-er-Eam
+ on the southern flank of Hermon. It is unnecessary, however, to pursue
+ this subject any further. But a few words must be added on the chief
+ cities of the Empire, before this chapter is brought to a conclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cities of the Empire may be divided into those of the dominant country
+ and those of the provinces. Those of the dominant country were, for the
+ most part, identical with the towns already described as belonging to the
+ ancient Chaldaea, Besides Babylon itself, there flourished in the
+ Babylonian period the cities of Borsippa, Duraba, Sippara or Sepharvaim,
+ Opis, Psittace, Cutha, Orchoe or Erech, and Diridotis or Teredon. The
+ sites of most of those have been described in the first volume; but it
+ remains to state briefly the positions of some few which were either new
+ creations or comparatively undistinguished in the earlier times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opis, a town of sufficient magnitude to attract the attention of
+ Herodotus, was situated on the left or east bank of the Tigris, near the
+ point where the Diyaleh or Gyndes joined the main river. Its position was
+ south of the Gyndes embouchure, and it might be reckoned as lying upon
+ either river. The true name of the place&mdash;that which it bears in the
+ cuneiform inscriptions&mdash;was Hupiya; and its site is probably marked
+ by the ruins at Khafaji, near Baghdad, which place is thought to retain,
+ in a corrupted form, the original appellation. Psittace or Sitace, the
+ town which gave name to the province of Sittacene, was in the near
+ neighborhood of Opis, lying on the same side of the Tigris, but lower
+ down, at least as low as the modern fort of the Zobeid chief. Its exact
+ site has not been as yet discovered. Teredon, or Diriaotis, appears to
+ have been first founded by Nebuchadnezzar. It lay on the coast of the
+ Persian Gulf, a little west of the mouth of the Euphrates, and protected
+ by a quay, or a breakwater, from the high tides that rolled in from the
+ Indian Ocean. There is great difficulty in identifying its site, owing to
+ the extreme uncertainty as to the exact position of the coast-line, and
+ the course of the river, in the time of Nebuchadnezzar. Probably it should
+ be sought about Zobair, or a little further inland.. The chief provincial
+ cities were Susa and Badaca in Susiana; Anat, Sirki, and Carchemish, on
+ the Middle Euphrates; Sidikan on the Khabour; Harran on the Bilik; Hamath,
+ Damascus, and Jerusalem, in Inner Syria; Tyre, Sidon, Ashdod, Ascalon, and
+ Gaza, upon the coast. Of these, Susa was undoubtedly the most important;
+ indeed, it deserves to be regarded as the second city of the Empire. Here,
+ between the two arms of the Choaspes, on a noble and well-watered plain,
+ backed at the distance of twenty-five miles by a lofty mountain range, the
+ fresh breezes from which tempered the summer heats, was the ancient palace
+ of the Kissian kings, proudly placed upon a lofty platform or mound, and
+ commanding a wide prospect of the rich pastures at its base, which
+ extended northwards to the roots of the hills, and in every other
+ direction as far as the eye could reach. Clustered at the foot of the
+ palace mound, more especially on its eastern side, lay the ancient town,
+ the foundation of the traditional Memnon who led an army to the defence of
+ Troy. The pure and sparkling water of the Choaspes&mdash;a drink fit for
+ kings&mdash;flowed near, while around grew palms, konars, and lemon-trees,
+ the plain beyond waving with green grass and golden corn. It may be
+ suspected that the Babylonian kings, who certainly maintained a palace at
+ this place, and sent high officers of their court to &ldquo;do their business&rdquo;
+ there, made it their occasional residence, exchanging, in summer and early
+ autumn, the heats and swamps of Babylon for the comparatively dry and cool
+ region at the base of the Lurish hills. But, however, this may have been,
+ at any rate Susa, long the capital of a kingdom little inferior to Babylon
+ itself, must have been the first of the provincial cities, surpassing all
+ the rest at once in size and in magnificence. Among the other cities,
+ Carchemish on the Upper Euphrates, Tyre upon the Syrian coast, and Ashdod
+ on the borders of Egypt, held the highest place. Carchemish, which has
+ been wrongly identified with Circesium, lay certainly high up the river,
+ and most likely occupied a site some distance to the north of Balis, which
+ is in lat. 36° nearly. It was the key of Syria on the east, commanding the
+ ordinary passage of the Euphrates, and being the only great city in this
+ quarter. Tyre, which had by this time surpassed its rival, Sidon, was the
+ chief of all the maritime towns; and its possession gave the mastery of
+ the Eastern Mediterranean to the power which could acquire and maintain
+ it. Ashdod was the key of Syria upon the south, being a place of great
+ strength, and commanding the coast route between Palestine and Egypt,
+ which was usually pursued by armies. It is scarcely too much to say that
+ the possession of Ashdod, Tyre, and Carchemish, involved the lordship of
+ Syria, which could not be permanently retained except by the occupation of
+ those cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The countries by which the Babylonian Empire was bounded were Persia on
+ the east, Media and her dependencies on the north, Arabia on the south,
+ and Egypt at the extreme southwest. Directly to the west she had no
+ neighbor, her territory being on that side washed by the Mediterranean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Persia, which must be described at length in the next volume, since it
+ was the seat of Empire during the Fifth Monarchy, no more need be said
+ here than that it was for the most part a rugged and sterile country, apt
+ to produce a brave and hardy race, but incapable of sustaining a large
+ population. A strong barrier separated it from the great Mesopotamian
+ lowland; and the Babylonians, by occupying a few easily defensible passes,
+ could readily prevent a Persian army from debouching on their fertile
+ plains. On the other hand, the natural strength of the region is so great
+ that in the hands of brave and active men its defence is easy; and the
+ Babylonians were not likely, if an aggressive spirit led to their pressing
+ eastward, to make any serious impression in this quarter, or ever greatly
+ to advance their frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Media, the power which bordered her upon the north, Babylonia, on the
+ contrary, lay wholly open. The Medes, possessing Assyria and Armenia, with
+ the Upper Tigris valley, and probably the Mons Masius, could at any time,
+ with the greatest ease, have marched armies into the low country, and
+ resumed the contest in which Assyria was engaged for so many hundred years
+ with the great people of the south. On this side nature had set no
+ obstacles; and, if danger threatened, resistance had to be made by means
+ of those artificial works which are specially suited for flat countries.
+ Long lines of wall, broad dykes, huge reservoirs, by means of which large
+ tracts may be laid under water, form the natural resort in such a case;
+ and to such defences as these alone, in addition to her armies, could
+ Babylonia look in case of a quarrel with the Medes. On this side, however,
+ she for many years felt no fear. Political arrangements and family ties
+ connected her with the Median reigning house, and she looked to her
+ northern neighbor as an ally upon whom she might depend for aid, rather
+ than as a rival whose ambitious designs were to be watched and baffled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Babylonia lay open also on the side of Arabia. Here, however, the nature
+ of the country is such that population must be always sparse; and the
+ habits of the people are opposed to that political union which can alone
+ make a race really formidable to others. Once only in their history, under
+ the excitement of a religious frenzy, have the Arabs issued forth from the
+ great peninsula on an errand of conquest. In general they are content to
+ vex and harass without seriously alarming their neighbors. The vast space
+ and arid character of the peninsula are adverse to the collection and the
+ movement of armies; the love of independence cherished by the several
+ tribes indisposes them to union; the affection for the nomadic life, which
+ is strongly felt, disinclines them to the occupation of conquests. Arabia,
+ as a a conterminous power, is troublesome, but rarely dangerous: one
+ section of the nation may almost always be played off against another: if
+ &ldquo;their hand is against every man,&rdquo; &ldquo;every man&rsquo;s hand&rdquo; is also &ldquo;against
+ them;&rdquo; blood-feuds divide and decimate their tribes, which are ever
+ turning their swords against each other; their neighbors generally wish
+ them ill, and will fall upon them, if they can take them at a
+ disadvantage; it is only under very peculiar circumstances, such as can
+ very rarely exist, that they are likely even to attempt anything more
+ serious than a plundering inroad. Babylonia consequently, though open to
+ attack on the side of the south as well as on that of the north, had
+ little to fear from either quarter. The friendliness of her northern
+ neighbor, and the practical weakness of her southern one, were equal
+ securities against aggression; and thus on her two largest and most
+ exposed frontiers the Empire dreaded no attack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was otherwise in the far south-west. Here the Empire bordered upon
+ Egypt, a rich and populous country, which at all times covets Syria, and
+ is often strong enough to seize and hold it in possession. The natural
+ frontier is moreover weak, no other barrier separating between Africa and
+ Asia than a narrow desert, which has never yet proved a serious obstacle
+ to an army. From the side of Egypt, if from no other quarter, Babylonia
+ might expect to have trouble. Here she inherited from her predecessor,
+ Assyria, an old hereditary feud, which might at any time break out into
+ active hostility. Here was an ancient, powerful, and well-organized
+ kingdom upon her borders, with claims upon that portion of her territory
+ which it was most difficult for her to defend effectively. By seas and by
+ land equally the strip of Syrian coast lay open to the arms of Egypt, who
+ was free to choose her time, and pour her hosts into the country when the
+ attention of Babylon was directed to some other quarter. The physical and
+ political circumstances alike pointed to hostile transactions between
+ Babylon and her south-western neighbor. Whether destruction would come
+ from this quarter, or from some other, it would have been impossible to
+ predict. Perhaps, on the whole, it may be said that Babylon might have
+ been expected to contend successfully with Egypt&mdash;that she had little
+ to fear from Arabia&mdash;that against Persia Proper it might have been
+ anticipated that she would be able to defend herself&mdash;but that she
+ lay at the mercy of Media. The Babylonian Empire was in truth an empire
+ upon sufferance. From the time of its establishment with the consent of
+ the Medes, the Modes might at any time have destroyed it. The dynastic tie
+ alone prevented this result. When that tie was snapped, and when moreover,
+ by the victories of Cyrus, Persian enterprise succeeded to the direction
+ of Median power, the fate of Babylon was sealed. It was impossible for the
+ long straggling Empire of the south, lying chiefly in low, flat, open
+ regions, to resist for any considerable time the great kingdom of the
+ north, of the high plateau, and of the mountain-chains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. CLIMATE AND PRODUCTIONS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonian Empire, lying as it did between the thirtieth and
+ thirty-seventh parallels of north latitude, and consisting mostly of
+ comparatively low countries, enjoyed a climate which was, upon the whole,
+ considerably warmer than that of Media, and less subject to extreme
+ variations. In its more southern parts-Susiana, Chaldaea (or Babylonia
+ Proper), Philistia, and Edom&mdash;-the intensity of the summer heat must
+ have been great; but the winters were mild and of short duration. In the
+ middle regions of Central Mesopotamia, the Euphrates valley, the
+ Palmyrene, Coele-Syria, Judaea, and Phoenicia, while the winters were
+ somewhat colder and longer, the summer warmth was more tolerable. Towards
+ the north, along the flanks of Masius, Taurus, and Amanus, a climate more
+ like that of eastern Media prevailed, the summers being little less hot
+ than those of the middle region, while the winters were of considerable
+ severity. A variety of climate thus existed, but a variety within somewhat
+ narrow limits. The region was altogether hotter and drier than is usual in
+ the same latitude. The close proximity of the great Arabian desert, the
+ small size of the adjoining seas, the want of mountains within the region
+ having any great elevation, and the general absence of timber, combined to
+ produce an amount of heat and dryness scarcely known elsewhere outside the
+ tropics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Detailed accounts of the temperature, and of the climate generally, in the
+ most important provinces of the Empire, Babylonia and Mesopotamia Proper,
+ have been already given, and on these points the reader is referred to the
+ first volume. With regard to the remaining provinces, it may be noticed,
+ in the first place, that the climate of Susiana differs but very slightly
+ from that of Babylonia, the region to which it is adjacent. The heat in
+ summer is excessive, the thermometer, even in the hill country, at an
+ elevation of 5000 feet, standing often at 107° Fahr. in the shade. The
+ natives construct for themselves serdaubs, or subterranean apartments, in
+ which they live during the day, thus somewhat reducing the temperature,
+ but probably never bringing it much below 100 degrees. They sleep at night
+ in the open air on the flat roofs of their houses. So far as there is any
+ difference of climate at this season between Susiana and Babylonia, it is
+ in favor of the former. The heat, though scorching, is rarely oppressive;
+ and not unfrequently a cool, invigorating breeze sets in from the
+ mountains, which refreshes both mind and body. The winters are exceedingly
+ mild, snow being unknown on the plains, and rare on the mountains, except
+ at a considerable elevation. At this time, however&mdash;from December to
+ the end of March&mdash;rain falls in tropical abundance; and occasionally
+ there are violent hail-storms, which inflict serious injury on the crops.
+ The spring-time in Susiana is delightful. Soft airs fan the cheek, laden
+ with the scent of flowers; a carpet of verdure is spread over the plains;
+ the sky is cloudless, or overspread with a thin gauzy veil; the heat of
+ the sun is not too great; the rivers run with full banks and fill the
+ numerous canals; the crops advance rapidly towards perfection; and on
+ every side a rich luxuriant growth cheers the eye of the traveller.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the opposite side of the Empire, in Syria and Palestine, a moister, and
+ on the whole a cooler climate prevails. In Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon there
+ is a severe winter, which lasts from October to April; much snow falls,
+ and the thermometer often marks twenty or thirty degrees of frost. On the
+ flanks of the mountain ranges, and in the highlands of Upper and
+ Coele-Syria, of Damascus, Samaria, and Judsea, the cold is considerably
+ less; but there are intervals of frost; snow falls, though it does not
+ often remain long upon the ground; and prolonged chilling rains make the
+ winter and early spring unpleasant. In the low regions, on the other hand,
+ in the <i>Shephelah</i>, the plain of Sharon, the Phoenician coast tract,
+ the lower valley of the Orontes, and again in the plain of Esdraelon and
+ the remarkable depression from the Merom lake to the Dead Sea, the winters
+ are exceedingly mild; frost and snow are unknown; the lowest temperature
+ is produced by cold rains and fogs, which do not bring the thermometer
+ much below 40°. During the summer these low regions, especially the Jordan
+ valley or Ghor, are excessively hot, the heat being ordinarily of that
+ moist kind which is intolerably oppressive. The upland plains and mountain
+ flanks experience also a high temperature, but there the heat is of a
+ drier character, and is not greatly complained of; the nights even in
+ summer are cold, the dews being often heavy; cool winds blow occasionally,
+ and though the sky is for months without a cloud, the prevailing heat
+ produces no injurious effects on those who are exposed to it. In Lebanon
+ and Anti-Lebanon the heat is of course still less; refreshing breezes blow
+ almost constantly; and the numerous streams and woods give a sense of
+ coolness beyond the markings of the thermometer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is one evil, however, to which almost the whole Empire must have
+ been subject. Alike in the east and in the west, in Syria and Palestine,
+ no less than in Babylonia Proper and Susiana, there are times when a
+ fierce and scorching wind prevails for days together&mdash;a wind whose
+ breath withers the herbage and is unspeakably depressing to man. Called in
+ the east the Sherghis, and in the west the Khamsin, this fiery sirocco
+ comes laden with fine particles of heated sand, which at once raise the
+ temperature and render the air unwholesome to breathe. In Syria these
+ winds occur commonly in the spring, from February to April; but in Susiana
+ and Babylonia the time for them is the height of summer. They blow from
+ various quarters, according to the position, with respect to Arabia,
+ occupied by the different provinces. In Palestine the worst are from the
+ east, the direction in which the desert is nearest; in Lower Babylonia
+ they are from the south; in Susiana from the west or the north-west.
+ During their continuance the air is darkened, a lurid glow is cast over
+ the earth, the animal world pines and droops, vegetation languishes, and,
+ if the traveller cannot obtain shelter, and the wind continues, he may
+ sink and die under its deleterious influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The climate of the entire tract included within the limits of the Empire
+ was probably much the same in ancient times as in our own days. In the low
+ alluvial plains indeed near the Persian Gulf it is probable that
+ vegetation was anciently more abundant, the date-palm being cultivated
+ much more extensively then than at present; and so far it might appear
+ reasonable to conclude that the climate of that region must have been
+ moister and cooler than it now is. But if we may judge by Strabo&rsquo;s account
+ of Susiana, where the climatic conditions were nearly the same as in
+ Babylonia, no important change can have taken place, for Strabo not only
+ calls the climate of Susiana &ldquo;fiery and scorching,&rdquo; but says that in Susa,
+ during the height of summer, if a lizard or a snake tried to cross the
+ street about noon-day, he was baked to death before accomplishing half the
+ distance. Similarly on the west, though there is reason to believe that
+ Palestine is now much more denuded of timber than it was formerly, and its
+ climate should therefore be both warmer and drier, yet it has been argued
+ with great force from the identity of the modern with the ancient
+ vegetation, that in reality there can have been no considerable change. If
+ then there has been such permanency of climate in the two regions where
+ the greatest alteration seems to have taken place in the circumstances
+ whereby climate is usually affected, it can scarcely be thought that
+ elsewhere any serious change has been brought about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief vegetable productions of Babylonia Proper in ancient times are
+ thus enumerated by Berosus. &ldquo;The land of the Babylonians,&rdquo; he says,
+ &ldquo;produces wheat as an indigenous plant,&rdquo; and has also barley, and lentils,
+ and vetches, and sesame; the banks of the streams and the marshes supply
+ edible roots, called gongoe, which have the taste of barley-cakes. Palms,
+ too, grow in the country, and apples, and fruit-trees of various kinds.
+ Wheat, it will be observed, and barley are placed first, since it was
+ especially as a grain country that Babylonia was celebrated. The
+ testimonies of Herodotus, Theophrastus, Strabo, and Pliny as to the
+ enormous returns which the Babylonian farmers obtained from their corn
+ lands have been already cited. No such fertility is known anywhere in
+ modern times; and, unless the accounts are grossly exaggerated, we must
+ ascribe it, in part, to the extraordinary vigor of a virgin soil, a deep
+ and rich alluvium; in part, perhaps, to a peculiar adaptation of the soil
+ to the wheat plant, which the providence of God made to grow spontaneously
+ in this region, and nowhere else, so far as we know, on the whole face of
+ the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides wheat, it appears that barley, millet, and lentils were cultivated
+ for food, while vetches were grown for beasts, and sesame for the sake of
+ the oil which can be expressed from its seed. All grew luxuriantly, and
+ the returns of the barley in particular are stated at a fabulous amount.
+ But the production of first necessity in Babylonia was the date-palm,
+ which flourished in great abundance throughout the region, and probably
+ furnished the chief food of the greater portion of the inhabitants. The
+ various uses to which it was applied have been stated in the first volume,
+ where a representation of its mode of growth has been also given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the adjoining country of Susiana, or at any rate in the alluvial
+ portion of it, the principal products of the earth seem to have been
+ nearly the same as in Babylonia, while the fecundity of the soil was but
+ little less. Wheat and barley returned to the sower a hundred or even two
+ hundred fold. The date-palm grew plentifully, more especially in the
+ vicinity of the towns. Other trees also were common, as probably konars,
+ acacias, and poplars, which are still found scattered in tolerable
+ abundance over the plain country. The neighboring mountains could furnish
+ good timber of various kinds; but it appears that the palm was the tree
+ chiefly used for building. If we may judge the past by the present, we may
+ further suppose that Susiana produced fruits in abundance; for modern
+ travellers tell us that there is not a fruit known in Persia which does
+ not thrive in the province of Khuzistan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Along the Euphrates valley to a considerable distance&mdash;at least as
+ far as Anah (or Hena)&mdash;the character of the country resembles that of
+ Babylonia and Susiana, and the products cannot have been very different.
+ About Anah the date-palm begins to fail, and the olive first makes its
+ appearance. Further up a chief fruit is the mulberry. Still higher, in
+ northern Mesopotamia, the mulberry is comparatively rare, but its place is
+ supplied by the walnut, the vine, and the pistachio-nut. This district
+ produces also good crops of grain, and grows oranges, pomegranates, and
+ the commoner kinds of fruit abundantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Across the Euphrates, in Northern Syria, the country is less suited for
+ grain crops; but trees and shrubs of all kinds grow luxuriantly, the
+ pasture is excellent, and much of the land is well adapted for the growth
+ of cotton. The Assyrian kings cut timber frequently in this tract; and
+ here are found at the present day enormous planes, thick forests of oak,
+ pine, and ilex, walnuts, willows, poplars, ash-trees, birches, larches,
+ and the carob or locust tree. Among wild shrubs are the oleander with its
+ ruddy blossoms, the myrtle, the bay, the arbutus, the clematis, the
+ juniper, and the honeysuckle; among cultivated fruit-trees, the orange,
+ the pomegranate, the pistachio-nut, the vine, the mulberry, and the olive.
+ The adis, an excellent pea, and the Lycoperdon, or wild potato, grow in
+ the neighborhood of Aleppo. The castor-oil plant is cultivated in the
+ plain of Edlib. Melons, cucumbers, and most of the ordinary vegetables are
+ produced in abundance and of good quality everywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Southern Syria and Palestine most of the same forms of vegetation
+ occur, with several others of quite a new character. These are due either
+ to the change of latitude, or to the tropical heat of the Jordan and Dead
+ Sea valley, or finally to the high elevation of Hermon, Lebanon, and
+ Anti-Lebanon. The date-palm fringes the Syrian shore as high as Beyrut,
+ and formerly flourished in the Jordan valley, where, however, it is not
+ now seen, except in a few dwarfed specimens near the Tiberias lake. The
+ banana accompanies the date along the coast, and even grows as far north
+ as Tripoli. The prickly pear, introduced from America, has completely
+ neutralized itself, and is in general request for hedging. The fig
+ mulberry (or true sycamore), another southern form, is also common, and
+ grows to a considerable size. Other denizens of warm climes, unknown in
+ Northern Syria, are the jujube, the tamarisk, theelasagnus or wild olive,
+ the gum-styrax plant (<i>Styrax officinalis</i>), the egg-plant, the
+ Egyptian papyrus, the sugar-cane, the scarlet misletoe, the solanum that
+ produces the &ldquo;Dead Sea apple&rdquo; (<i>Solanum Sodomceum</i>), the
+ yellow-flowered acacia, and the liquorice plant. Among the forms due to
+ high elevation are the famous Lebanon cedar, several oaks and juniper, the
+ maple, berberry, jessamine, ivy, butcher&rsquo;s broom, a rhododendron, and the
+ gum-tragacanth plant. The fruits additional to those of the north are
+ dates, lemons, almonds, shaddocks, and limes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief mineral products of the Empire seem to have been bitumen, with
+ its concomitants, naphtha and petroleum, salt, sulphur, nitre, copper,
+ iron, perhaps silver, and several sorts of precious stones. Bitumen was
+ furnished in great abundance by the springs at Hit or Is, which were
+ celebrated in the days of Herodotus; it was also procured from Ardericca
+ (Kir-Ab), and probably from Earn Ormuz, in Susiana, and likewise from the
+ Dead Sea. Salt was obtainable from the various lakes which had no outlet,
+ as especially from the Sabakhab, the Bahr-el-Melak, the Dead Sea, and a
+ small lake near Tadmor or Palmyra. The Dead Sea gave also most probably
+ both sulphur and nitre, but the latter only in small quantities. Copper
+ and iron seem to have been yielded by the hills of Palestine. Silver was
+ perhaps a product of the Anti-Lebanon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be doubted whether any gems were really found in Babylonia itself,
+ which, being purely alluvial, possesses no stone of any kind. Most likely
+ the sorts known as Babylonian came from the neighboring Susiana, whose
+ unexplored mountains may possess many rich treasures. According to
+ Dionysius, the bed of the Choaspes produced numerous agates, and it may
+ well be that from the same quarter came that &ldquo;beryl more precious than
+ gold,&rdquo; and those &ldquo;highly reputed sard,&rdquo; which Babylon seems to have
+ exported to other countries. The western provinces may, however, very
+ probably have furnished the gems which are ascribed to them, as amethysts,
+ which are said to have been found in the neighborhood of Petra, alabaster,
+ which came from near Damascus, and the cyanus, a kind of lapis-lazuli,
+ which was a production of Phoenicia. No doubt the Babylonian love of gems
+ caused the provinces to be carefully searched for stones; and it is not
+ improbable that they yielded besides the varieties already named, and the
+ other unknown kinds mentioned by Pliny, many, if not most, of the
+ materials which we find to have been used for seals by the ancient people.
+ These are, cornelian, rock-crystal, chalcedony, onyx, jasper, quartz,
+ serpentine, sienite, haematite, green felspar, pyrites, loadstone, and
+ amazon-stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stone for building was absent from Babylonia Proper and the alluvial
+ tracts of Susiana, but in the other provinces it abounded. The Euphrates
+ valley could furnish stone at almost any point above Hit; the mountain
+ regions of Susiana could supply it in whatever quantity might be required;
+ and in the western provinces it was only too plentiful. Near to Babylonia
+ the most common kind was limestone; but about Had-disah on the Euphrates
+ there was also a gritty, silicious rock alternating with iron-stone, and
+ in the Arabian Desert were sandstone and granite. Such stone as was used
+ in Babylon itself, and in the other cities of the low country, probably
+ either came down the Euphrates, or was brought by canals from the adjacent
+ part of Arabia. The quantity, however, thus consumed was small, the
+ Babylonians being content for most uses with the brick, of which their own
+ territory gave them a supply practically inexhaustible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The principal wild animals known to have inhabited the Empire in ancient
+ times are the following: the lion, the panther or large leopard, the
+ hunting leopard, the bear, the hyena, the wild ox, the buffalo (?), the
+ wild ass, the stag, the antelope, the ibex or wild goat, the wild sheep,
+ the wild boar, the wolf, the jackal, the fox, the hare, and the rabbit. Of
+ these, the lion, leopard, bear, stag, wolf, jackal, and fox seem to have
+ been very widely diffused, while the remainder were rarer, and, generally
+ speaking, confined to certain localities. The wild ass was met with only
+ in the dry parts of Mesopotamia, and perhaps of Syria, the buffalo and
+ wild boar only in moist regions, along the banks of rivers or among
+ marshes. The wild ox was altogether scarce; the wild sheep, the rabbit,
+ and the hare, were probably not common.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this list may be added as present denizens of the region, and therefore
+ probably belonging to it in ancient times, the lynx, the wildcat, the
+ ratel, the sable, the genet, the badger, the otter, the beaver, the
+ polecat, the jerboa, the rat, the mouse, the marmot, the porcupine, the
+ squirrel, and perhaps the alligator. Of these the commonest at the present
+ day are porcupines, badgers, otters, rats, mice, and jerboas. The ratel,
+ sable, and genet belong only to the north; the beaver is found nowhere but
+ in the Khabour and middle Euphrates; the alligator, if a denizen of the
+ region at all exists only in the Euphrates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief birds of the region are eagles, vultures, falcons, owls, hawks,
+ many kinds of crows, magpies, jackdaws, thrushes, blackbirds,
+ nightingales, larks, sparrows, goldfinches, swallows, doves of fourteen
+ kinds, francolins, rock partridges, gray partridges, black partridges,
+ quails, pheasants, capercailzies, bustards, flamingoes, pelicans,
+ cormorants, storks, herons, cranes, wild-geese, ducks, teal, kingfishers,
+ snipes, woodcocks, the sand-grouse, the hoopoe, the green parrot, the
+ becafico, the locust-bird, the humming-bird (?), and the bee-eater. The
+ eagle, pheasant, capercailzie, quail, parrot, locust-bird, becafico, and
+ humming-bird are rare; the remainder are all tolerably common. Besides
+ these, we know that in ancient times ostriches wore found within the
+ limits of the Empire, though now they have retreated further south into
+ the Great Desert of Arabia. Perhaps bitterns may also formerly have
+ frequented some of the countries belonging to it, though they are not
+ mentioned among the birds of the region by modern writers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a bird of the heron species, or rather of a species between the
+ heron and the stork, which seems to deserve a few words of special
+ description. It is found chiefly in Northern Syria, in the plain of Aleppo
+ and the districts watered by the Koweik and Sajur rivers. The Arabs call
+ it Tair-el-Raouf, or &ldquo;the magnificent.&rdquo; This bird is of a grayish-white,
+ the breast white, the joints of the wings tipped with scarlet, and the
+ under part of the beak scarlet, the upper part being of a blackish-gray.
+ The beak is nearly five inches long, and two thirds of an inch thick. The
+ circumference of the eye is red; the feet are of a deep yellow; and the
+ bird in its general form strongly resembles the stork; but its color is
+ darker. It is four feet high, and covers a breadth of nine feet when the
+ wings are spread. The birds of this species are wont to collect in large
+ flocks on the North Syrian rivers, and to arrange themselves in several
+ rows across the streams where they are shallowest. Here they squat side by
+ side, as close to one another as possible, and spread out their tails
+ against the current, thus forming a temporary dam. The water drains off
+ below them, and when it has reached its lowest point, at a signal from one
+ of their number who from the bank watches the proceedings, they rise and
+ swoop upon the fish, frogs, etc., which the lowering of the water has
+ exposed to view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fish are abundant in the Chaldaean marshes, and in almost all the
+ fresh-water lakes and rivers. <a href="#linkimage-0003">[PLATE. VIII.,
+ Fig.]</a> The Tigris and Euphrates yield chiefly barbel and carp; but the
+ former stream has also eels, trout, chub, shad-fish, siluruses, and many
+ kinds which have no English names. The Koweik contains the Aleppo eel (<i>Ophidium
+ masbacambahis</i>), a very rare variety; and in other streams of Northern
+ Syria are found lampreys, bream, dace, and the black-fish (<i>Macroptero-notus
+ niger</i>), besides carp, trout, chub, and barbel. Chub, bream, and the
+ silurus are taken in the Sea of Galilee. The black-fish is extremely
+ abundant in the Bahr-el-Taka and the Lake of Antioch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among reptiles may be noticed, besides snakes, lizards, and frogs, which
+ are numerous, the following less common species&mdash;iguanoes, tortoises
+ of two kinds, chameleons, and monitors. Bats also were common in Babylonia
+ Proper, where they grew to a great size. Of insects the most remarkable
+ are scorpions, tarantulas, and locusts. These last come suddenly in
+ countless myriads with the wind, and, settling on the crops, rapidly
+ destroy all the hopes of the husbandman, after which they strip the shrubs
+ and trees of their leaves, reducing rich districts in an incredibly short
+ space of time to the condition of howling wildernesses. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0003">[PLATE. VIII., Fig. 3.]</a> If it were not for the
+ locust-bird, which is constantly keeping down their numbers, these
+ destructive insects would probably increase so as to ruin utterly the
+ various regions exposed to their ravages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The domestic animals employed in the countries which composed the Empire
+ were, camels, horses, mules, asses, buffaloes, cows and oxen, goats,
+ sheep, and dogs. Mules as well as horses seem to have been anciently used
+ in war by the people of the more southern regions-by the Susianians at any
+ rate, if not also by the Babylonians. Sometimes they were ridden;
+ sometimes they were employed to draw carts or chariots. They were spirited
+ and active animals, evidently of a fine breed, such as that for which
+ Khuzistan is famous at the present day. <a href="#linkimage-0003">[PLATE.
+ VIII., Fig. 4.]</a> The asses from which these mules were produced must
+ also have been of superior quality, like the breed for which Baghdad is
+ even now famous, The Babylonian horses are not likely to have been nearly
+ so good; for this animal does not flourish in a climate which is at once
+ moist and hot. Still, at any rate under the Persians, Babylonia seems to
+ have been a great breeding-place for horses, since the stud of a single
+ satrap consisted of 800 stallions and 16,000 mares. If we may judge of the
+ character of Babylonian from that of Susianian steeds, we may consider the
+ breed to have, been strong and large limbed, but not very handsome, the
+ head being too large and the legs too short for beauty. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE IX., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate009.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Ix. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians were also from very early times famous for their breed of
+ dogs. The tablet engraved in a former volume, which gives a representation
+ of a Babylonian hound, is probably of a high antiquity, not later than the
+ period or the Empire. Dogs are also not unfrequently represented on
+ ancient Babylonian stones and cylinders. It would seem that, as in
+ Assyria, there were two principal breeds, one somewhat clumsy and heavy,
+ of a character not unlike that of our mastiff, the other of a much lighter
+ make, nearly resembling our greyhound. The former kind is probably the
+ breed known as Indian, which was kept up by continual importations from
+ the country whence it was originally derived.<a href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE.
+ IX., Fig. 2.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have no evidence that camels were employed in the time of the Empire,
+ either by the Babylonians themselves or by their neighbors, the
+ Susianians; but in Upper Mesopotamia, in Syria, and in Palestine they had
+ been in use from a very early date. The Amalekitos and the Midianites
+ found them serviceable in war; and the latter people employed them also as
+ beasts of burden in their caravan trade. The Syrians of Upper Mesopotamia
+ rode upon them in their journeys. It appears that they were also sometimes
+ yoked to chariots, though from their size and clumsiness they would be but
+ ill fitted for beasts of draught.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buffaloes were, it is probable, domesticated by the Babylonians at an
+ early date. The animal seems to have been indigenous in the country, and
+ it is far better suited for the marshy regions of Lower Babylonia and
+ Susiana than cattle of the ordinary kind. It is perhaps a buffalo which is
+ represented on an ancient tablet already referred to, where a lion is
+ disturbed in the middle of his feast off a prostrate animal by a man armed
+ with a hatchet. Cows and oxen, however, of the common kind are
+ occasionally represented on the cylinders <a href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE
+ IX., Fig. 4.]</a>, where they seem sometimes to represent animals about to
+ be offered to the gods. Goats also appear frequently in this capacity; and
+ they were probably more common than sheep, at any rate in the more
+ southern districts. Of Babylonian sheep we have no representations at all
+ on the monuments; but it is scarcely likely that a country which used wool
+ so largely was content to be without them. At any rate they abounded in
+ the provinces, forming the chief wealth of the more northern nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTEE III. THE PEOPLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Chaldaeans, that bitter and hasty nation.&rdquo;&mdash;Habak. 1. 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians, who, under Nabopolassar and Nebuchadnezzar, held the
+ second place among the nations of the East, were emphatically a mixed
+ race. The ancient people from whom they were in the main descended&mdash;the
+ Chaldaeans of the First Empire&mdash;possessed this character to a
+ considerable extent, since they united Cusbite with Turanian blood, and
+ contained moreover a slight Semitic and probably a slight Arian element.
+ But the Babylonians of later times&mdash;the Chaldaeans of the Hebrew
+ prophets&mdash;must have been very much more a mixed race than their
+ earlier namesakes&mdash;partly in consequence of the policy of
+ colonization pursued systematically by the later Assyrian kings, partly
+ from the direct influence exerted upon them by conquerors. Whatever may
+ have been the case with the Arab dynasty, which bore sway in the country
+ from about B.C. 1546 till B.C. 1300, it is certain that the Assyrians
+ conquered Babylon about B.C. 1300, and almost certain that they
+ established an Assyrian family upon the throne of Nimrod, which held for
+ some considerable time the actual sovereignty of the country. It was
+ natural that under a dynasty of Semites, Semitic blood should flow freely
+ into the lower region, Semitic usages and modes of thought become
+ prevalent, and the spoken language of the country pass from a Turanian or
+ Turano-Cushite to a Semitic type. The previous Chaldaean race blended,
+ apparently, with the new comers, and people was produced in which the
+ three elements&mdash;the Semitic, the Turanian, and the Cushite&mdash;held
+ about equal shares. The colonization of the Sargonid kings added probably
+ other elements in small proportions, and the result was that among all the
+ nations inhabiting Western Asia there can have been none so thoroughly
+ deserving the title of a &ldquo;mingled people&rdquo; as the Babylonians of the later
+ Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In mixtures of this kind it is almost always found that some one element
+ practically preponderates, and assumes to itself the right of fashioning
+ and forming the general character of the race. It is not at all necessary
+ that this formative element should be larger than any other; on the
+ contrary, it may be and sometimes is extremely small; for it does not work
+ by its mass, but by its innate force and strong vital energy. In
+ Babylonia, the element which showed itself to possess this superior
+ vitality, which practically asserted its pre-eminence and proceeded to
+ mold the national character, was the Semitic. There is abundant evidence
+ that by the time of the later Empire the Babylonians had become thoroughly
+ Semitized; so much so, that ordinary observers scarcely distinguished them
+ from their purely Semitic neighbors, the Assyrians. No doubt there were
+ differences which a Hippocrates or an Aristotle could have detected&mdash;differences
+ resulting from mixed descent, as well as differences arising from climate
+ and physical geography; but, speaking broadly, it must be said that the
+ Semitic element, introduced into Babylonia from the north, had so
+ prevailed by the time of the establishment of the Empire that the race was
+ no longer one sui generis, but was a mere variety of the well-known and
+ widely spread Semitic type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We possess but few notices, and fewer assured representations, from which
+ to form an opinion of the physical characteristics of the Babylonians.
+ Except upon the cylinders, there are extant only three or four
+ representations of the human forms by Babylonian artists, and in the few
+ cases where this form occurs we cannot always feel at all certain that the
+ intention is to portray a human being. A few Assyrian bas-reliefs probably
+ represent campaigns in Babylonia; but the Assyrians vary their human type
+ so little that these sculptures must not be regarded as conveying to us
+ very exact information. Tho cylinders are too rudely executed to be of
+ much service, and they seem to preserve an archaic type which originated
+ with the Proto-Chaldaeans. If we might trust the figures upon them as at
+ all nearly representing the truth, we should have to regard the
+ Babylonians as of much slighter and sparer frames than their northern
+ neighbors, of a physique in fact approaching to meagreness. The Assyrian
+ sculptures, however, are far from bearing out this idea; from them it
+ would seem that the frames of the Babylonians were as brawny and massive
+ as those of the Assyrians themselves, while in feature there was not much
+ difference between the nations. <a href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE IX., Fig.
+ 3.]</a> Foreheads straight but not high, noses well formed but somewhat
+ depressed, full lips, and a well-marked rounded chin, constitute the
+ physiognomy of the Babylonians as it appears upon the sculptures of their
+ neighbors. This representation is not contradicted by the few specimens of
+ actual sculpture left by themselves. In these the type approaches nearly
+ to the Assyrian, while there is still, such an amount of difference as
+ renders it tolerably easy to distinguish between the productions of the
+ two nations. The eye is larger, and not so decidedly almond-shaped; the
+ nose is shorter, and its depression is still more marked; while the
+ general expression of the countenance is altogether more commonplace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These differences may be probably referred to the influence which was
+ exercised upon the physical form of the race by the primitive or
+ Proto-Chaldaean element, an influence which appears to have been
+ considerable. This element, as has been already observed, was
+ predominantly Cushite; and there is reason to believe that the Cushite
+ race was connected not very remotely with the negro. In Susiana, where the
+ Cushite blood was maintained in tolerable purity&mdash;Elymseans and
+ Kissians existing side by side, instead of blending together&mdash;there
+ was, if we may trust the Assyrian remains, a very decided prevalency of a
+ negro type of countenance, as the accompanying specimens, carefully copied
+ from the sculptures, will render evident. <a href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE
+ IX., Fig. 6.]</a> The head was covered with short crisp curls; the eye was
+ large, the nose and mouth nearly in the same line, the lips thick. Such a
+ physiognomy as the Babylonian appears to have been would naturally arise
+ from an intermixture of a race like the Assyrian with one resembling that
+ which the later sculptures represent as the main race inhabiting Susiana.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herodotus remarks that the Babylonians wore their hair long; and this
+ remark is confirmed to some extent by the native remains. These in general
+ represent the hair as forming a single stiff and heavy curl at the back of
+ the head (No. 3). Sometimes, however, they make it take the shape of long
+ flowing locks, which depend over the back (No. 1), or over the back and
+ shoulders (No. 4), reaching nearly to the waist. Occasionally, in lieu of
+ these commoner types, wo have one which closely resembles the Assyrian,
+ the hair forming a round mass behind the head (No. 2), on which we can
+ sometimes trace indications of a slight wave. <a href="#linkimage-0005">[PLATE
+ X., Fig. 1.]</a> The national fashion, that to which Herodotus alludes,
+ seems to be represented by the three commoner modes. Where the round mass
+ is worn, we have probably an Assyrian fashion, which the Babylonians aped
+ during the time of that people&rsquo;s pre-eminence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate010.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate X. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Besides their flowing hair, the Babylonians are represented frequently
+ with a large beard. This is generally longer than the Assyrian, descending
+ nearly to the waist. Sometimes it curls crisply upon the face, but below
+ the chin depends over the breast in long, straight locks. At other times
+ it droops perpendicularly from the cheeks and the under lip.15 Frequently,
+ however, the beard is shaven off, and the whole face is smooth and
+ hairless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chaldaean females, as represented by the Assyrians, are tall and
+ large-limbed. Their physiognomy is Assyrian, their hair not very abundant.
+ The Babylonian cylinders, on the other hand, make the hair long and
+ conspicuous, while the forms are quite as spare and meagre as those of the
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole, it is most probable that the physical type of the later
+ Babylonians was nearly that of their northern neighbors. A somewhat sparer
+ form, longer and more flowing hair, and features less stern and strong,
+ may perhaps have characterized them. They were also, it is probable, of a
+ darker complexion than the Assyrians, being to some extent Ethiopians by
+ descent, and inhabiting a region which lies four degrees nearer to the
+ tropics than Assyria. The Cha&rsquo;ab Arabs, the present possessors of the more
+ southern parts of Babylonia, are nearly black; and the &ldquo;black Syrians,&rdquo; of
+ whom Strabo speaks, seem intended to represent the Babylonians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the moral and mental characteristics of the people, the first place
+ is due to their intellectual ability. Inheriting a legacy of scientific
+ knowledge, astronomical and arithmetical, from the Proto-Chaldaeans, they
+ seem to have not only maintained but considerably advanced these sciences
+ by their own efforts. Their &ldquo;wisdom and learning&rdquo; are celebrated by the
+ Jewish prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Daniel; the Father of History
+ records their valuable inventions; and an Aristotle was not ashamed to be
+ beholden to them for scientific data. They were good observers of
+ astronomical phenomena, careful recorders of such observations, and
+ mathematicians of no small repute. Unfortunately, they mixed with their
+ really scientific studies those occult pursuits which, in ages and
+ countries where the limits of true science are not known, are always apt
+ to seduce students from the right path, having attractions against which
+ few men are proof, so long as it is believed that they can really
+ accomplish the end that they propose to themselves. The Babylonians were
+ astrologers no less than astronomers; they professed to cast nativities,
+ to expound dreams, and to foretell events by means of the stars; and
+ though there were always a certain number who kept within the legitimate
+ bounds of science, and repudiated the astrological pretensions of their
+ brethren, yet on the whole it must be allowed that their astronomy was
+ fatally tinged with a mystic and unscientific element.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In close connection with the intellectual ability of the Babylonians was
+ the spirit of enterprise which led them to engage in traffic and to
+ adventure themselves upon the ocean in ships. In a future chapter we shall
+ have to consider the extent and probable direction of this commerce. It is
+ sufficient to observe in the present place that the same turn of mind
+ which made the Phoenicians anciently the great carriers between the East
+ and West, and which in modern times has rendered the Jews so successful in
+ various branches of trade, seems to have characterized the Semitized
+ Babylonians, whose land was emphatically &ldquo;a land of traffic,&rdquo; and their
+ chief city &ldquo;a city of merchants.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trading spirit which was thus strongly developed in the Babylonian
+ people led naturally to the two somewhat opposite vices of avarice and
+ over-luxuriousness. Not content with honorable gains, the Babylonians
+ &ldquo;coveted an evil covetousness,&rdquo; as we learn both from Habakkuk and
+ Jeremiah. The &ldquo;shameful custom&rdquo; mentioned by Herodotus, which required as
+ a religious duty that every Babylonian woman, rich or poor, highborn or
+ humble, should once in her life prostitute herself in the temple of
+ Beltis, was probably based on the desire of attracting strangers to the
+ capital, who would either bring with them valuable commodities or purchase
+ the productions of the country. The public auction of marriageable virgins
+ had most likely a similar intention. If we may believe Curtius, strangers
+ might at any time purchase the gratification of any passion they might
+ feel, from the avarice of parents or husbands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The luxury of the Babylonians is a constant theme with both sacred and
+ profane writers. The &ldquo;daughter of the Chaldaeans&rdquo; was &ldquo;tender and
+ delicate,&rdquo; &ldquo;given to pleasures,&rdquo; apt to &ldquo;dwell carelessly.&rdquo; Her young men
+ made themselves &ldquo;as princes to look at&mdash;exceeding in dyed attire upon
+ their heads,&rdquo;&mdash;painting their faces, wearing earrings, and clothing
+ themselves in robes of soft and rich material. Extensive polygamy
+ prevailed. The pleasures of the table were carried to excess. Drunkenness
+ was common. Rich unguents were invented. The tables groaned under the
+ weight of gold and silver plate. In every possible way the Babylonians
+ practised luxuriousness of living, and in respect of softness and
+ self-indulgence they certainly did not fall short of any nation of
+ antiquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was, however, a harder and sterner side to the Babylonian character.
+ Despite their love of luxury, they were at all times brave and skilful in
+ war; and, during the period of their greatest strength, they were one of
+ the most formidable of all the nations of the East. Habakkuk describes
+ them, drawing evidently from the life, as &ldquo;bitter and hasty,&rdquo; and again as
+ &ldquo;terrible and dreadful&mdash;their horses&rsquo; hoofs swifter than the
+ leopard&rsquo;s, and more fierce than the evening wolves.&rdquo; Hence they &ldquo;smote the
+ people in wrath with a continual stroke&rdquo;&mdash;they &ldquo;made the earth to
+ tremble, and did shake kingdoms&rdquo;&mdash;they carried all before them in
+ their great enterprises, seldom allowing themselves to be foiled by
+ resistance, or turned from their course by pity. Exercised for centuries
+ in long and fierce wars with the well-armed and well-disciplined
+ Assyrians, they were no sooner quit of this enemy, and able to take an
+ aggressive attitude, than they showed themselves no unworthy successors of
+ that long-dominant nation, so far as energy, valor, and military skill
+ constitute desert. They carried their victorious arms from the shores of
+ the Persian Gulf to the banks of the Nile; wherever they went, they
+ rapidly established their power, crushing all resistance, and fully
+ meriting the remarkable title, which they seem to have received from those
+ who had felt their attacks, of &ldquo;the hammer of the whole earth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The military successes of the Babylonians were accompanied with needless
+ violence, and with outrages not unusual in the East, which the historian
+ must nevertheless regard as at once crimes and follies. The
+ transplantation of conquered races&mdash;a part of the policy of Assyria
+ which the Chaldaeans adopted&mdash;may perhaps have been morally
+ defensible, notwithstanding the sufferings which it involved. But the
+ mutilations of prisoners, the weary imprisonments, the massacre of
+ non-combatants, the refinement of cruelty shown in the execution of
+ children before the eyes of their fathers&mdash;these and similar
+ atrocities, which are recorded of the Babylonians, are wholly without
+ excuse, since they did not so much terrify as exasperate the conquered
+ nations, and thus rather endangered than added strength or security to the
+ empire. A savage and inhuman temper is betrayed by these harsh punishments&mdash;a
+ temper common in Asiatics, but none the less reprehensible on that account&mdash;one
+ that led its possessors to sacrifice interest to vengeance, and the peace
+ of a kingdom to a tiger-like thirst for blood. Nor was this cruel temper
+ shown only towards the subject nations and captives taken in war.
+ Babylonian nobles trembled for their heads if they incurred by a slight
+ fault the displeasure of the monarch; and even the most powerful class in
+ the kingdom, the learned and venerable &ldquo;Chaldaeans,&rdquo; ran on one occasion
+ the risk of being exterminated, because they could not expound a dream
+ which the king had forgotten. If a monarch displeased his court, and was
+ regarded as having a bad disposition, it was not thought enough simply to
+ make away with him, but he was put to death by torture. Among recognized
+ punishments were cutting to pieces and casting into a heated furnace. The
+ houses of offenders were pulled down and made into dunghills. These
+ practices imply a &ldquo;violence&rdquo; and cruelty beyond the ordinary Oriental
+ limit; and we cannot be surprised that when final judgment was denounced
+ against Babylon, it was declared to be sent, in a great measure, &ldquo;because
+ of men&rsquo;s blood, and for the violence of the land-of the city, and all that
+ dwelt therein.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is scarcely necessary to add that the Babylonians were a proud people.
+ Pride is unfortunately the invariable accompaniment of success, in the
+ nation, if not in the individual; and the sudden elevation of Babylon from
+ a subject to a dominant power must have been peculiarly trying, more
+ especially to the Oriental temperament. The spirit which culminated in
+ Nebuchadnezzar, when, walking in the palace of his kingdom, and surveying
+ the magnificent buildings which he had raided on every side from the
+ plunder of the conquered nations, and by the labor of their captive bands,
+ he exclaimed, &ldquo;Is not the great Babylon which I have built by the might of
+ my power and for the honor of my majesty?&rdquo;&mdash;was rife in the people
+ generally, who, naturally enough, believed themselves superior to every
+ other nation upon the earth. &ldquo;I am, and there is none else beside me,&rdquo; was
+ the thought, if not the speech, of the people, whose arrogancy was perhaps
+ somewhat less offensive than that of the Assyrians, but was quite as
+ intense and as deep-seated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians, notwithstanding their pride, their cruelty, their
+ covetousness, and their love of luxury, must be pronounced to have been,
+ according to their lights, a religious people. The temple in Babylonia is
+ not a mere adjunct of the palace, but has almost the same pre-eminence
+ over other buildings which it claims in Egypt. The vast mass of the
+ Birs-i-Nimrud is sufficient to show that an enormous amount of labor was
+ expended in the erection of sacred edifices; and the costly ornamentation
+ lavished on such buildings is, as we shall hereafter find, even more
+ remarkable than their size. Vast sums wore also expended on images of the
+ gods, necessary adjuncts of the religion; and the whole paraphernalia of
+ worship exhibited a rare splendor and magnificence. The monarchs were
+ devout worshippers of the various deities, and gave much of their
+ attention to the building and repair of temples, the erection of images,
+ and the like. They bestowed on their children names indicative of
+ religious feeling, and implying real faith in the power of the gods to
+ protect their votaries. The people generally affected similar names&mdash;names
+ containing, in almost every case, a god&rsquo;s name as one of their elements.
+ The seals or signets which formed almost a necessary part of each man&rsquo;s
+ costume were, except in rare instances, of a religious character. Even in
+ banquets, where we might have expected that thoughts of religion would be
+ laid aside, it seems to have been the practice during the drinking to
+ rehearse the praises of the deities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told by Nicolas of Damascus that the Babylonians cultivated two
+ virtues especially, honesty and calmness. Honesty is the natural, almost
+ the necessary virtue of traders, who soon find that it is the best policy
+ to be fair and just in their dealings. We may well believe that this
+ intelligent people had the wisdom to see their true interests, and to
+ understand that trade can never prosper unless conducted with integrity
+ and straightforwardness. The very fact that their trade did prosper, that
+ their goods were everywhere in request, is sufficient proof of their
+ commercial honesty, and of their superiority to those tricks which
+ speedily ruin a commerce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calmness is not a common Oriental virtue. It is not even in general very
+ highly appreciated, being apt to strike the lively, sensitive, and
+ passionate Eastern as mere dulness and apathy. In China, however, it is a
+ point of honor that the outward demeanor should be calm and placid under
+ any amount of provocation; and indignation, fierceness, even haste, are
+ regarded as signs of incomplete civilization, which the disciples of
+ Confucius love to note in their would-be rivals of the West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may conceive that some similar notion was entertained by the proud
+ Babylonians, who no doubt regarded themselves as infinitely superior in
+ manners and culture, no less than in scientific attainments, to the
+ &ldquo;barbarians&rdquo; of Persia and Greece. While rage boiled in their hearts, and
+ commands to torture and destroy fell from their tongues, etiquette may
+ have required that the countenance should be unmoved, the eye serene, the
+ voice low and gentle. Such contrasts are not uncommonly seen in the polite
+ Mandarin, whose apparent calmness drives his European antagonist to
+ despair; and it may well be that the Babylonians of the sixth and seventh
+ centuries before our era had attained to an equal power of restraining the
+ expression of feeling. But real gentleness, meekness, and placability were
+ certainly not the attributes of a people who were so fierce in their wars
+ and so cruel in their punishments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTEE IV. THE CAPITAL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Babylon, the capital of the Fourth Monarchy, was probably the largest and
+ most magnificent city of the ancient world. A dim tradition current in the
+ East gave, it is true, a greater extent, if not a greater splendor, to the
+ metropolis of Assyria; but this tradition first appears in ages subsequent
+ to the complete destruction of the more northern city; and it is
+ contradicted by the testimony of facts. The walls of Nineveh have been
+ completely traced, and indicate a city three miles in length, by less than
+ a mile and a half in breadth, containing an area of about 1800 English
+ acres. Of this area less than one tenth is occupied by ruins of any
+ pretension. On the admitted site of Babylon striking masses of ruin cover
+ a space considerably larger than that which at Nineveh constitutes the
+ whole area of the town. Beyond this space in every direction, north, east,
+ south and west, are detached mounds indicating the former existence of
+ edifices of some size, while the intermediate ground between these mounds
+ and the main ruins shows distinct traces of its having been built upon in
+ former days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the actual size of the town, modern research gives us no clear and
+ definite notion. One explorer only has come away from the country with an
+ idea that the general position of the detached mounds, by which the plain
+ around Hillah is dotted, enables him to draw the lines of the ancient
+ walls, and mark out the exact position of the city. But the very maps and
+ plans which are put forward in support of this view show that it rests
+ mainly on hypothesis; nor is complete confidence placed in the surveys on
+ which the maps and plans have been constructed. The English surveys, which
+ have been unfortunately lost, are said not to have placed the detached
+ mounds in any such decided lines as M. Oppert believes them to occupy, and
+ the general impression of the British officers who were employed on the
+ service is that &ldquo;no vestige of the walls of Babylon has been as yet
+ discovered.&rdquo; <a href="#linkimage-0006">[PLATE XI.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate011.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xi. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ For the size and plan of the city we are thus of necessity thrown back
+ upon the reports of ancient authors. It is not pretended that such reports
+ are in this, or in any other case, deserving of implicit credence. The
+ ancient historians, even the more trustworthy of them, are in the habit of
+ exaggerating in their numbers; and on such subjects as measurements they
+ were apt to take on trust the declarations of their native guides, who
+ would be sure to make over-statements. Still in this instance we have so
+ many distinct authorities&mdash;eyewitnesses of the facts&mdash;and some
+ of them belonging to times when scientific accuracy had begun to be
+ appreciated, that we must be very in credulous if we do not accept their
+ witness, so far as it is consentient, and not intrinsically very
+ improbable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Herodotus, an eye-witness, and the earliest authority on the
+ subject the <i>enceinte</i> of Babylon was a square, 120 stades (about 14
+ miles) each way&mdash;the entire circuit of the wall being thus 56 miles,
+ and the area enclosed within them falling little short of 200 square
+ miles. Ctesias, also an eyewitness, and the next writer on the subject,
+ reduced the circuit of the walls to 360 stades, or 41 miles, and made the
+ area consequently little more than 100 square miles. These two estimates
+ are respectively the greatest and the least that have come down to us. The
+ historians of Alexander, while conforming nearly to the statements of
+ Ctesias, a little enlarge his dimensions, making the circuit 365, 368, or
+ 385 stades. The differences here are inconsiderable; and it seems to be
+ established, on a weight of testimony which we rarely possess in such a
+ matter, that the walls of this great town were about forty miles in
+ circumference, and enclosed an area as large as that of the Landgraviat of
+ Hesse-Homburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult to suppose that the real city&mdash;the streets and
+ squares&mdash;can at any time have occupied one half of this enormous
+ area, A clear space, we are told, was left for a considerable distance
+ inside the wall&mdash;like the <i>pomaerium</i> of the Romans&mdash;upon
+ which no houses were allowed to be built. When houses began, they were far
+ from being continuous; gardens, orchards, even fields, were interspersed
+ among the buildings; and it was supposed that the inhabitants, when
+ besieged, could grow sufficient corn for their own consumption within the
+ walls. Still the whole area was laid out with straight streets, or perhaps
+ one should say with roads (for the houses cannot have been continuous
+ along them), which cut one another everywhere at right angles, like the
+ streets of some German towns. The wall of the town was pierced with a
+ hundred gates, twenty-five (we may suppose) in each face, and the roads
+ led straight to these portals, the whole area being thus cut up into
+ square blocks. The houses were in general lofty, being three or even four
+ stories high. They are said to have had vaulted roofs, which were not
+ protected externally with any tiling, since the climate was so dry as to
+ render such a protection unnecessary. The beams used in the houses were of
+ palm-wood, all other timber being scarce in the country; and such pillars
+ as the houses could boast were of the same material. The construction of
+ these last was very rude. Around posts of palm-wood were twisted wisps of
+ rushes, which were covered with plaster, and then colored according the
+ taste of the owner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Euphrates ran through the town, dividing it nearly in half. Its banks
+ were lined throughout with quays of brick laid in bitumen, and were
+ further guarded by two walls of brick, which skirted them along their
+ whole length. In each of these walls were twenty-five gates, corresponding
+ to the number of the streets which gave upon the river; and outside each
+ gate was a sloped landing place, by which you could descend to the water&rsquo;s
+ edge, if you had occasion to cross the river. Boats were kept ready at
+ these landing-places to convey passengers from side to side; while for
+ those who disliked this method of conveyance a bridge was provided of a
+ somewhat peculiar construction. A number of stone piers were erected in
+ the bed of the stream, firmly clamped together with fastenings of iron and
+ lead; wooden drawbridges connected pier with pier during the day, and on
+ these passengers passed over; but at night they were withdrawn, in order
+ that the bridge might not be used during the dark. Diodorus declares that
+ besides this bridge, to which he assigns a length of five stades (about
+ 1000 yards) and a breadth of 30 feet, the two sides of the river were
+ joined together by a tunnel, which was fifteen feet wide and twelve high
+ to the spring of its arched roof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most remarkable buildings which the city contained were the two
+ palaces, one on either side of the river, and the great temple of Belus.
+ Herodotus describes the great temple as contained within a square
+ enclosure, two stades (nearly a quarter of a mile) both in length and
+ breadth. Its chief feature was the <i>ziggurat</i> or tower, a huge solid
+ mass of brick-work, built (like all Babylonian temple-towers) in stages,
+ square being emplaced on square, and a sort of rude pyramid being thus
+ formed, at the top of which was the main shrine of the god. The basement
+ platform of the Belus tower was, Herodotus tells us, a stade, or rather
+ more than 200 yards, each way. The number of stages was eight. The ascent
+ to the highest stage, which contained the shrine of the god, was on the
+ outside, and consisted either of steps, or of an inclined plane, carried
+ round the four sides of the building, and in this way conducting to the
+ top. According to Strabo the tower was a stado (606 feet 9 inches) in
+ height; but this estimate, if it is anything more than a conjecture, must
+ represent rather the length of the winding ascent than the real altitude
+ of the building. The great pyramid itself was only 480 feet high; and it
+ is very questionable whether any Babylonian building ever equalled it.
+ About half-way up the ascent was a resting-place with seats, where persons
+ commonly sat a while on their way to the summit. The shrine which crowned
+ the edifice was large and rich. In the time of Herodotus it contained no
+ image; but only a golden table and a large couch, covered with a handsome
+ drapery. This, however, was after the Persian conquest and the plunder of
+ its principal treasures. Previously, if we may believe Diodorus, the
+ shrine was occupied by three colossal images of gold&mdash;one of Bel, one
+ of Beltis, and the third of Rhea or Ishtar. Before the image of Beltis
+ were two golden lions, and near them two enormous serpents of silver, each
+ thirty talents in weight. The golden table&mdash;forty feet long and
+ fifteen broad&mdash;was in front of these statues, and upon it stood two
+ huge drinking-cups, of the same weight as the serpents. The shrine also
+ contained two enormous censers and three golden bowls, one for each of the
+ three deities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the base of the tower was a second shrine or chapel, which in the time
+ of Herodotus contained a sitting image of Bel, made of gold, with a golden
+ table in front of it, and a stand for the image, of the same precious
+ metal. Here, too, Persian avarice had been busy; for anciently this shrine
+ had possessed a second statue, which was a human figure twelve cubits
+ high, made of solid gold. The shrine was also rich in private offerings.
+ Outside the building, but within the sacred enclosure, were two altars, a
+ smaller one of gold, on which it was customary to offer sucklings, and a
+ larger one, probably of stone, where the worshippers sacrificed full-grown
+ victims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great palace was a building of still larger dimensions than the great
+ temple. According to Diodorus, it was situated within a triple enclosure,
+ the innermost wall being twenty stades, the second forty stades, and the
+ outermost sixty stades (nearly seven miles), in circumference. The outer
+ wall was built entirely of plain baked brick. The middle and inner walls
+ were of the same material, fronted with enamelled bricks representing
+ hunting scenes. The figures, according to this author, were larger than
+ the life, and consisted chiefly of a great variety of animal forms. There
+ were not wanting, however, a certain number of human forms to enliven the
+ scene; and among these were two&mdash;a man thrusting his spear through a
+ lion, and a woman on horseback aiming at a leopard with her javelin&mdash;which
+ the later Greeks believed to represent the mythic Ninus and Semiramis. Of
+ the character of the apartments we hear nothing; but we are told that the
+ palace had three gates, two of which were of bronze, and that these had to
+ be opened and shut by a machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the main glory of the palace was its pleasure-ground&mdash;the
+ &ldquo;Hanging Gardens,&rdquo; which the Greeks regarded as one of the seven wonders
+ of the world. This extraordinary construction, which owed its erection to
+ the whim of a woman, was a square, each side of which measured 400 Greek
+ feet. It was supported upon several tiers of open arches, built one over
+ the other, like the walls of a classic theatre, and sustaining at each
+ stage, or story, a solid platform, from which the piers of the next tier
+ of arches rose. The building towered into the air to the height of at
+ least seventy-five feet, and was covered at the top with a great mass of
+ earth, in which there grew not merely flowers and shrubs, but tress also
+ of the largest size. Water was supplied from the Euphrates through pipes,
+ and was raised (it is said) by a screw, working on the principal of
+ Archimedes. To prevent the moisture from penetrating into the brick-work
+ and gradually destroying the building, there were interposed between the
+ bricks and the mass of soil, first a layer of reeds mixed with bitumen,
+ then a double layer of burnt brick cemented with gypsum, and thirdly a
+ coating of sheet lead. The ascent to the garden was by steps. On the way
+ up, among the arches which sustained the building, were stately
+ apartments, which, must have been pleasant from their coolness. There was
+ also a chamber within the structure containing the machinery by which the
+ water was raised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the smaller palace, which was opposite to the larger one, on the other
+ side the river, but few details have come down to us. Like the larger
+ palace, it was guarded by a triple enclosure, the entire circuit of which
+ measured (it is said) thirty stades. It contained a number of bronze
+ statues, which the Greeks believed to represent the god Belus, and the
+ sovereigns Ninus and Semiramis, together with their officers. The walls
+ were covered with battle scenes and hunting scenes, vividly represented by
+ means of bricks painted and enamelled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the general character of the town and its chief edifices, if we
+ may believe the descriptions of eye-witnesses. The walls which enclosed
+ and guarded the whole&mdash;or which, perhaps one should rather say,
+ guarded the district within which Babylon was placed&mdash;have been
+ already mentioned as remarkable for their great extent, but cannot be
+ dismissed without a more special and minute description. Like the &ldquo;Hanging
+ Gardens,&rdquo; they were included among the &ldquo;world&rsquo;s seven wonders,&rdquo; and,
+ according to every account given of them, their magnitude and construction
+ were remarkable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been already noticed that, according to the lowest of the ancient
+ estimates, the entire length of the walls was 360 stades, or more than
+ forty-one miles. With respect to the width we have two very different
+ statements, one by Herodotus and the other by Clitarchus and Strabo.
+ Herodotus makes the width 50 royal cubits, or about 85 English feet,
+ Strabo and Q. Curtius reduced the estimate to 32 feet. There is still
+ greater discrepancy with respect to the height of the walls. Herodotus
+ says that the height was 200 royal cubits, or 300 royal feet (about 335
+ English feet); Ctesias made it 50 fathoms, or 300 ordinary Greek feet;
+ Pliny and Solinus, substituting feet for the royal cubits of Herodotus,
+ made the altitude 235 feet; Philostratus and Q. Curtius, following perhaps
+ some one of Alexander&rsquo;s historians, gave for the height 150 feet; finally
+ Clitarchus, as reported by Diodorus Siculus, and Strabo, who probably
+ followed him, have left us the very moderate estimate of 75 feet. It is
+ impossible to reconcile these numbers. The supposition that some of them
+ belong properly to the outer, and others to the inner wall, will not
+ explain the discrepancies&mdash;for the measurements cannot by any
+ ingenuity be reduced to two sets of dimensions. The only conclusion which
+ it seems possible to draw from the conflicting testimony is that the
+ numbers were either rough guesses made by very unskilful travellers, or
+ else were (in most cases) intentional exaggerations palmed upon them by
+ the native ciceroni. Still the broad facts remain&mdash;first, that the
+ walls enclosed an enormous space, which was very partially occupied by
+ buildings; secondly, that they were of great and unusual thickness; and
+ thirdly, that they were of a vast height&mdash;seventy or eighty feet at
+ least in the time of Alexander, after the wear and tear of centuries and
+ the violence of at least three conquerors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general character of the construction is open to but little doubt. The
+ wall was made of bricks, either baked in kilns, or (more probably) dried
+ in the sun, and laid in a cement of bitumen, with occasional layers of
+ reeds between the courses. Externally it was protected by a wide and deep
+ moat. On the summit were low towers, rising above the wall to the height
+ of some ten or fifteen feet, and probably serving as guardrooms for the
+ defenders. These towers are said to have been 250 in number; they were
+ least numerous on the western face of the city, where the wall ran along
+ the marshes. They were probably angular, not round; and instead of
+ extending through the whole thickness of the wall, they were placed along
+ its outer and inner edge, tower facing tower, with a wide space between
+ them&mdash;&ldquo;enough,&rdquo; Herodotus says, &ldquo;for a four-horse chariot to turn
+ in.&rdquo; The wall did not depend on them for its strength, but on its own
+ height and thickness, which were such as to render scaling and mining
+ equally hopeless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was Babylon, according to the descriptions of the ancients&mdash;a
+ great city, built on a very regular plan, surrounded by populous suburbs
+ interspersed among fields and gardens, the whole being included within a
+ large square strongly fortified enceinte. When we turn from this picture
+ of the past to contemplate the present condition of the localities, we are
+ at first struck with astonishment at the small traces which remain of so
+ vast and wonderful a metropolis. &ldquo;The broad walls of Babylon&rdquo; are &ldquo;utterly
+ broken&rdquo; down, and her &ldquo;high gates burned with fire.&rdquo; &ldquo;The golden city hath
+ ceased.&rdquo; God has &ldquo;swept it with the bosom of destruction.&rdquo; &ldquo;The glory of
+ the kingdoms, the beauty of the Chaldees&rsquo; excellency,&rdquo; is become &ldquo;as when
+ God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrha.&rdquo; The traveller who passes through the
+ land is at first inclined to say that there are no ruins, no remains, of
+ the mighty city which once lorded it over the earth. By and by, however,
+ he begins to see that though ruins, in the common acceptation of the term,
+ scarcely exist&mdash;though there are no arches, no pillars, but one or
+ two appearances of masonry even yet the whole country is covered with
+ traces of exactly that kind which it was prophesied Babylon should leave.
+ Vast &ldquo;heaps&rdquo; or mounds, shapeless and unsightly, are scattered at
+ intervals over the entire region where it is certain that Babylon
+ anciently stood, and between the &ldquo;heaps&rdquo; the soil is in many places
+ composed of fragments of pottery and bricks, and deeply impregnated with
+ nitre, infallible indications of its having once been covered with
+ buildings. As the traveller descends southward from Baghdad he finds these
+ indications increase, until, on nearing the Euphrates, a few miles beyond
+ Mohawil, he notes that they have become continuous, and finds himself in a
+ region of mounds, some of which are of enormous size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These mounds begin about five miles above Hillah, and extend for a
+ distance of about three miles from north to south along the course of the
+ river, lying principally on its left or eastern bank. The ruins on this
+ side consist chiefly of three great masses of building. The most northern,
+ to which the Arabs of the present day apply the name of BABIL&mdash;the
+ true native appellation of the ancient citys&mdash;is a vast pile of
+ brick-work of an irregular quadrilateral shape, with precipitous sides
+ furrowed by ravines, and with a flat top. <a href="#linkimage-0005">[PLATE
+ X., Fig.,3.]</a> Of the four faces of the ruin the southern seems to be
+ the most perfect. It extends a distance of about 200 yards, or almost
+ exactly a stade, and runs nearly in a straight line from west to east. At
+ its eastern extremity it forms a right angle with the east face, which
+ runs nearly due north for about 180 yards, also almost in a straight line.
+ The western and northern faces are apparently much worn away. Here are the
+ chief ravines, and here is the greatest seeming deviation from the
+ original lines of the building. The greatest height of the Babil mound is
+ 130 or 140 feet. It is mainly composed of sun-dried brick, but shows signs
+ of having been faced with fire-burnt brick, carefully cemented with an
+ excellent white mortar. The bricks of this outer facing bear the name and
+ titles of Nebuchadnezzar. A very small portion of the original structure
+ has been laid bare enough however to show that the lines of the building
+ did not slope like those of a pyramid, but were perpendicular, and that
+ the side walls had, at intervals, the support of buttresses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This vast building, whatever it was, stood within a square enclosure, two
+ sides of which, the northern and eastern, are still very distinctly
+ marked. A long low line of rampart runs for 400 yards parallel to the east
+ face of the building, at a distance of 120 or 130 yards, and a similar but
+ somewhat longer line of mound runs parallel to the north face at rather a
+ greater distance from it. On the west a third line could be traced in the
+ early part of the present century; but it appears to be now obliterated.
+ Here and on the south are the remains of an ancient canal, the
+ construction of which may have caused the disappearance of the southern,
+ and of the lower part of the western line. <a href="#linkimage-0007">[PLATE
+ XII., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate012.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Below the Babil mound, which stands isolated from the rest of the ruins,
+ are two principal masses&mdash;the more northern known to the Arabs as EL
+ KASR, &ldquo;the Palace,&rdquo; and the more southern as &ldquo;the mound of Amran,&rdquo; from
+ the tomb of a reputed prophet Amran-ibn-Ali, which crowns its summit. The
+ Kasr mound is an oblong square, about 700 yards long by 600 broad, with
+ the sides facing the cardinal points. <a href="#linkimage-0007">[PLATE
+ XII., Fig. 2.]</a> Its height above the plain is 70 feet. Its longer
+ direction is from north to south. As far as it has been penetrated, it
+ consists mainly of rubbish-loose bricks, tiles, and fragments of stone. In
+ a few places only are there undisturbed remains of building. One such
+ relic is a subterranean passage, seven feet in height, floored and walled
+ with baked brick, and covered in at the top with great blocks of
+ sandstone, which may either have been a secret exit or more probably an
+ enormous drain. Another is the Kasr, or &ldquo;palace&rdquo; proper, whence the mound
+ has its name. This is a fragment of excellent brick masonry in a wonderful
+ state of preservation, consisting of walls, piers, and buttresses, and in
+ places ornamented with pilasters, but of too fragmentary a character to
+ furnish the modern inquirer with any clue to the original plan of the
+ building. The bricks are of a pale yellow color and of the best possible
+ quality, nearly resembling our fire-bricks. They are stamped, one and all,
+ with the name and titles of Nebuchadnezzar. The mortar in which they are
+ laid is a fine lime cement, which adheres so closely to the bricks that it
+ is difficult to obtain a specimen entire. In the dust at the foot of the
+ walls are numerous fragments of brick, painted, and covered with a thick
+ enamel or glaze. Here, too, have been found a few fragments of sculptured
+ stone, and slabs containing an account of the erection of a palatial
+ edifice by Nebuchadnezzar. Near the northern edge of the mound, and about
+ midway in its breadth, is a colossal figure of a lion, rudely carved in
+ black basalt, standing over the prostrate figure of a man with arms
+ outstretched. A single tree grows on the huge ruin, which the Arabs
+ declare to be of a species not known elsewhere, and regard as a remnant of
+ the hanging garden of Bokht-i-nazar. It is a tamarisk of no rare kind, but
+ of very great ago, in consequence of which, and of its exposed position,
+ the growth and foliage are somewhat peculiar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ South of the Kasr mound, at the distance of about 800 yards, is the
+ remaining great mass of ruins, the mound of Jumjuma, or of Amran. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0007">[PLATE XII., Fig. 3.]</a> The general shape of this
+ mound is triangular,107 but it is very irregular and ill-defined, so as
+ scarcely to admit of accurate description. Its three sides face
+ respectively a little east of north, a little south of east, and a little
+ south of west. The south-western side, which runs nearly parallel with the
+ Euphrates, and seems to have been once washed by the river, is longer than
+ either of the others, extending a distance of above a thousand yards,
+ while the south-eastern may be 800 yards, and the north-eastern 700.
+ Innumerable ravines traverse the mound on every side, penetrating it
+ nearly to its centre. The surface is a series of undulations. Neither
+ masonry nor sculpture is anywhere apparent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All that meets the eye is a mass of debris; and the researches hitherto
+ made have failed to bring to light any distinct traces of building.
+ Occasionally bricks are found, generally of poor material, and bearing the
+ names and titles of some of the earlier Babylonian monarchs; but the
+ trenches opened in the pile have in no case laid bare even the smallest
+ fragment of a wall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the remains which have been already described, the most remarkable
+ are certain long lines of rampart on both sides of the river, which lie
+ outside of the other ruins, enclosing them all, except the mound of Babil.
+ On the left bank of the stream there is to be traced, in the first place,
+ a double line of wall or rampart, having a direction nearly due north and
+ south, which lies east of the Kasr and Amran mounds, at the distance from
+ them of about 1000 yards. Beyond this is a single line of rampart to the
+ north-east, traceable for about two miles, the direction of which is
+ nearly from north-west to south-east, and a double line of rampart to the
+ south-east, traceable for a mile and a half, with a direction from
+ northeast to south-west. The two lines in this last case are from 600 to
+ 700 yards apart, and diverge from one another as they run out to the
+ north-east. The inner of the two meets the north-eastern rampart nearly at
+ a right angle, and is clearly a part of the same work. It is questioned,
+ however, whether this line of fortification is ancient, and not rather a
+ construction belonging to Parthian times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A low line of mounds is traceable between the western face of the Amran
+ and Kasr hills, and the present eastern bank of the river, bounding a sort
+ of narrow valley, in which either the main stream of the Euphrates, or at
+ any rate a branch from it, seems anciently to have flowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the right bank of the stream the chief remains are of the same kind.
+ West of the river, a rampart, twenty feet high, runs for nearly a mile
+ parallel with the general line of the Amran mound, at the distance of
+ about 1000 yards from the old course of the stream. At either extremity
+ the line of the rampart turns at a right angle, running down towards the
+ river, and being traceable towards the north for 400 yards and towards the
+ south for fifty or sixty. It is evident that there was once, before the
+ stream flowed in its present channel, a rectangular enclosure, a mile long
+ and 1000 yards broad, opposite to the Amran mound; and there are
+ indications that within this <i>enceinte</i> was at least one important
+ building, which was situated near the south-east angle of the enclosure,
+ on the banks of the old course of the river. The bricks found at this
+ point bear the name of Neriglissar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are also, besides the ramparts and the great masses of ruin above
+ described, a vast number of scattered and irregular heaps of hillocks on
+ both sides of the river, chiefly, however, upon the eastern bank. Of these
+ one only seems to deserve distinct mention. This is the mound called El
+ Homeira, &ldquo;the Red,&rdquo; which lies due east of the Kasr, distant from it about
+ 800 yards&mdash;a mound said to be 300 yards long by 100 wide, and to
+ attain an elevation of 60 or 70 feet. It is composed of baked brick of a
+ bright red color, and must have been a building of a very considerable
+ height resting upon a somewhat confined base. Its bricks are inscribed
+ along their edges, not (as is the usual practice) on their lower face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only other ancient work of any importance of which some remains are
+ still to be traced is a brick embankment on the left bank of the stream
+ between the Kasr and the Babil mounds, extending for a distance of a
+ thousand yards in a line which has a slight curve and a general direction
+ of S.S.W. The bricks of this embankment are of a bright red color, and of
+ great hardness. They are laid wholly in bitumen. The legend which they
+ bear shows that the quay was constructed by Nabonidus. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0008">[PLATE XIII.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008">
+ <!-- IMG --></a> <a href="images/plate013.jpg">ENLARGE TO FULL SIZE</a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="plate013th (220K)" src="images/plate013th.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Such then are the ruins of Babylon&mdash;the whole that can now with
+ certainty be assigned to the &ldquo;beauty of the Chaldees&rsquo; excellency&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ &ldquo;great Babylon&rdquo; of Nebuchadnezzar. Within a space little more than three
+ miles long and a mile and three quarters broad are contained all the
+ undoubted remains of the greatest city of the old world. These remains,
+ however, do not serve in any way to define the ancient limits of the
+ place. They are surrounded on every side by nitrous soil, and by low heaps
+ which it has not been thought worth while to excavate, but which the best
+ judges assign to the same era as the great mounds, and believe to mark the
+ sites of the lesser temples and the other public buildings of the ancient
+ city. Masses of this kind are most frequent to the north and east.
+ Sometimes they are almost continuous for miles; and if we take the Kasr
+ mound as a centre, and mark about it an area extending five miles in each
+ direction (which would give a city of the size described by Ctesias and
+ the historians of Alexander), we shall scarcely find a single square mile
+ of the hundred without some indications of ancient buildings upon its
+ surface. The case is not like that of Nineveh, where outside the walls the
+ country is for a considerable distance singularly bare of ruins. The mass
+ of Babylonian remains extending from Babil to Amran does not correspond to
+ the whole <i>enceinte</i> of Nineveh, but to the mound of Koyunjik. It has
+ every appearance of being, not the city, but &ldquo;the heart of the city&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ &ldquo;Royal quarter&rdquo; outside of which were the streets and squares, and still
+ further off, the vanished walls. It may seem strange that the southern
+ capital should have so greatly exceeded the dimensions of the northern
+ one. But, if we follow the indications presented by the respective sites,
+ we are obliged to conclude that there was really this remarkable
+ difference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has to be considered in conclusion how far we can identify the various
+ ruins above described with the known buildings of the ancient capital, and
+ to what extent it is possible to reconstruct upon the existing remains the
+ true plan of the city. Fancy, if it discards the guidance of fact, may of
+ course with the greatest ease compose plans of a charming completeness. A
+ rigid adherence to existing data will produce, it is to be feared, a
+ somewhat meagre and fragmentary result; but most persons will feel that
+ this is one of the cases where the maxim of Hesiod applies&mdash;&ldquo;the half
+ is preferable to the whole:&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/page_insert0182.jpg" height="50" width="404"
+ alt="Page 182 " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The one identification which may be made upon certain and indeed
+ indisputable evidence is that of the Kasr mound with the palace built by
+ Nebuchadnezzar. The tradition which has attached the name of Kasr or
+ &ldquo;Palace&rdquo; to this heap is confirmed by inscriptions upon slabs found on the
+ spot, wherein Nebuchadnezzar declares the building to be his &ldquo;Grand
+ Palace.&rdquo; The bricks of that part of the ruin which remains uncovered bear,
+ one and all, the name of this king; and it is thus clear that here stood
+ in ancient times the great work of which Berosus speaks as remarkable for
+ its height and splendor. If a confirmation of the fact were needed after
+ evidence of so decisive a character, it would be found in the
+ correspondence between the remains found on the mound and the description
+ left us of the &ldquo;greater palace&rdquo; by Diodorus. Diodorus relates that the
+ walls of this edifice were adorned with colored representations of hunting
+ scenes; and modern explorers find that the whole soil of the mound, and
+ especially the part on which the fragment of ruin stands, is full of
+ broken pieces of enamelled brick, varied in hue, and evidently containing
+ portions of human and animal forms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if the Kasr represents the palace built by Nebuchadnezzar, as is
+ generally allowed by those who have devoted their attention to the
+ subject, it seems to follow almost as a certainty that the Amran mound is
+ the site of that old palatial edifice to which the erection of
+ Nebuchadnezzar was an addition. Berosus expressly states that
+ Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s building &ldquo;adjoined upon&rdquo; the former palace, a description
+ which is fairly applicable to the Amran mound by means of a certain
+ latitude of interpretation, but which is wholly inapplicable to any of the
+ other ruins. This argument would be conclusive, even if it stood alone. It
+ has, however, received an important corroboration in the course of recent
+ researches. From the Amran mound, and from this part of Babylon only, have
+ monuments been recovered of an earlier date than Nebuchadnezzar. Here and
+ here alone did the early kings leave memorials of their presence in
+ Babylon; and here consequently, we may presume, stood the ancient royal
+ residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, then, all the principal ruins on the east bank of the river, with the
+ exception of the Babil mound and the long lines marking walls or
+ embankments, be accepted as representing the &ldquo;great palace&rdquo; or &ldquo;citadel&rdquo;
+ of the classical writers we must recognize in the remains west of the
+ ancient course of the river-the oblong square enclosure and the important
+ building at its south-east angle&mdash;the second or &ldquo;smaller palace&rdquo; of
+ Ctesias, which was joined to the larger one, according to that writer, by
+ a bridge and a tunnel. This edifice, built or at any rate repaired by
+ Neriglissar, lay directly opposite the more ancient part of the eastern
+ palace, being separated from it by the river, which anciently flowed along
+ the western face of the Kasr and Amran mounds. The exact position of the
+ bridge cannot be fixed. With regard to the tunnel, it is extremely
+ unlikely that any such construction was ever made. The &ldquo;Father of History&rdquo;
+ is wholly silent on the subject, while he carefully describes the bridge,
+ a work far less extraordinary. The tunnel rests on the authority of two
+ writers only&mdash;Diodorus and Philostratus&mdash;who both wrote after
+ Babylon was completely ruined. It was probably one of the imaginations of
+ the inventive Ctesias, from whom Diodorus evidently derived all the main
+ points of his description.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far there is no great difficulty in identifying the existing remains
+ with buildings mentioned by ancient authors; but, at the point to which we
+ are now come, the subject grows exceedingly obscure, and it is impossible
+ to offer more than reasonable conjectures upon the true character of the
+ remaining ruins. The descriptions of ancient writers would lead us to
+ expect that we should find among the ruins unmistakable traces of the
+ great temple of Belus, and at least some indication of the position
+ occupied by the Hanging Gardens. These two famous constructions can
+ scarcely, one would think, have wholly perished. More especially, the
+ Belus temple, which was a stade square, and (according to some) a stade in
+ height, must almost of necessity have a representative among the existing
+ remains. This, indeed, is admitted on all hands; and the controversy is
+ thereby narrowed to the question, which of two great ruins&mdash;the only
+ two entitled by their size and situation to attention&mdash;has the better
+ right to be regarded as the great and celebrated sanctuary of the ancient
+ Babylon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the mound of Babil is the <i>ziggurat</i> or tower of a Babylonian
+ temple scarcely admits of a doubt. Its square shape, its solid
+ construction, its isolated grandeur, its careful emplacement with the
+ sides facing the cardinal points, and its close resemblance to other known
+ Babylonian temple-towers, sufficiently mark it for a building of this
+ character, or at any rate raise a presumption which it would require very
+ strong reasons indeed to overcome. Its size moreover corresponds well with
+ the accounts which have come down to us of the dimensions of the Belus
+ temple, and its name and proximity to the other main ruins show that it
+ belonged certainly to the ancient capital. Against its claim to be
+ regarded as the remains of the temple of Bolus two objections only can be
+ argued: these are the absence of any appearance of stages, or even of a
+ pyramidical shape, from the present ruin, and its position on the same
+ side of the Euphrates with the palace. Herodotus expressly declares that
+ the temple of Belus and the royal palace were upon opposite sides of the
+ river, and states, moreover, that the temple was built in stages, which
+ rose one above the other to the number of eight. Now these two
+ circumstances, which do not belong at present to the Babil mound, attach
+ to a ruin distant from it about eleven or twelve miles&mdash;a ruin which
+ is certainly one of the most remarkable in the whole country, and which,
+ if Babylon had really been of the size asserted by Herodotus, might
+ possibly have been included within the walls. The Birs-i-Nimrud had
+ certainly seven, probably eight stages, and it is the only ruin on the
+ present western bank of the Euphrates which is at once sufficiently grand
+ to answer to the descriptions of the Belus temple, and sufficiently near
+ to the other ruin to make its original inclusion within the walls not
+ absolutely impossible. Hence, ever since the attention of scholars was
+ first directed to the subject of Babylonian topography, opinion has been
+ divided on the question before us, and there have not been wanting persons
+ to maintain that the Birs-i-Nimrud is the true temple of Belus, if not
+ also the actual tower of Babel, whose erection led to the confusion of
+ tongues and general dispersion of the sons of Adam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this latter identification we are not in the present place concerned.
+ With respect to the view that the Birs is the sanctury of Belus, it may be
+ observed in the first place that the size of the building is very much
+ smaller than that ascribed to the Belus temple; secondly, that it was
+ dedicated to Kebo, who cannot be identified with Bel; and thirdly, that it
+ is not really any part of the remains of the ancient capital, but belongs
+ to an entirely distinct town. The cylinders found in the ruin by Sir Henry
+ Eawlinson declare the building to have been &ldquo;the wonder of Borsippa;&rdquo; and
+ Borsippa, according to all the ancient authorities, was a town by itself&mdash;an
+ entirely distinct place from Babylon. To include Borsippa within the outer
+ wall of Babylon is to run counter to all the authorities on the subject,
+ the inscriptions, the native writer, Berosus, and the classical
+ geographers generally. Nor is the position thus assigned to the Belus
+ temple in harmony with the statement of Herodotus, which alone causes
+ explorers to seek for the temple on the west side of the river. For,
+ though the expression which this writer uses does not necessarily mean
+ that the temple was in the exact centre of one of the two divisions of the
+ town, it certainly implies that it lay towards the middle of one division&mdash;well
+ within it&mdash;and not upon its outskirts. It is indeed inconceivable
+ that the main sanctuary of the place, where the kings constantly offered
+ their worship, should have been nine or ten miles from the palace! The
+ distance between the Amran mound and Babil, which is about two miles, is
+ quite as great as probability will allow us to believe existed between the
+ old residence of the kings and the sacred shrine to which they were in the
+ constant habit of resorting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still there remain as objections to the identification of the great temple
+ with the Babil mound the two arguments already noticed. The Babil mound
+ has no appearance of stages such as the Birs presents, nor has it even a
+ pyramidical shape. It is a huge platform with a nearly level top, and
+ sinks, rather than rises, in the centre. What has become, it is asked, of
+ the seven upper stages of the great Belus tower, if this ruin represents
+ it? Whither have they vanished? How is it that in crumbling down they have
+ not left something like a heap towards the middle? To this it may be
+ replied that the destruction of the Belus tower has not been the mere work
+ of the elements&mdash;it was violently broken down either by Xerxes, or by
+ some later king, who may have completely removed all the upper stages.
+ Again, it has served as a quarry to the hunters after bricks for more than
+ twenty centuries; so that it is only surprising that it still retains so
+ much of its original shape. Further, when Alexander entered Babylon more
+ than 2000 years ago 10,000 men were employed for several weeks in clearing
+ away the rubbish and laying bare the foundations of the building. It is
+ quite possible that a conical mass of crumbled brick may have been removed
+ from the top of the mound at this time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The difficulty remains that the Babil mound is on the same side of the
+ Euphrates with the ruins of the Great Palace, whereas Herodotus makes the
+ two buildings balance each other, one on the right and the other on the
+ left bank of the stream. Now here it is in the first place to be observed
+ that Herodotus is the only writer who does this. No other ancient author
+ tells us anything of the relative situation of the two buildings. We have
+ thus nothing to explain but the bald statement of a single writer&mdash;a
+ writer no doubt of great authority, but still one not wholly infallible.
+ We might say, then, that Herodotus probably made a mistake&mdash;that his
+ memory failed him in this instance, or that he mistook his notes on the
+ subject. Or we may explain his error by supposing that he confounded a
+ canal from the Euphrates, which seems to have anciently passed between the
+ Babil mound and the Kasr (called Shebil by Nebuchadnezzar) with the main
+ stream. Or, finally, we may conceive that at the time of his visit the old
+ palace lay in ruins, and that the palace of Nerig-lissar on the west bank
+ of the stream was that of which he spoke. It is at any rate remarkable,
+ considering how his authority is quoted as fixing the site of the Belus
+ tower to the west bank, that, in the only place where he gives us any
+ intimation of the side of the river on which he would have placed the
+ tower, it is the east and not the west bank to which his words point. He
+ makes those who saw the treachery of Zopyrus at the Belian and Kissian
+ gates, which must have been to the east of the city, at once take refuge
+ in the famous sanctuary, which he implies was in the vicinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole, therefore, it seems best to regard the Babil mound as the
+ ziggurat of the great temple of Bel (called by some &ldquo;the tomb of Belus&rdquo;)
+ which the Persians destroyed and which Alexander intended to restore. With
+ regard to the &ldquo;hanging gardens,&rdquo; as they were an erection of less than
+ half the size of the tower, it is not so necessary to suppose that
+ distinct traces must remain of them. Their debris may be confused with
+ those of the Kasr mound, on which one writer places them. Or they may have
+ stood between the Kasr and Amran ruins, where are now some mounds of no
+ great height. Or, possibly, their true site is in the modern El Homeira,
+ the remarkable red mound which lies east of the Kasr at the distance of
+ about 800 yards, and attains an elevation of sixty-five feet. Though this
+ building is not situated upon the banks of the Euphrates, where Strabo and
+ Diodorus place the gardens, it abuts upon a long low valley into which the
+ Euphrates water seems formerly to have been introduced, and which may
+ therefore have been given the name of the river. This identification is,
+ however, it must be allowed, very doubtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two lines of mounds which enclose the long low valley above mentioned
+ are probably the remains of an embankment which here confined the waters
+ of a great reservoir. Nebuchadnezzar relates that he constructed a large
+ reservoir, which he calls the Yapur-Shapu, in Babylon, and led water into
+ it by means of an &ldquo;eastern canal&rdquo;&mdash;the Shebil. The Shebil canal, it
+ is probable, left the Euphrates at some point between Babil and the Kasr,
+ and ran across with a course nearly from west to east to the top of the
+ Yapur-Shapu. This reservoir seems to have been a long and somewhat narrow
+ parallelogram, running nearly from north to south, which shut in the great
+ palace on the east and protected it like a huge moat. Most likely it
+ communicated with the Euphrates towards the south by a second canal, the
+ exact line of which cannot be determined. Thus the palatial residence of
+ the Babylonian kings looked in both directions upon broad sheets of water,
+ an agreeable prospect in so hot a climate; while, at the same time, by the
+ assignment of a double channel to the Euphrates, its floods were the more
+ readily controlled, and the city was preserved from those terrible
+ inundations which in modern times have often threatened the existence of
+ Baghdad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other lines of mound upon the east side of the river may either be
+ Parthian works, or (possibly) they may be the remains of some of those
+ lofty walls whereby, according to Diodorus, the greater palace was
+ surrounded and defended. The fragments of them which remain are so placed
+ that if the lines were produced they would include all the principal ruins
+ on the left bank except the Babil tower. They may therefore be the old
+ defences of the Eastern palace; though, if so, it is strange that they run
+ in lines which are neither straight nor parallel to those of the buildings
+ enclosed by them. The irregularity of these ramparts is certainly a very
+ strong argument in favor of their having been the work of a people
+ considerably more barbarous and ignorant than the Babylonians. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0010">[PLATE XIV.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate014.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xiv. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. ARTS AND SCIENCES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That the Babylonians were among the most ingenious of all the nations of
+ antiquity, and had made considerable progress in the arts and sciences
+ before their conquest by the Persians, is generally admitted. The
+ classical writers commonly parallel them with the Egyptians; and though,
+ from their habit of confusing Babylon with Assyria, it is not always quite
+ certain that the inhabitants of the more southern country&mdash;the real
+ Babylonians&mdash;are meant, still there is sufficient reason to believe
+ that, in the estimation of the Greeks and Romans, the people of the lower
+ Euphrates were regarded as at least equally advanced in civilization with
+ those of the Nile valley and the Delta. The branches of knowledge wherein
+ by general consent the Babylonians principally excelled were architecture
+ and astronomy. Of their architectural works two at least were reckoned
+ among the &ldquo;Seven Wonders,&rdquo; while others, not elevated to this exalted
+ rank, were yet considered to be among the most curious and admirable of
+ Oriental constructions. In astronomical science they were thought to have
+ far excelled all other nations, and the first Greeks who made much
+ progress in the subject confessed themselves the humble disciples of
+ Babylonian teachers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the account, which it is proposed to give, in this place, of Babylonian
+ art and science, so far as they are respectively known to us, the priority
+ will be assigned to art, which is an earlier product of the human mind
+ than science; and among the arts the first place will be given to
+ architecture, as at once the most fundamental of all the fine arts, and
+ the one in which the Babylonians attained their greatest excellence. It is
+ as builders that the primitive Chaldaean people, the progenitors of the
+ Babylonians, first appear before us in history; and it was on his
+ buildings that the great king of the later Empire, Nebuchadnezzar,
+ specially prided himself. When Herodotus visited Babylon he was struck
+ chiefly by its extraordinary edifices; and it is the account which the
+ Greek writers gave of these erections that has, more than anything else,
+ procured for the Babylonians the fame that they possess and the position
+ that they hold among the six or seven leading nations of the old world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The architecture of the Babylonians seems to have culminated in the
+ Temple. While their palaces, their bridges, their walls, even their
+ private houses were remarkable, their grandest works, their most elaborate
+ efforts, were dedicated to the honor and service, not of man, but of God.
+ The Temple takes in Babylonia the same sort of rank which it has in Egypt
+ and in Greece. It is not, as in Assyria, a mere adjunct of the palace. It
+ stands by itself, in proud independence, as the great building of a city,
+ or a part of a city; it is, if not absolutely larger, at any rate loftier
+ and more conspicuous than any other edifice: it often boasts a magnificent
+ adornment: the value of the offerings which are deposited in it is
+ enormous: in every respect it rivals the palace, while in some it has a
+ decided preeminence. It draws all eyes by its superior height and
+ sometimes by its costly ornamentation; it inspires awe by the religious
+ associations which belong to it; finally, it is a stronghold as well as a
+ place of worship, and may furnish a refuge to thousands in the time of
+ danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Babylonian temple seems to have stood commonly within a walled
+ enclosure. In the case of the great temple of Belus at Babylon, the
+ enclosure is said to have been a square of two stades each way, or, in
+ other words, to have contained an area of thirty acres. The temple itself
+ ordinarily consisted of two parts. Its most essential feature was a <i>ziggurat</i>,
+ or tower, which was either square, or at any rate rectangular, and built
+ in stages, the smallest number of such stages being two, and the largest
+ known number seven. At the summit of the tower was probably in every case
+ a shrine, or chapel, of greater or less size, containing altars and
+ images. The ascent to this was on the outside of the towers, which were
+ entirely solid; and it generally wound round the different faces of the
+ towers, ascending them either by means of steps or by an inclined plane.
+ Special care was taken with regard to the emplacement of the tower, either
+ its sides or its angles being made exactly to confront the cardinal
+ points. It is said that the temple-towers were used not merely for
+ religious purposes but also as observatories, a use with a view to which
+ this arrangement of their position would have been serviceable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the shrine at the summit of the temple-tower or ziggurat, there
+ was commonly at the base of the tower, or at any rate somewhere within the
+ enclosure, a second shrine or chapel, in which the ordinary worshipper,
+ who wished to spare himself the long ascent, made his offerings. Here
+ again the ornamentation was most costly, lavish use being made of the
+ precious metals for images and other furniture. Altars of different sizes
+ were placed in the open air in the vicinity of this lower shrine, on which
+ were sacrificed different classes of victims, gold being used occasionally
+ as the material of the altar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general appearance of a Babylonian temple, or at any rate of its chief
+ feature, the tower or <i>ziggurat</i>, will be best gathered from a more
+ particular description of a single building of the kind; and the building
+ which it will be most convenient to take for that purpose is that
+ remarkable edifice which strikes moderns with more admiration than any
+ other now existing in the country, and which has also been more completely
+ and more carefully examined than any other Babylonian ruins&mdash;the
+ Birs-i-Nimrud, or ancient temple of Nebo at Borsippa. The plan of this
+ tower has been almost completely made out from data still existing on the
+ spot; and a restoration of the original building may be given with a near
+ approach to certainty. <a href="#linkimage-0011">[PLATE XV., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate015.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xv. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Upon a platform of crude brick, raised a few feet above the level of the
+ alluvial plain, was built the first or basement stage of the great
+ edifice, an exact square, 272 feet each way, and and probably twenty-six
+ feet in perpendicular height. On this was erected a second stage of
+ exactly the same height, but a square of only 230 feet; which however was
+ not placed exactly in the middle of the first, but further from its
+ northeastern than its south-western edge, twelve feet only from the one
+ and thirty feet from the other. The third stage, which was imposed in the
+ same way upon the second, was also twenty-six feet high, and was a square
+ of 188 feet. Thus far the plan had been uniform and without any variety;
+ but at this point an alteration took place. The height of the fourth
+ stage, instead of being twenty-six, was only fifteen feet. In other
+ respects however the old numbers were maintained; the fourth stage was
+ diminished equally with the others, and was consequently a square of 146
+ feet. It was emplaced upon the stage below it exactly as the former stages
+ had been. The remaining stages probably followed the same rule of
+ diminution&mdash;the fifth being a square of 104, the sixth one of 24, and
+ the seventh one of 20 feet. Each of these stages had a height of fifteen
+ feet. Upon the seventh or final stage was erected the shrine or
+ tabernacle, which was probably also fifteen feet high, and about the same
+ length and breadth. Thus the entire height of the building, allowing three
+ feet for the crude brick platform, was 150 feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ornamentation of the edifice was chiefly by means of color. The seven
+ stages represented the Seven Spheres, in which moved (according to ancient
+ Chaldaean astronomy) the seven planets. To each planet fancy, partly
+ grounding itself upon fact, had from of old assigned a peculiar tint or
+ hue. The Sun was golden, the Moon silver; the distant Saturn, almost
+ beyond the region of light, was black; Jupiter was orange the fiery Mars
+ was red; Venus was a pale Naples yellow; Mercury a deep blue. The seven
+ stages of the tower, like the seven walls of Ecbatana, gave a visible
+ embodiment to these fancies. The basement stage, assigned to Saturn, was
+ blackened by means of a coating of bitumen spread over the face of the
+ masonry; the second stage, assigned to Jupiter, obtained the appropriate
+ orange color by means of a facing of burnt bricks of that hue; the third
+ stage, that of Mars, was made blood-red by the use of half-burnt bricks
+ formed of a bright red clay; the fourth stage, assigned to the Sun,
+ appears to have been actually covered with thin plates of gold; the fifth,
+ the stage of Venus, received a pale yellow tint from the employment of
+ bricks of that hue; the sixth, the sphere of Mercury, was given an azure
+ tint by vitrifaction, the whole stage having been subjected to an intense
+ heat after it was erected, whereby the bricks composing it were converted
+ into a mass of blue slag; the seventh stage, that of the Moon, was
+ probably, like the fourth, coated with actual plates of metal. Thus the
+ building rose up in stripes of varied color, arranged almost as nature&rsquo;s
+ cunning arranges hues in the rainbow, tones of red coming first, succeeded
+ by a broad stripe of yellow, the yellow being followed by blue. Above this
+ the glowing silvery summit melted into the bright sheen of the sky. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0012">[PLATE XVI.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate016.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xvi. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The faces of the various stages were, as a general rule, flat and
+ unbroken, unless it were by a stair or ascent, of which however there has
+ been found no trace. But there were two exceptions to this general
+ plainness. The basement stage was indented with a number of shallow
+ squared recesses, which seem to have been intended for a decoration. The
+ face of the third stage was weak on account of its material, which was
+ brick but half-burnt. Here then the builders, not for ornament&rsquo;s sake, but
+ to strengthen their work, gave to the wall the support of a number of
+ shallow buttresses. They also departed from their usual practice, by
+ substituting for the rigid perpendicular of the other faces a slight slope
+ outwards for some distance from the base. These arrangements, which are
+ apparently part of the original work, and not remedies applied
+ subsequently, imply considerable knowledge of architectural principles on
+ the part of the builders, and no little ingenuity in turning architectural
+ resources to account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the shrine which was emplaced upon the topmost, or silver
+ stage, little is definitely known. It appears to have been of brick; and
+ we may perhaps conclude from the analogy of the old Chaldaean shrines at
+ the summits of towers, as well as from that of the Belus shrine at
+ Babylon, that it was richly ornamented both within and without; but it is
+ impossible to state anything as to the exact character of the
+ ornamentation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tower is to be regarded as fronting to the north-east, the coolest
+ side and that least exposed to the sun&rsquo;s rays from the time that they
+ become oppressive in Babylonia. On this side was the ascent, which
+ consisted probably of abroad staircase extending along the whole front of
+ the building. The side platforms (those towards the south-east and
+ north-west)&mdash;at any rate of the first and second stages, probably of
+ all&mdash;were occupied by a series of chambers abutting upon the
+ perpendicular wall, as the priests&rsquo; chambers of Solomon&rsquo;s temple abutted
+ upon the side walls of that building. In these were doubtless lodged the
+ priests and other attendants upon the temple service. The side chambers
+ seem sometimes to have communicated with vaulted apartments within the
+ solid mass of the structure, like those of which we hear in the structure
+ supporting the &ldquo;hanging gardens.&rdquo; It is possible that there may have been
+ internal stair-cases, connecting the vaulted apartments of one stage with
+ those of another; but the ruin has not yet been sufficiently explored for
+ us to determine whether or not there was such communication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great Tower is thought to have been approached through a vestibule of
+ considerable size. Towards the north-east the existing ruin is prolonged
+ in an irregular manner and it is imagined that this prolongation marks the
+ site of a vestibule or propylaeum, originally distinct from the tower, but
+ now, through the crumbling down of both buildings, confused with its
+ ruins. As no scientific examination has been made of this part of the
+ mound, the above supposition can only be regarded as a conjecture.
+ Possibly the excrescence does not so much mark a vestibule as a second
+ shrine, like that which is said to have existed at the foot of the Belus
+ Tower at Babylon. Till, however, additional researches have been made, it
+ is in vain to think of restoring the plan or elevation of this part of the
+ temple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the temples of the Babylonians we may now pass to their palaces&mdash;constructions
+ inferior in height and grandeur, but covering a greater space, involving a
+ larger amount of labor, and admitting of more architectural variety.
+ Unfortunately the palaces have suffered from the ravages of time even more
+ than the temples, and in considering their plan and character we obtain
+ little help from the existing remains. Still, something may be learnt of
+ them from this source, and where it fails we may perhaps be allowed to eke
+ out the scantiness of our materials by drawing from the elaborate
+ descriptions of Diodorus such points as have probability in their favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonian palace, like the Assyrian, and the Susianian, stood upon a
+ lofty mound or platform. This arrangement provided at once for safety, for
+ enjoyment, and for health. It secured a pure air, freedom from the
+ molestation of insects, and a position only assailable at a few points.
+ The ordinary shape of the palace mound appears to have been square; its
+ elevation was probably not less than fifty or sixty feet. It was composed
+ mainly of sun-dried bricks, which however were almost certainly enclosed
+ externally by a facing of burnt brick, and may have been further
+ strengthened within by walls of the same material, which perhaps traversed
+ the whole mound. The entire mass seems to have been carefully drained, and
+ the collected waters were conveyed through subterranean channels to the
+ level of the plain at the mound&rsquo;s base. The summit of the platform was no
+ doubt paved, either with stone or burnt brick&mdash;mainly, it is
+ probable, with the latter; since the former material was scarce, and
+ though a certain number of stone pavement slabs have been found, they are
+ too rare and scattered to imply anything like the general use of stone
+ paving. Upon the platform, most likely towards the centre, rose the actual
+ palace, not built (like the Assyrian palaces) of crude brick faced with a
+ better material, but constructed wholly of the finest and hardest burnt
+ brick laid in a mortar of extreme tenacity, with walls of enormous
+ thickness, parallel to the sides of the mound, and meeting each other at
+ right angles. Neither the ground-plan nor the elevation of a Babylonian
+ palace can be given; nor can even a conjectural restoration of such a
+ building be made, since the small fragment of Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s palace
+ which remains has defied all attempts to reduce it to system. We can only
+ say that the lines of the building were straight; that the walls rose, at
+ any rate to a considerable height, without windows; and that the flatness
+ of the straight line was broken by numerous buttressses and pilasters. We
+ have also evidence that occasionally there was an ornamentation of the
+ building, either within or without, by means of sculptured stone slabs, on
+ which were represented figures of a small size, carefully wrought. The
+ general ornamentation, however, external as well as internal, we may well
+ believe to have been such as Diodorus states, colored representations on
+ brick of war-scenes, and hunting-scenes, the counterparts in a certain
+ sense of those magnificent bas-reliefs which everywhere clothed the walls
+ of palaces in Assyria. It has been already noticed that abundant remains
+ of such representations have been found upon the Kasr mound. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0011">[PLATE XV., Fig. 2.]</a> They seem to have
+ alternated with cuneiform inscriptions, in white on a blue ground, or else
+ with a patterning of rosettes in the same colors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the general arrangement of the royal palaces, of their height, their
+ number of stories, their roofing, and their lighting, we know absolutely
+ nothing. The statement made by Herodotus, that many of the private houses
+ in the town had three or four stories, would naturally lead us to suppose
+ that the palaces were built similarly; but no ancient author tells us that
+ this was so. The fact that the walls which exist, though of considerable
+ height, show no traces of windows, would seem to imply that the lighting,
+ as in Assyria, was from the top of the apartment, either from the ceiling,
+ or from apertures in the part of the walls adjoining the ceiling.
+ Altogether, such evidence as exists favors the notion that the Babylonian
+ palace, in its character and general arrangements, resembled the Assyrian,
+ with only the two differences, that Babylonian was wholly constructed of
+ burnt brick, while in the Assyrian the sun-dried material was employed to
+ a large extent; and, further, that in Babylonia the decoration of the
+ walls was made, not by slabs of alabaster, which did not exist in the
+ country, but mainly&mdash;almost entirely&mdash;by colored representations
+ upon the brickwork.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the adjuncts of the principal palace at Babylon was the remarkable
+ construction known to the Greeks and Romans as &ldquo;the Hanging Garden.&rdquo; The
+ accounts which, Diodorus, Strabo, and Q. Curtius give of this structure
+ are not perhaps altogether trustworthy; still, it is probable that they
+ are in the main at least founded on fact. We may safely believe that a
+ lofty structure was raised at Babylon on several tiers of arches, which
+ supported at the top a mass of earth, wherein grew, not merely flowers and
+ shrubs, but trees of a considerable size. The Assyrians had been in the
+ habit of erecting structures of a somewhat similar kind, artificial
+ elevations to support a growth of trees and shrubs; but they were content
+ to place their garden at the summit of a single row of pillars or arches,
+ and thus to give it a very moderate height. At Babylon the object was to
+ produce an artificial imitation of a mountain. For this purpose several
+ tiers of arches were necessary; and these appear to have been constructed
+ in the manner of a Roman amphitheatre, one directly over another so that
+ the outer wall formed from summit to base a single perpendicular line. Of
+ the height of the structure various accounts are given, while no writer
+ reports the number of the tiers of arches. Hence there are no sufficient
+ data for a reconstruction of the edifice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the walls and bridge of Babylon, and of the ordinary houses of the
+ people, little more is known than has been already reported in the general
+ description of the capital. It does not appear that they possessed any
+ very great architectural merit. Some skill was shown in constructing the
+ piers of the bridge, which presented an angle to the current and then a
+ curved line, along which the water slid gently. <a href="#linkimage-0011">[PLATE
+ XV., Fig. 3.]</a> The loftiness of the houses, which were of three or four
+ stories, is certainly surprising, since Oriental houses have very rarely
+ more than two stories. Their construction, however, seems to have been
+ rude; and the pillars especially&mdash;posts of palm, surrounded with
+ wisps of rushes, and then plastered and painted&mdash;indicate a low
+ condition of taste and a poor and coarse style of domestic architecture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The material used by the Babylonians in their constructions seems to have
+ been almost entirely brick. Like the early Chaldaeans, they employed
+ bricks of two kinds, both the ruder sun-dried sort, and the very superior
+ kiln-baked article. The former, however, was only applied to platforms,
+ and to the interior of palace mounds and of very thick walls, and was
+ never made by the later people the sole material of a building. In every
+ case there was at least a revetement of kiln-dried brick, while the
+ grander buildings were wholly constructed of it. The baked bricks used
+ were of several different qualities, and (within rather narrow limits) of
+ different sizes. The finest quality of brick was yellow, approaching to
+ our Stourbridge or fire-brick; another very hard kind was blue,
+ approaching to black; the commoner and coarser sorts were pink or red, and
+ these were sometimes, though rarely, but half-baked, in which case they
+ were weak and friable. The shape was always square; and the dimensions
+ varied between twelve and fourteen inches for the length and breadth, and
+ between three and four inches for the thickness. <a href="#linkimage-0013">[PLATE
+ XVII., Fig. 1.]</a> At the corners of buildings, half-bricks were used in
+ the alternate rows, since otherwise the joinings must have been all one
+ exactly over another. The bricks were always made with a mold, and were
+ commonly stamped on one face with an inscription. They were, of course,
+ ordinarily laid horizontally. Sometimes, however, there was a departure
+ from this practice. Rows of bricks were placed vertically, separated from
+ one another by single horizontal layers. This arrangement seems to have
+ been regarded as conducing to strength, since it occurs only where there
+ is an evident intention of supporting a weak construction by the use of
+ special architectural expedients.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate017.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xvii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="plate017a (98K)" src="images/plate017a.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonian builders made use of three different kinds of cement. The
+ most indifferent was crude clay, or mud, which was mixed with chopped
+ straw, to give it greater tenacity, and was applied in layers of
+ extraordinary thickness. This was (it is probable) employed only where it
+ was requisite that the face of the building should have a certain color. A
+ cement superior to clay, but not of any very high value, unless as a
+ preventive against damp, was bitumen, which was very generally used in
+ basements and in other structures exposed to the action of water. Mortar,
+ however, or lime cement was far more commonly employed than either of the
+ others, and was of very excellent quality, equal indeed to the best Roman
+ material.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There can be no doubt that the general effect of the more ambitious
+ efforts of the Babylonian architects was grand and imposing. Even now, in
+ their desolation and ruin, their great size renders them impressive; and
+ there are times and states of atmosphere under which they fill the
+ beholder with a sort of admiring awe, akin to the feeling which is called
+ forth by the contemplation of the great works of nature. Rude and
+ inartificial in their idea and general construction, without architectural
+ embellishment, without variety, without any beauty of form, they yet
+ affect men by their mere mass, producing a direct impression of sublimity,
+ and at the same time arousing a sentiment of wonder at the indomitable
+ perseverance which from materials so unpromising could produce such
+ gigantic results. In their original condition, when they were adorned with
+ color, with a lavish display of the precious metals, with pictured
+ representations of human life, and perhaps with statuary of a rough kind,
+ they must have added to the impression produced by size a sense of
+ richness and barbaric magnificence. The African spirit, which loves gaudy
+ hues and costly ornament, was still strong among the Babylonians, even
+ after they had been Semitized; and by the side of Assyria, her colder and
+ more correct northern sister, Babylonia showed herself a true child of the
+ south&mdash;rich, glowing, careless of the laws of taste, bent on
+ provoking admiration by the dazzling brilliancy of her appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult to form a decided opinion as to the character of
+ Babylonian mimetic art. The specimens discovered are so few, so
+ fragmentary, and in some instances so worn by time and exposure, that we
+ have scarcely the means of doing justice to the people in respect of this
+ portion of their civilization. Setting aside the intaglios on seals and
+ gems, which have such a general character of quaintness and grotesqueness,
+ or at any rate of formality, that we can scarcely look upon many of them
+ as the serious efforts of artists doing their best, we possess not half a
+ dozen specimens of the mimetic art of the people in question. We have one
+ sculpture in the round, one or two modelled clay figures, a few
+ bas-reliefs, one figure of a king engraved on stone, and a few animal
+ forms represented the same material. Nothing more has reached us but
+ fragments of pictorial representations too small for criticism to
+ pronounce upon, and descriptions of ancient writers too incomplete to be
+ of any great value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The single Babylonian sculpture in the round which has come down to our
+ times is the colossal lion standing over the prostrate figure of a man,
+ which is still to be seen on the Kasr mound, as has been already
+ mentioned. The accounts of travellers uniformly state that it is a work of
+ no merit&mdash;either barbarously executed, or left unfinished by the
+ sculptor&mdash;and probably much worn by exposure to the weather. A sketch
+ made by a recent visitor and kindly communicated to the author, seems to
+ show that, while the general form of the animal was tolerably well hit
+ off, the proportions were in some respects misconceived, and the details
+ not only rudely but incorrectly rendered. The extreme shortness of the
+ legs and the extreme thickness of the tail are the most prominent errors;
+ there is also great awkwardness in the whole representation of the beast&rsquo;s
+ shoulder. The head is so mutilated that it is impossible to do more than
+ conjecture its contour. Still the whole figure is not without a certain
+ air of grandeur and majesty. <a href="#linkimage-0013">[PLATE XVII., Fig.
+ 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The human appears to be inferior to the animal form. The prostrate man is
+ altogether shapeless, and can never, it would seem, have been very much
+ better than it is at the present time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Modelled figures in clay are of rare occurrence. The best is one figured
+ by Ker Porter, which represents a mother with a child in her arms. The
+ mother is seated in a natural and not ungraceful attitude on a rough
+ square pedestal. She is naked except for a hood, or mantilla, which covers
+ the head, shoulders, and back, and a narrow apron which hangs down in
+ front. She wears earrings and a bracelet. The child, which sleeps on her
+ left shoulder, wears a shirt open in front, and a short but full tunic,
+ which is gathered into plaits. Both figures are in simple and natural
+ taste, but the limbs of the infant are somewhat too thin and delicate. The
+ statuette is about three inches and a half high, and shows signs of having
+ been covered with a tinted glaze. <a href="#linkimage-0013">[PLATE XVII.,
+ Fig. 2.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The single figure of a king which we possess is clumsy and ungraceful. It
+ is chiefly remarkable for the elaborate ornamentation of the head-dress
+ and the robes, which have a finish equal to that of the best Assyrian
+ specimens. The general proportions are not bad; but the form is stiff, and
+ the drawing of the right hand is peculiarly faulty, since it would be
+ scarcely possible to hold arrows in the manner represented. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0014">[PLATE XVIII., Fig. 2.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0014" id="linkimage-0014">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate018.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Vxiii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The engraved animal forms have a certain amount of merit. The figure of a
+ dog sitting, which is common on the &ldquo;black stones,&rdquo; is drawn with spirit;
+ <a href="#linkimage-0014">[PLATE XVIII., Fig. 1.]</a> and a bird,
+ sometimes regarded as a cock, but more resembling a bustard, is touched
+ with a delicate hand, and may be pronounced superior to any Assyrian
+ representation of the feathered tribe. <a href="#linkimage-0014">[PLATE
+ XVIII., Fig. 3.]</a> The hound on a bas-relief, given in the first volume
+ of this work, is also good; and the cylinders exhibit figures of goats,
+ cows, deer, and even monkeys, which are truthful and meritorious. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0015">[PLATE XIX., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0015" id="linkimage-0015">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate019.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xix. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It has been observed that the main characteristic of the engravings on
+ gems and cylinders, considered as works of mimetic art, is their
+ quaintness and grotesqueness. A few specimens, taken almost at random from
+ the admirable collection of M. Felix Lajard, will sufficiently illustrate
+ this feature. In one the central position is occupied by a human figure
+ whose left arm has two elbow-joints, while towards the right two sitting
+ figures threaten one another with their fists, in the upper quarter, and
+ in the lower two nondescript animals do the same with their jaws. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0014">[PLATE XVIII., Fig. 4.]</a> The entire drawing of
+ this design seems to be intentionally rude. The faces of the main figures
+ are evidently intended to be ridiculous; and the heads of the two animals
+ are extravagantly grotesque. On another cylinder three nondescript animals
+ play the principal part. One of them is on the point of taking into his
+ mouth the head of a man who vainly tries to escape by flight. Another,
+ with the head of a pike, tries to devour the third, which has the head of
+ a bird and the body of a goat. This kind intention seems to be disputed by
+ a naked man with a long beard, who seizes the fish-headed monster with his
+ right hand, and at the same time administers from behind a severe kick
+ with his right foot. The heads of the three main monsters, the tail and
+ trousers of the principal one, and the whole of the small figure in front
+ of the flying man, are exceedingly quaint, and remind one of the pencil of
+ Fuseli. <a href="#linkimage-0015">[PLATE XIX., Fig. 3.]</a> The third of
+ the designs approaches nearly to the modern caricature. It is a drawing in
+ two portions. The upper line of figures represents a procession of
+ worshippers who bear in solemn state their offerings to a god. In the
+ lower line this occupation is turned to a jest. Nondescript animals bring
+ with a serio-comic air offerings which consist chiefly of game, while a
+ man in a mask seeks to steal away the sacred tree from the temple wherein
+ the scene is enacted. <a href="#linkimage-0015">[PLATE XIX., Fig. 4.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is probable that the most elaborate and most artistic of the Babylonian
+ works of art were of a kind which has almost wholly perished. What
+ bas-relief was to the Assyrian, what painting is to moderns, that
+ enamelling upon brick appears to have been to the people of Babylon. The
+ mimetic power, which delights in representing to itself the forms and
+ actions of men, found a vent in this curious byway of the graphic art; and
+ the images of the Chaldaeans, portrayed upon the wall, with vermilion, and
+ other hues, formed the favorite adornment of palaces and public buildings,
+ at once employing the artist, gratifying the taste of the native
+ connoisseur, and attracting the admiration of the foreigner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The artistic merit of these works can only be conjectured. The admiration
+ of the Jews, or even that of Diodorus, who must be viewed here as the echo
+ of Ctesias, is no sure test; for the Jews were a people very devoid of
+ true artistic appreciation; and Ctesias was bent on exaggerating the
+ wonders of foreign countries to the Greeks. The fact of the excellence of
+ Assyrian art at a somewhat earlier date lends however support to the view
+ that the wall-painting of the Babylonians had some real artistic
+ excellence. We can scarcely suppose that there was any very material
+ difference, in respect of taste and aesthetic power, between the two
+ cognate nations, or that the Babylonians under Nebuchadnezzar fell very
+ greatly short of the Assyrians under Asshur-bani-pal. It is evident that
+ the same subjects&mdash;war scenes and hunting scenes&mdash;approved
+ themselves to both people; and it is likely that their treatment was not
+ very different. Even in the matter of color, the contrast was not sharp
+ nor strong; for the Assyrians partially colored their bas-reliefs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tho tints chiefly employed by the Babylonians in their colored
+ representations were white, blue, yellow, brown, and black. The blue was
+ of different shades, sometimes bright and deep, sometimes exceedingly
+ pale. The yellow was somewhat dull, resembling our yellow ochre. The brown
+ was this same hue darkened. In comparatively rare instances the
+ Babylonians made use of a red, which they probably obtained with some
+ difficulty. Objects were colored, as nearly as possible, according to
+ their natural tints&mdash;water a light blue, ground yellow, the shafts of
+ spears black, lions a tawny brown, etc. No attempt was made to shade the
+ figures or the landscape, much less to produce any general effect by means
+ of <i>chiaroscuro</i>; but the artist trusted for his effect to a careful
+ delineation of forms, and a judicious arrangement of simple hues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considerable metallurgic knowledge and skill were shown in the composition
+ of the pigments, and the preparation and application of the glaze
+ wherewith they are covered. The red used was a sub-oxide of copper; the
+ yellow was sometimes oxide of iron, sometimes antimoniate of lead&mdash;the
+ Naples yellow of modern artists; the blue was either cobalt or oxide of
+ copper; the white was oxide of tin. Oxide of load was added in some cases,
+ not as a coloring matter, but as a flux, to facilitate the fusion of the
+ glaze. In other cases the pigment used was covered with a vitreous coat of
+ an alkaline silicate of alumina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pigments were not applied to an entirely flat surface. Prior to the
+ reception of the coloring matter and the glaze, each brick was modelled by
+ the hand, the figures being carefully traced out, and a slight elevation
+ given to the more important objects. A very low bas-relief was thus
+ produced, to which the colors were subsequently applied, and the brick was
+ then baked in the furnace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is conjectured that the bricks were not modelled singly and separately.
+ A large mass of clay was (it is thought) taken, sufficient to contain a
+ whole subject, or at any rate a considerable portion of a subject. On this
+ the modeller made out his design in low relief. The mass of clay was then
+ cut up into bricks, and each brick was taken and painted separately with
+ the proper colors, after which they were all placed in the furnace and
+ baked. When baked, they were restored to their original places in the
+ design, a thin layer of the finest mortar serving to keep them in place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the mimetic art of the Babylonians, and the branches of knowledge
+ connected with it, we may now pass to the purely mechanical arts&mdash;as
+ the art by which hard stones were cut, and those of agriculture,
+ metallurgy, pottery, weaving, carpet-making, embroidery, and the like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stones shaped, bored, and engraved by Babylonian artisans were not
+ merely the softer and more easily worked kinds, as alabaster, serpentine,
+ and lapis-lazuli, but also the harder sorts-cornelian, agate, quartz,
+ jasper, sienite, loadstone, and green felspar or amazon-stone. These can
+ certainly not have been cut without emery, and scarcely without such
+ devices as rapidly revolving points, or discs, of the kind used by modern
+ lapidaries. Though the devices are in general rude, the work is sometimes
+ exceedingly delicate, and implies a complete mastery over tools and
+ materials, as well as a good deal of artistic power. As far as the
+ mechanical part of the art goes, the Babylonians may challenge comparison
+ with the most advanced of the nations of antiquity; they decidedly excel
+ the Egyptians, and fall little, if at all, short of the Greeks and Romans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extreme minuteness of the work in some of the Babylonian seals and
+ gems raises a suspicion that they must have been engraved by the help of a
+ powerful magnifying-glass. A lens has been found in Assyria; and there is
+ much reason to believe that the convenience was at least as well known in
+ the lower country. Glass was certainly in use, and was cut into such
+ shapes as were required. It is at any rate exceedingly likely that
+ magnifying-glasses, which were undoubtedly known to the Greeks in the time
+ of Aristophanes, were employed by the artisans of Babylon during the most
+ flourishing period of the Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Babylonian metal-work we have scarcely any direct means of judging. The
+ accounts of ancient authors imply that the Babylonians dealt freely with
+ the material, using gold and silver for statues, furniture, and utensils,
+ bronze for gates and images, and iron sometimes for the latter. We may
+ assume that they likewise employed bronze and iron for tools and weapons,
+ since those metals were certainly so used by the Assyrians. Lead was made
+ of service in building; where iron was also employed, if great strength
+ was needed. The golden images are said to have been sometimes solid, in
+ which case we must suppose them to have been cast in a mold; but
+ undoubtedly in most cases the gold was a mere external covering, and was
+ applied in plates, which were hammered into shape upon some cheaper
+ substance below. Silver was no doubt used also in plates, more especially
+ when applied externally to walls, or internally to the woodwork of
+ palaces; but the silver images, ornamental figures, and utensils of which
+ we hear, were most probably solid. The bronze works must have been
+ remarkable. We are told that both the town and the palace gates were of
+ this material, and it is implied that the latter were too heavy to be
+ opened in the ordinary manner. Castings on an enormous scale would be
+ requisite for such purposes; and the Babylonians must thus have possessed
+ the art of running into a single mold vast masses of metal. Probably the
+ gates here mentioned were solid; but occasionally, it would seem, the
+ Babylonians had gates of a different kind, composed of a number of
+ perpendicular bars, united by horizontal ones above and below [as in PLATE
+ XIX., Fig. 2.]. They had also, it would appear, metal gateways of a
+ similar character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The metal-work of personal ornaments, such as bracelets and armlets, and
+ again that of dagger handles, seems to have resembled the work of the
+ Assyrians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Small figures in bronze were occasionally cast by the Babylonians, which
+ were sometimes probably used as amulets, while perhaps more generally they
+ wore mere ornaments of houses, furniture, and the like. Among these may be
+ noticed figures of dogs in a sitting posture, much resembling the dog
+ represented among the constellations, figures of men, grotesque in
+ character, and figures of monsters. An interesting specimen, which
+ combines a man and a monster, was found by Sir R. Ker Porter at Babylon.
+ <a href="#linkimage-0016">[PLATE XX., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0016" id="linkimage-0016">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate020.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xx. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The pottery of the Babylonians was of excellent quality, and is scarcely
+ to be distinguished from the Assyrian, which it resembles alike in form
+ and in material. The bricks of the best period were on the whole better
+ than any used in the sister country, and may compare for hardness and
+ fineness with the best Roman. The earthenware is of a fine terra-cotta,
+ generally of a light red color, and slightly baked, but occasionally of a
+ yellow hue, with a tinge of green. It consists of cups, jars, vases, and
+ other vessels. They appear to have been made upon the wheel, and are in
+ general unornamented. From representations upon the cylinders, it appears
+ that the shapes were often elegant. Long and narrow vases with thin necks
+ seem to have been used for water vessels; these had rounded or pointed
+ bases, and required therefore the support of a stand. Thin jugs were also
+ in use, with slight elegant handles. It is conjectured that sometimes
+ modelled figures may have been introduced at the sides as handles to the
+ vases; but neither the cylinders nor the extant remains confirm this
+ supposition. The only ornamentation hitherto observed consists in a double
+ band which seems to have been carried round some of the vases in an
+ incomplete spiral. The vases sometimes have two handles; but they are
+ plain and small, adding nothing to the beauty of the vessels. Occasionally
+ the whole vessel is glazed with a rich blue color. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0016">[PLATE XX., Fig. 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians certainly employed glass for vessels for a small size.
+ They appear not to have been very skilful blowers, since their bottles are
+ not unfrequently misshappen. <a href="#linkimage-0016">[PLATE XX., Fig. 3.]</a>
+ They generally stained their glass with, some coloring matter, and
+ occasionally ornamented it with a ribbing. Whether they were able to form
+ masses of glass of any considerable size, whether they used it, like the
+ Egyptians, for beads and bugles, or for mosaics, is uncertain. If we
+ suppose a foundation in fact for Pliny&rsquo;s story of the great emerald (?)
+ presented by a king of Babylon to an Egyptian Pharaoh, we must conclude
+ that very considerable masses of glass were produced by the Babylonians,
+ at least occasionally; for the said emerald, which can scarcely have been
+ of any other material, was four cubits (or six feet) long and three cubits
+ (or four and a half feet) broad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the productions of the Babylonians none obtained such, high repute
+ in ancient times as their textile fabrics. Their carpets especially were
+ of great celebrity, and were largely exported to foreign countries. They
+ were dyed of various colors, and represented objects similar to those
+ found on the gems, as griffins and such like monsters. Their position in
+ the ancient world may be compared to that which is now borne by the
+ fabrics of Turkey and Persia, which are deservedly preferred to those of
+ all other countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next to their carpets, the highest, character was borne by their muslins.
+ Formed of the finest cotton, and dyed of the most brilliant colors, they
+ seemed to the Oriental the very best possible material for dress. The
+ Persian kings preferred them for their own wear; and they had an early
+ fame in foreign countries at a considerable distance from Babylonia. It is
+ probable that they were sometimes embroidered with delicate patterns, such
+ as those which may be seen on the garments of the early Babylonian kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides woollen and cotton fabrics, the Babylonians also manufactured a
+ good deal of linen cloth, the principal seat of the manufacture being
+ Borsippa. This material was produced, it is probable, chiefly for home
+ consumption, long linen robes being generally worn by the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the arts of the Babylonians we may now pass to their science&mdash;an
+ obscure subject, but one which possesses more than common interest. If the
+ classical writers were correct in their belief that Chaldaea was the
+ birthplace of Astronomy, and that their own astronomical science was
+ derived mainly from this quarter, it must be well worth inquiry what the
+ amount of knowledge was which the Babylonians attained on the subject, and
+ what were the means whereby they made their discoveries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the broad flat plains of Chaldsea, where the entire celestial
+ hemisphere is continually visible to every eye, and the clear transparent
+ atmosphere shows night after night the heavens gemmed with countless
+ stars, each shining with a brilliancy unknown in our moist northern
+ climes, the attention of man was naturally turned earlier than elsewhere
+ to these luminous bodies, and attempts were made to grasp, and reduce to
+ scientific form, the array of facts which nature presented to the eye in a
+ confused and tangled mass. It required no very long course of observation
+ to acquaint men with a truth, which at first sight none would have
+ suspected&mdash;namely, that the luminous points whereof the sky was full
+ were of two kinds, some always maintaining the same position relatively to
+ one another, while others were constantly changing their places, and as it
+ were wandering about the sky. It is certain that the Babylonians at a very
+ early date distinguished from the fixed stars those remarkable five,
+ which, from their wandering propensities, the Greeks called the &ldquo;planets,&rdquo;
+ and which are the only erratic stars that the naked eye, or that even the
+ telescope, except at a very high power, can discern. With these five they
+ were soon led to class the Moon, which was easily observed to be a
+ wandering luminary, changing her place among the fixed stars with
+ remarkable rapidity. Ultimately, it came to be perceived that the Sun too
+ rose and set at different parts of the year in the neighborhood of
+ different constellations, and that consequently the great luminary was
+ itself also a wanderer, having a path in the sky which it was possible, by
+ means of careful observation, to mark out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to do this, to mark out with accuracy the courses of the Sun and Moon
+ among the fixed stars, it was necessary, or at least convenient, to
+ arrange the stars themselves into groups. Thus, too, and thus only, was it
+ possible to give form and order to the chaotic confusion in which the
+ stars seem at first sight to lie, owing to the irregularity of their
+ intervals, the difference in their magnitude, and their apparent
+ countlessness. The most uneducated eye, when raised to the starry heavens
+ on a clear night, fixes here and there upon groups of stars: in the north,
+ Cassiopeia, the Great Bear, the Pleiades&mdash;below the Equator, the
+ Southern Cross&mdash;must at all times have impressed those who beheld
+ them with a certain sense of unity. Thus the idea of a &ldquo;constellation&rdquo; is
+ formed; and this once done, the mind naturally progresses in the same
+ direction, and little by little the whole sky is mapped out into certain
+ portions or districts to which names are given&mdash;names taken from some
+ resemblance, real or fancied, between the shapes of the several groups and
+ objects familiar to the early observers. This branch of practical
+ astronomy is termed &ldquo;uranography&rdquo; by moderns; its utility is very
+ considerable; thus and thus only can we particularize the individual stars
+ of which we wish to speak; thus and thus only can we retain in our memory
+ the general arrangement of the stars and their positions relatively to
+ each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is reason to believe that in the early Babylonian astronomy the
+ subject of uranography occupied a prominent place. The Chaldaean
+ astronomers not only seized on and named those natural groups which force
+ themselves upon the eye, but artificially arranged the whole heavens into
+ a certain number of constellations or asterisms. The very system of
+ uranography which maintains itself to the present day on our celestial
+ globes and maps, and which is still acknowledged&mdash;albeit under
+ protest&mdash;in the nomenclature of scientific astronomers, came in all
+ probability from this source, reaching us from the Arabians, who took it
+ from the Greeks who derived it from the Babylonians. The Zodiacal
+ constellations at any rate, or those through which the sun&rsquo;s course lies
+ would seem to have had this origin; and many of them may be distinctly
+ recognized on Babylonian monuments which are plainly of a stellar
+ character. The accompanying representation, taken from a conical black
+ stone in the British Museum <a href="#linkimage-0016">[PLATE XX., Fig. 2.]</a>,
+ and belonging to the twelfth century before our era, is not perhaps,
+ strictly speaking, a zodiac, but it is almost certainly an arrangement of
+ constellations according to the forms assigned them in Babylonian
+ uranography. <a href="#linkimage-0017">[PLATE XXI.]</a> The Ram, the Bull,
+ the Scorpion, the Serpent, the Dog, the Arrow, the Eagle or Vulture may
+ all be detected on the stone in question, as may similar forms variously
+ arranged on other similar monuments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0017" id="linkimage-0017">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate021.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xxi. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians called the Zodiacal constellations the &ldquo;Houses of the
+ Sun,&rdquo; and distinguished from them another set of asterisms, which they
+ denominated the &ldquo;Houses of the Moon.&rdquo; As the Sun and Moon both move
+ through the sky in nearly the same plane, the path of the Moon merely
+ crossing and recrossing that of the Sun, but never diverging from it
+ further than a few degrees, it would seem that these &ldquo;Houses of the Moon,&rdquo;
+ or lunar asterisms, must have been a division of the Zodiacal stars
+ different from that employed with respect to the sun, either in the number
+ of the &ldquo;Houses,&rdquo; or in the point of separation between &ldquo;House&rdquo; and
+ &ldquo;House.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians observed and calculated eclipses; but their power of
+ calculation does not seem to have been based on scientific knowledge, nor
+ to have necessarily implied sound views as to the nature of eclipses or as
+ to the size, distance, and real motions of the heavenly bodies. The
+ knowledge which they possessed was empirical. Their habits of observation
+ led them to discover the period of 223 lunations or 18 years 10 days,
+ after which eclipses&mdash;especially those of the the moon&mdash;recur
+ again in the same order. Their acquaintance with this cycle would enable
+ them to predict lunar eclipses with accuracy for many ages, and solar
+ eclipses without much inaccuracy for the next cycle or two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the Babylonians carefully noted and recorded eclipses is witnessed by
+ Ptolemy, who had access to a continuous series of such observations
+ reaching back from his own time to B.C. 747. Five of these&mdash;all
+ eclipses of the moon&mdash;were described by Hipparchus from Babylonian
+ sources, and are found to answer all the requirements of modern science.
+ They belong to the years B.C. 721, 720, 621, and 523. One of them, that of
+ B.C. 721, was total at Babylon. The others were partial, the portion of
+ the moon obscured varying from one digit to seven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no reason to think that the observation of eclipses by the
+ Babylonians commenced with Nabonassar. Ptolemy indeed implies that the
+ series extant in his day went no higher; but this is to be accounted for
+ by the fact, which Berosus mentioned, that Nabonassar destroyed, as far as
+ he was able, the previously existing observations, in order that exact
+ chronology might commence with his own reign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other astronomical achievements of the Babylonians were the following.
+ They accomplished a catalogue of the fixed stars, of which the Greeks made
+ use in compiling their stellar tables. They observed and recorded their
+ observations upon occultations of the planets by the sun and moon. They
+ invented the <i>gnomon</i> and the <i>polos</i>, two kinds of sundial, by
+ means of which they were able to measure time during the day, and to fix
+ the true length of the solar day, with sufficient accuracy. They
+ determined correctly within a small fraction the length of the synodic
+ revolution of the moon. They knew that the true length of the solar year
+ was 365 days and a quarter, nearly. They noticed comets, which they
+ believed to be permanent bodies, revolving in orbits like those of the
+ planets, only greater. They ascribed eclipses of the sun to the
+ interposition of the moon between the sun and the earth. They had notions
+ not far from the truth with respect to the relative distance from the
+ earth of the sun, moon, and planets. Adopting, as was natural, a
+ geocentric system, they decided that the Moon occupied the position
+ nearest to the earth; that beyond the Moon was Mercury, beyond Mercury
+ Venus, beyond Venus Mars, beyond Mars Jupiter, and beyond Jupiter, in the
+ remotest position of all, Saturn. This arrangement was probably based upon
+ a knowledge, more or less exact, of the periodic times which the several
+ bodies occupy in their (real or apparent) revolutions. From the difference
+ in the times the Babylonians assumed a corresponding difference in the
+ size of the orbits, and consequently a greater or less distance from the
+ common centre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far the astronomical achievements of the Babylonians rest upon the
+ express testimony of ancient writers&mdash;a testimony confirmed in many
+ respects by the monuments already deciphered. It is suspected that, when
+ the astronomical tablets which exist by hundreds in the British Museum
+ come to be thoroughly understood, it will be found that the acquaintance
+ of the Chaldaean sages with astronomical phenomena, if not also with
+ astronomical laws, went considerably beyond the point at which we should
+ place it upon the testimony of the Greek and Roman writers. There is said
+ to be distinct evidence that they observed the four satellites of Jupiter,
+ and strong reason to believe that they were acquainted likewise with the
+ seven satellites of Saturn. Moreover, the general laws of the movements of
+ the heavenly bodies seem to have been so far known to them that they could
+ state by anticipation the position of the various planets throughout the
+ year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to attain the astronomical knowledge which they seem to have
+ possessed, the Babylonians must undoubtedly have employed a certain number
+ of instruments. The invention of sun-dials, as already observed, is
+ distinctly assigned to them. Besides these contrivances for measuring time
+ during the day, it is almost certain that they must have possessed means
+ of measuring time during the night. The clepsydra, or water-clock, which
+ was in common use among the Greeks as early as the fifth century before
+ our era, was probably introduced into Greece from the East, and is likely
+ to have been a Babylonian invention. The astrolabe, an instrument for
+ measuring the altitude of stars above the horizon, which was known to
+ Ptolemy, may also reasonably be assigned to them. It has generally been
+ assumed that they were wholly ignorant of the telescope. But if the
+ satellites of Saturn are really mentioned, as it is thought that they are,
+ upon some of the tablets, it will follow&mdash;strange as it may seem to
+ us&mdash;that the Babylonians possessed optical instruments of the nature
+ of telescopes, since it is impossible, even in the clear and vapor-loss
+ sky of Chaldaea, to discern the faint moons of that distant planet without
+ lenses. A lens, it must be remembered, with a fair magnifying power, has
+ been discovered among the Mesopotamian ruins. A people ingenious enough to
+ discover the magnifying-glass would be naturally led on to the invention
+ of its opposite. When once lenses of the two contrary kinds existed, the
+ elements of a telescope were in being. We could not assume from these data
+ that the discovery was made; but if it shall ultimately be substantiated
+ that bodies invisible to the naked eye were observed by the Babylonians,
+ we need feel no difficulty in ascribing to them the possession of some
+ telescopic instrument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The astronomical zeal of the Babylonians was in general, it must be
+ confessed, no simple and pure love of an abstract science. A school of
+ pure astronomers existed among them; but the bulk of those who engaged in
+ the study undoubtedly pursued it in the belief that the heavenly bodies
+ had a mysterious influence, not only upon the seasons, but upon the lives
+ and actions of men&mdash;an influence which it was possible to discover
+ and to foretell by prolonged and careful observation. The ancient writers,
+ Biblical and other, state this fact in the strongest way; and the extant
+ astronomical remains distinctly confirm it. The great majority of the
+ tablets are of an astrological character, recording the supposed influence
+ of the heavenly bodies, singly, in conjunction, or in opposition, upon all
+ sublunary affairs, from the fate of empires to the washing of hands or the
+ paring of nails. The modern prophetical almanac is the legitimate
+ descendant and the sufficient representative of the ancient Chaldee
+ Ephemeris, which was just as silly, just as pretentious, and just as
+ worthless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chaldee astrology was, primarily and mainly, genethlialogical. It
+ inquired under what aspect of the heavens persons were born, or conceived,
+ and, from the position of the celestial bodies at one or other of these
+ moments, it professed to deduce the whole life and fortunes of the
+ individual. According to Diodorus, it was believed that a particular star
+ or constellation presided over the birth of each person, and thenceforward
+ exercised over his life a special malign or benignant influence. But his
+ lot depended, not on this star alone, but on the entire aspect of the
+ heavens at a certain moment. To cast the horoscope was to reproduce this
+ aspect, and then to read by means of it the individual&rsquo;s future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chaldee astrology, was not, however, limited to genethlialogy. The
+ Chaldaeans professed to predict from the stars such things as the changes
+ of the weather, high winds and storms, great heats, the appearance of
+ comets, eclipses, earthquakes, and the like. They published lists of luck
+ and unlucky days, and tables showing what aspect of the heavens portended
+ good or evil to particular countries. Curiously enough, it appears that
+ they regarded their art as locally limited to the regions inhabited by
+ themselves and their kinsmen, so that while they could boldly predict
+ storm, tempest, failing or abundant crops, war, famine, and the like, for
+ Syria, Babylonia, and Susiana, they could venture on no prophecies with
+ respect to other neighboring lands, as Persia, Media, Armenia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A certain amount of real meteorological knowledge was probably mixed up
+ with the Chaldaean astrology. Their calendars, like modern almanacs,
+ boldly predicted the weather for fixed days in the year. They must also
+ have been mathematicians to no inconsiderable extent, since their methods
+ appear to have been geometrical. It is said that the Greek mathematicians
+ often quoted with approval the works of their Chaldaean predecessors,
+ Ciden, Naburianus, and Sudinus. Of the nature and extent of their
+ mathematical acquirements, no account, however, can be given, since the
+ writers who mention them enter into no details on the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. MANNERS AND CUSTOMS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Girded with girdles upon their loins, exceeding in dyed attire upon their
+ heads, all of them princes to look to, after the manner of the Babylonians
+ of Chaldaea, the land of their nativity.&rdquo;&mdash;Ezek. xxiii. 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The manners and customs of the Babylonians, though not admitting of that
+ copious illustration from ancient monuments which was found possible in
+ the case of Assyria, are yet sufficiently known to us, either from the
+ extant remains or from the accounts of ancient writers of authority, to
+ furnish materials for a short chapter. Herodotus, Strabo, Diodorus, and
+ Nicolas of Damascus, present us with many interesting traits of this
+ somewhat singular people; the sacred writers contemporary with the acme of
+ the nation add numerous touches; while the remains, though scanty, put
+ distinctly and vividly before our eyes a certain number of curious
+ details.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herodotus describes with some elaboration the costume of the Babylonians
+ in his day. He tells us that they wore a long linen gown reaching down to
+ their feet, a woollen gown or tunic above this, a short cloak or cape of a
+ white color, and shoes like those of the Boeotians. Their hair they
+ allowed to grow long, but confined it by a head-band or a turban; and they
+ always carried a walking-stick with a carving of some kind on the handle.
+ This portraiture, it is probable, applies to the richer inhabitants of the
+ capital, and represents the Babylonian gentleman of the fifth century
+ before our era, as he made his appearance in the streets of the
+ metropolis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cylinders seem to show that the ordinary Babylonian dress was less
+ complicated. The worshipper who brings an offering to a god is frequently
+ represented with a bare head, and wears apparently but one garment, a
+ tunic generally ornamented with a diagonal fringe, and reaching from the
+ shoulder to a little above the knee. The tunic is confined round the waist
+ by a belt. <a href="#linkimage-0018">[PLATE XXII., Fig. 1.]</a> Richer
+ worshippers, who commonly present a goat, have a fillet or headband, not a
+ turban, round the head. They wear generally the same sort of tunic as the
+ others; but over it they have a long robe, shaped like a modern
+ dressing-gown, except that it has no sleeves, and does not cover the right
+ shoulder. <a href="#linkimage-0018">[PLATE XXII., Fig. 1.]</a> In a few
+ instances only we see underneath this open gown a long inner dress or
+ robe, such as that described by Herodotus. <a href="#linkimage-0018">[PLATE
+ XXII., Fig. 2.]</a> A cape or tippet of the kind which he describes is
+ worn sometimes by a god, but is never seen, it is believed, in any
+ representation of a mortal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0018" id="linkimage-0018">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate022.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xxii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The short tunic, worn by the poorer worshippers, is seen also in a
+ representation (hereafter to be given) of hunters attacking a lion. A
+ similar garment is worn by the man&mdash;probably a slave&mdash;who
+ accompanies the dog, supposed to represent an Indian hound; and also by a
+ warrior, who appears on one of the cylinders conducting six foreign
+ captives. <a href="#linkimage-0018">[PLATE XXII., Fig. 4.]</a> There is
+ consequently much reason to believe that such a tunic formed the ordinary
+ costume of the common people, as it does at present of the common Arab
+ inhabitants of the country. It left the arms and right shoulder bare,
+ covering only the left. Below the belt it was not made like a frock but
+ lapped over in front, being in fact not so much a garment as a piece of
+ cloth wrapped round the body. Occasionally it is represented as patterned;
+ but this is somewhat unusual. <a href="#linkimage-0018">[PLATE XXII., Fig.
+ 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In lieu of the long robe reaching to the feet, which seems to have been
+ the ordinary costume of the higher classes, we observe sometimes a
+ shorter, but still a similar garment&mdash;a sort of coat without sleeves,
+ fringed down both sides, and reaching only a little below the knee. The
+ worshippers who wear this robe have in most cases the head adorned with a
+ fillet. <a href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0019" id="linkimage-0019">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate023.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xxiii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It is unusual to find any trace of boots or shoes in the representations
+ of Babylonians. A shoe patterned with a sort of check work was worn by the
+ king; and soldiers seem to have worn a low boot in their expeditions. But
+ with rare exceptions the Babylonians are represented with bare feet on the
+ monuments; and if they commonly wore shoes in the time of Herodotus, we
+ may conjecture that they had adopted the practice from the example of the
+ Medes and Persians. A low boot, laced in front, was worn by the chiefs of
+ the Susianians. Perhaps the &ldquo;peculiar shoe&rdquo; of the Babylonians was not
+ very different. <a href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girdle was an essential feature of Babylonian costume, common to high
+ and low, to the king and to the peasant. It was a broad belt, probably of
+ leather, and encircled the waist rather high up. The warrior carried his
+ daggers in it; to the common man it served the purpose of keeping in place
+ the cloth which he wore round his body. According to Herodotus, it was
+ also universal in Babylonia to carry a seal and a walking-stick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Special costumes, differing considerably from those hitherto described,
+ distinguished the king and the priests. The king wore a long gown,
+ somewhat scantily made, but reaching down to the ankles, elaborately
+ patterned and fringed. Over this, apparently, he had a close-fitting
+ sleeved vest, which came down to the knees, and terminated in a set of
+ heavy tassels. The girdle was worn outside the outer vest, and in war the
+ monarch carried also two cross-belts, which perhaps supported his quiver.
+ The upper vest was, like the under one, richly adorned with embroidery.
+ From it, or from the girdle, depended in front a single heavy tassel
+ attached by a cord, similar to that worn by the early kings of Assyria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tho tiara of the monarch was very remarkable. It was of great height,
+ nearly cylindrical, but with a slight tendency to swell out toward the
+ crown, which was ornamented with a row of feathers round its entire
+ circumference. The space below was patterned with rosettes, sacred trees,
+ and mythological figures. From the centre of the crown there rose above
+ the feathers a projection resembling in some degree the projection which
+ distinguishes the tiara of the Assyrian kings, the rounded, and not
+ squared, at top. This head-dress, which has a heavy appearance, was worn
+ low on the brow, and covered nearly all the back of the head. It can
+ scarcely have been composed of a heaver material than cloth or felt.
+ Probably it was brilliantly colored.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monarch wore bracelets, but (apparently) neither necklaces nor
+ earrings. Those last are assigned by Nicolas of Damascus to a Babylonian
+ governor; and they were so commonly used by the Assyrians that we can
+ scarcely suppose them unknown to their kindred and neighbors. The
+ Babylonian monuments, however, contain no traces of earrings as worn by
+ men, and only a few doubtful ones of collars or necklaces; whence we may
+ at any rate conclude that neither were worn at all generally. The
+ bracelets which encircle the royal wrist resemble the most common bracelet
+ of the Assyrians, consisting of a plain band, probably of metal, with a
+ rosette in the centre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dress of the priests was a long robe or gown, flounced and striped,
+ over which they seem to have worn an open jacket of a similar character. A
+ long scarf or riband depended from behind down their backs. They carried
+ on their heads an elaborate crown or mitre, which is assigned also to many
+ of the gods. In lieu of this mitre, we find sometimes, though rarely, a
+ horned cap; and, in one or two instances, a mitre of a different kind. In
+ all sacrificial and ceremonial acts the priests seem to have worn their
+ heads covered. <a href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig. 6.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the subject of the Babylonian military costume our information is
+ scanty and imperfect. In the time of Herodotus the Chaldaeans seem to have
+ had the same armature as the Assyrians&mdash;namely, bronze helmets, linen
+ breastplates, shields, spears, daggers, and maces or clubs; and, at a
+ considerably earlier date, we find in Scripture much the same arms,
+ offensive and defensive, assigned them. There is, however, one remarkable
+ difference between the Biblical account and that given by Herodotus. The
+ Greek historian says nothing of the use of bows by the Chaldaeans; while
+ in Scripture the bow appears as their favorite weapon, that which
+ principally renders them formidable. The monuments are on this point
+ thoroughly in accordance with Scripture. The Babylonian king already
+ represented carries a bow and two arrows. The soldier conducting captives
+ has a bow an arrow, and a quiver. A monument of an earlier date, which is
+ perhaps rather Proto-Chaldaean than pure Babylonian, yet which has certain
+ Babylonian characteristics, makes the arms of a king a bow and arrow, a
+ club (?), and a dagger. In the marsh fights of the Assyrians, where their
+ enemies are probably Chaldaeans of the low country, the bow is the sole
+ weapon which we see in use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonian bow nearly resembles the ordinary curved bow of the
+ Assyrians. It has a knob at either extremity, over which the string
+ passes, and is thicker towards the middle than at the two ends; the bend
+ is slight, the length when strung less than four feet. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig. 2.]</a>The length of the arrow
+ is about three feet. It is carefully notched and feathered, and has a
+ barbed point. The quiver, as represented in the Assyrian sculptures, has
+ nothing remarkable about it; but the single extant Babylonian
+ representation makes it terminate curiously with a large ornament
+ resembling a spearhead. It is difficult to see the object of this
+ appendage, which must have formed no inconsiderable addition to the weight
+ of the quiver. <a href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig. 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Babylonian daggers were short, and shaped like the Assyrian; but their
+ handles were less elegant and less elaborately ornamented. They were worn
+ in the girdle (as they are at the present day in all eastern countries)
+ either in pairs or singly. <a href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig.
+ 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other weapons of the Babylonians, which we may be sure they used in war,
+ though the monuments do not furnish any proof of the fact, were the spear
+ and the bill or axe. These weapons are exhibited in combination upon one
+ of the most curious of the cylinders, where a lion is disturbed in his
+ meal off an ox by two rustics, one of whom attacks him in front with a
+ spear, while the other seizes his tail and assails him in the rear with an
+ axe. [PI. XXIII., Fig. 5.] With the axe here represented may be compared
+ another, which is found on a clay tablet brought from Sinkara, and
+ supposed to belong to the early Chaldaean period.30 The Sinkara axe has a
+ simple square blade: the axe upon the cylinder has a blade with long
+ curved sides and a curved edge; while, to balance the weight of the blade,
+ it has on the lower side three sharp spikes. The difference between the
+ two implements marks the advance of mechanical art in the country between
+ the time of the first and that of the fourth monarchy. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0019">[PLATE XXIII., Fig. 4.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Babylonian armies seem to have been composed, like Assyrian, of three
+ elements&mdash;infantry, cavalry, and chariots. Of the chariots we appear
+ to have one or two representations upon the cylinders, but they are too
+ rudely carved to be of much value. It is not likely that the chariots
+ differed much either in shape or equipment from the Assyrian, unless they
+ were, like those of Susiana, ordinarily drawn by mules. A peculiar car,
+ four-wheeled, and drawn by four horses, with an elevated platform in front
+ and a seat behind for the driver, which the cylinders occasionally
+ exhibit, is probably not a war-chariot, but a sacred vehicle, like the
+ tensa or thensa of the Romans. <a href="#linkimage-0020">[PLATE XXIV.,
+ Fig. 2.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0020" id="linkimage-0020">
+ <!-- IMG --></a> <a href="images/plate024.jpg">ENLARGE TO FULL SIZE</a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="plate024th (112K)" src="images/plate024th.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The Prophet Habakkuk evidently considered the cavalry of the Babylonians
+ to be their most formidable arm. &ldquo;They are terrible and dreadful,&rdquo; he
+ said; &ldquo;from them shall proceed judgment and captivity; their horses also
+ are swifter than the leopards, and are more fierce than the evening
+ wolves; and their horsemen shall spread themselves, and their horsemen
+ shall come from far; they shall fly, as the eagle that hasteth to eat.&rdquo;
+ Similarly Ezekiel spoke of the &ldquo;desirable young men, captains and rulers,
+ great lords and renowned; all of them riding upon horses,&rdquo; Jeremiah
+ couples the horses with the chariots, as if he doubted whether the chariot
+ force or the cavalry were the more to be dreaded. &ldquo;Behold, he shall come
+ up as clouds, and his chariot shall be as a whirlwind; his horses are
+ swifter than eagles. Woe unto us! for we are spoiled.&rdquo; In the army of
+ Xerxes the Babylonians seem to have served only on foot, which would imply
+ that they were not considered in that king&rsquo;s time to furnish such good
+ cavalry as the Persians, Medes, Cissians, Indians, and others, who sent
+ contingents of horse. Darius, however, in the Behistun inscription, speaks
+ of Babylonian horsemen; and the armies which overran Syria, Palestine, and
+ Egypt, seem to have consisted mainly of horse. The Babylonian armies, like
+ the Persian, were vast hosts, poorly disciplined, composed not only of
+ native troops, but of contingents from the subject nations, Cissians,
+ Elamites, Shuhites, Assyrians, and others. They marched with vast noise
+ and tumult, spreading themselves far and wide over the country which they
+ were invading, plundering and destroying on all sides. If their enemy
+ would consent to a pitched battle, they were glad to engage with him; but,
+ more usually, their contests resolved themselves into a succession of
+ sieges, the bulk of the population attacked retreating to their
+ strongholds, and offering behind walls a more or less protracted
+ resistance. The weaker towns were assaulted with battering-rams; against
+ the stronger, mounds were raised, reaching nearly to the top of the walls,
+ which were then easily scaled or broken down. A determined persistence in
+ sieges seems to have characterized this people, who did not take Jerusalem
+ till the third, nor Tyre till the fourteenth year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In expeditions it sometimes happened that a question arose as to the
+ people or country next to be attacked. In such cases it appears that
+ recourse was had to divination, and the omens which were obtained decided
+ whither the next effort of the invader should be directed. Priests
+ doubtless accompanied the expeditions to superintend the sacrifices and
+ interpret them on such occasions. According to Diodorus, the priests in
+ Babylonia were a caste, devoted to the service of the native deities and
+ the pursuits of philosophy, and held in high honor by the people. It was
+ their business to guard the temples and serve at the altars of the gods,
+ to explain dreams and prodigies, to understand omens, to read the warnings
+ of the stars, and to instruct men how to escape the evils threatened in
+ those various ways, by purifications, incantations, and sacrifices. They
+ possessed a traditional knowledge which had come down from father to son,
+ and which none thought of questioning. The laity looked up to them as the
+ sole possessors of a recondite wisdom of the last importance to humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these statements of the lively but inaccurate Sicilian those of the
+ Book of Daniel are very fairly, if not entirely, in accordance. A class of
+ &ldquo;wise men&rdquo; is described as existing at Babylon, foremost among whom are
+ the Chaldaeans; they have a special &ldquo;learning,&rdquo; and (as it would seem) a
+ special &ldquo;tongue;&rdquo; their business is to expound dreams and prodigies; they
+ are in high favor with the monarch, and are often consulted by him. This
+ body of &ldquo;wise men&rdquo; is subdivided into four classes&mdash;&ldquo;Chaldaeans,
+ magicians, astrologers, and soothsayers&rdquo;&mdash;a subdivision which seems
+ to be based upon difference of occupation. It is not distinctly stated
+ that they are priests; nor does it seem that they were a caste; for Jews
+ are enrolled among their number, and Daniel himself is made chief of the
+ entire body. But they form a very distinct order, and constitute a
+ considerable power in the state; they have direct communication with the
+ monarch, and they are believed to possess, not merely human learning, but
+ a supernatural power of predicting future events. High civil office is
+ enjoyed by some of their number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notices agreeing with these, but of less importance, are contained in
+ Herodotus and Strabo. Herodotus speaks of the Chaldaeans as &ldquo;priests;&rdquo;
+ Strabo says that they were &ldquo;philosophers,&rdquo; who occupied themselves
+ principally in astronomy. The latter writer mentions that they were
+ divided into sects, who differed one from another in their doctrines. He
+ gives the names of several Chaldaeans whom the Greek mathematicians were
+ in the habit of quoting. Among them is a Seleucus, who by his name should
+ be a Greek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From these various authorities we may assume that there was in Babylon, as
+ in Egypt, and in later Persia, a distinct priest class, which enjoyed high
+ consideration. It was not, strictly speaking, a caste. Priests may have
+ generally brought up their sons to the occupation; but other persons, even
+ foreigners (and if foreigners, then <i>a fortiori</i> natives), could be
+ enrolled in the order, and attain its highest privileges. It was at once a
+ sacerdotal and a learned body. It had a literature, written in peculiar
+ language, which its members were bound to study. This language and this
+ literature were probably a legacy from the old times of the first
+ (Turano-Cushite) kingdom, since even in Assyria it is found that the
+ literature was in the main Turanian, down to the very close of the empire.
+ Astronomy, astrology, and mythology were no doubt the chief subjects which
+ the priests studied; but history, chronology, grammar, law, and natural
+ science most likely occupied some part of their attention. Conducting
+ everywhere the worship of the gods, they were of course scattered far and
+ wide through the country; but they had certain special seats of learning,
+ corresponding perhaps in some sort to our universities, the most famous of
+ which were Erech or Orchoe (Warka), and Borsippa, the town represented by
+ the modern Birs-i-Nimrud. They were diligent students, not wanting in
+ ingenuity, and not content merely to hand down the wisdom of their
+ ancestors. Schools arose among them; and a boldness of speculation
+ developed itself akin to that which we find among the Greeks. Astronomy,
+ in particular, was cultivated with a good deal of success; and stores were
+ accumulated of which the Greeks in later times understood and acknowledged
+ the value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In social position the priest class stood high. They had access to the
+ monarch: they were feared and respected by the people; the offerings of
+ the faithful made them wealthy; their position as interpreters of the
+ divine will secured them influence. Being regarded as capable of civil
+ employment, they naturally enough obtained frequently important offices,
+ which added to their wealth and consideration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mass of the people in Babylonia were employed in the two pursuits of
+ commerce and agriculture. The commerce was both foreign and domestic.
+ Great numbers of the Babylonians were engaged in the manufacture of those
+ textile fabrics, particularly carpets and muslins, which Babylonia
+ produced not only for her own use, but also for the consumption of foreign
+ countries. Many more must have been employed as lapidaries in the
+ execution of those delicate engravings on hard stone, wherewith the seal,
+ which every Babylonian carried, was as a matter of course adorned. The
+ ordinary trades and handicrafts practised in the East no doubt flourished
+ in the country. A brisk import and export trade was constantly kept up,
+ and promoted a healthful activity throughout the entire body politic.
+ Babylonia is called &ldquo;a land of traffic&rdquo; by Ezekiel, and Babylon &ldquo;a city of
+ merchants.&rdquo; Isaiah says &ldquo;theory of the Chaldaeans&rdquo; was &ldquo;in their ships.&rdquo;
+ The monuments show that from very early times the people of the low
+ country on the borders of the Persian Gulf were addicted to maritime
+ pursuits, and navigated the gulf freely, if they did not even venture on
+ the open ocean. And AEschylus is a witness that the nautical character
+ still attached to the people after their conquest by the Persians; for he
+ calls the Babylonians in the army of Xerxes &ldquo;navigators of ships.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonian import trade, so far as it was carried on by themselves,
+ seems to have been chiefly with Arabia, with the islands in the Persian
+ Gulf, and directly or indirectly with India. From Arabia they must have
+ imported the frankincense which they used largely in their religious
+ ceremonies; from the Persian Gulf they appear to have derived pearls,
+ cotton, and wood for walking sticks from India they obtained dogs and
+ several kinds of gems. If we may believe Strabo, they had a colony called
+ Gerrha, most favorably situated on the Arabian coast of the gulf, which
+ was a great emporium, and conducted not only the trade between Babylonia
+ and the regions to the south, but also that which passed through Babylonia
+ into the more nothern districts. The products of the various countries of
+ Western Asia flowed into Babylonia down the courses of the rivers. From
+ Armenia, or rather Upper Mesopotamia, came wine, gems, emery, and perhaps
+ stone for building; from Phoenicia, by way of Palmyra and Thapsacus, came
+ tin, perhaps copper, probably musical instruments, and other objects of
+ luxury; from Media and the countries towards the east came fine wool,
+ lapis-lazuli, perhaps silk, and probably gold and ivory. But these imports
+ seem to have been brought to Babylonia by foreign merchants rather than
+ imported by the exertions of native traders. The Armenians, the
+ Phoenicians, and perhaps the Greeks, used for the conveyance of their
+ goods the route of the Euphrates. The Assyrians, the Paretaceni, and the
+ Medes probably floated theirs down the Tigris and its tributaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A large-probably the largest-portion of the people must have been engaged
+ in the occupations of agriculture. Babylonia was, before all things, a
+ grain-producing country&mdash;noted for a fertility unexampled elsewhere,
+ and to moderns almost incredible. The soil was a deep and rich alluvium,
+ and was cultivated with the utmost care. It grew chiefly wheat, barley
+ millet, and sesame, which all nourished with wonderful luxuriance. By a
+ skilful management of the natural water supply, the indispensable fluid
+ was utilized to the utmost, and conveyed to every part of the country.
+ Date-groves spread widely over the land, and produced abundance of an
+ excellent fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the cultivation of the date nothing was needed but a proper water
+ supply, and a little attention at the time of fructification. The male and
+ female palm are distinct trees, and the female cannot produce fruit unless
+ the pollen from the male comes in contact with its blossoms. If the male
+ and the female trees are grown in proper proximity, natural causes will
+ always produce a certain amount of impregnation. But to obtain a good
+ crop, art may be serviceably applied. According to Herodotus, the
+ Babylonians were accustomed to tie the branches of the male to those of
+ the female palm. This was doubtless done at the blossoming time, when it
+ would have the effect he mentions, preventing the fruit of the female, or
+ date-producing palms, from falling off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The date palm was multiplied in Babylonia by artificial means. It was
+ commonly grown from seed, several stones being planted together for
+ greater security; But occasionally it was raised from suckers or cuttings.
+ It was important to plant the seeds and cuttings in a sandy soil; and if
+ nature had not sufficiently impregnated the ground with saline particles,
+ salt had to be applied artificially to the soil around as a dressing. The
+ young plants needed a good deal of attention. Plentiful watering was
+ required; and transplantation was desirable at the end of both the first
+ and second year. The Babylonians are said to have transplanted their young
+ trees in the height of summer; other nations preferred the springtime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the cultivation of grain the Babylonians broke up their land with the
+ plough; to draw which they seem to have employed two oxen, placed one
+ before the other, in the mode still common in many parts of England. The
+ plough had two handles, which the ploughman guided with his two hands. It
+ was apparently of somewhat slight construction. The tail rose from the
+ lower part of one of the handles, and was of unusual length. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0020">[PLATE XXIV., Fig. 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is certain that dates formed the main food of the inhabitants, The
+ dried fruit, being to them the staff of life, was regarded by the Greeks
+ as their &ldquo;bread.&rdquo; It was perhaps pressed into cakes, as is the common
+ practice in the country at the present day. On this and goat&rsquo;s milk, which
+ we know to have been in use, the poorer class, it is probable, almost
+ entirely subsisted. Palm-wine, the fermented sap of the tree, was an
+ esteemed, but no doubt only an occasional beverage. It was pleasant to the
+ taste, but apt to leave a headache behind it. Such vegetables as gourds,
+ melons, and cucumbers, must have been cheap, and may have entered into the
+ diet of the common people. They were also probably the consumers of the
+ &ldquo;pickled bats,&rdquo; which (according to Strabo) were eaten by the Babylonians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the marshy regions of the south there were certain tribes whose sole,
+ or at any rate whose chief, food was fish. Fish abound in these districts,
+ and are readily taken either with the hook or in nets. The mode of
+ preparing this food was to dry it in the sun, to pound it fine, strain it
+ through a sieve, and then make it up into cakes, or into a kind of bread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The diet of the richer classes was no doubt varied and luxurious. Wheaten
+ bread, meats of various kinds, luscious fruits, fish, game, loaded the
+ board; and wine, imported from abroad was the usual beverage. The wealthy
+ Babylonians were fond of drinking to excess; their banquets were
+ magnificent, but generally ended in drunkenness; they were not, however,
+ mere scenes of coarse indulgence, but had a certain refinement, which
+ distinguishes them from the riotous drinking-bouts of the less civilized
+ Modes. Music was in Babylonia a recognized accompaniment of the feast; and
+ bands of performers, entering with the wine, entertained the guests with
+ concerted pieces. A rich odor of perfume floated around, for the
+ Babylonians were connoisseurs in unguents. The eye was delighted with a
+ display of gold and silver plate. The splendid dresses of the guests, the
+ exquisite carpets and hangings, the numerous attendants, gave an air of
+ grandeur to the scene, and seemed half to excuse the excess of which too
+ many were guilty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A love of music appears to have characterized both the Babylonians and
+ their near neighbors and kinsmen, the Susianians. In the sculptured
+ representations of Assyria, the Susianians are shown to have possessed
+ numerous instruments, and to have organized large bands of performers. The
+ Prophet Daniel and the historian Ctesias similarly witness to the musical
+ taste of the Babylonians, which had much the same character. Ctesias said
+ that Annarus (or Nannarus), a Babylonian noble, entertained his guests at
+ a banquet with music performed by a company of 150 women. Of these a part
+ sang, while the rest played upon instruments, some using the pipe, others
+ the harp, and a certain number the psaltery. These same instruments are
+ assigned to the Babylonians by the prophet Daniel, who, however, adds to
+ them three more&mdash;viz., the horn, the sambuca, and an instrument
+ called the sumphonia, or &ldquo;symphony.&rdquo; It is uncertain whether the horn
+ intended was straight, like the Assyrian, or curved, like the Roman cornu
+ and lituus. The pipe was probably the double instrument, played at the
+ end, which was familiar to the Susianians and Assyrians. The harp would
+ seem to have resembled the later harp of the Assyrians; but it had fewer
+ strings, if we may judge from a representation upon a cylinder. Like the
+ Assyrian, it was carried under one arm, and was played by both hands, one
+ on either side of the strings. <a href="#linkimage-0021">[PLATE XXV., Fig.
+ 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0021" id="linkimage-0021">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate025.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate Xxv. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The character of the remaining instruments is more doubtful. The sambuca
+ seems to have been a large harp, which rested on the ground, like the
+ harps of the Egyptians. The psaltery was also a stringed instrument, and,
+ if its legitimate descendant is the modern santour, we may presume that it
+ is represented in the hands of a Susianian musician on the monument which
+ is our chief authority for the Oriental music of the period. The symphonia
+ is thought by some to be the bagpipe, which is called sampogna by the
+ modern Italians: by others it is regarded as a sort of organ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians used music, not merely in their private entertainments,
+ but also in their religious ceremonies. Daniel&rsquo;s account of their
+ instruments occurs casually in his mention of Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s dedication
+ of a colossal idol of gold. The worshippers were to prostrate themselves
+ before the idol as soon as they heard the music commence, and were
+ probably to continue in the attitude of worship until the sound ceased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seclusion of women seems scarcely to have been practised in Babylonia
+ with as much strictness as in most Oriental countries. The two peculiar
+ customs on which Herodotus descants at length&mdash;the public auction of
+ the marriageable virgins in all the towns of the empire, and the religious
+ prostitution authorized in the worship of Beltis&mdash;were wholly
+ incompatible with the restraints to which the sex has commonly submitted
+ in the Eastern world. Much modesty can scarcely have belonged to those
+ whose virgin charms were originally offered in the public market to the
+ best bidder, and who were required by their religion, at least once in
+ their lives, openly to submit to the embraces of a man other than their
+ husband. It would certainly seem that the sex had in Babylonia a freedom&mdash;and
+ not only a freedom, but also a consideration&mdash;unusual in the ancient
+ world, and especially rare in Asia. The stories of Semiramis and Nitocris
+ may have in them no great amount of truth; but they sufficiently indicate
+ the belief of the Greeks as to the comparative publicity allowed to their
+ women by the Babylonians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monuments accord with the view of Babylonian manners thus opened to
+ us. The female form is not eschewed by the Chaldaean artists. Besides
+ images of a goddess (Beltis or Ish-tar) suckling a child, which are
+ frequent, we find on the cylinders numerous representations of women,
+ engaged in various employments. Sometimes they are represented in a
+ procession, visiting the shrine of a goddess, to whom they offer their
+ petitions, by the mouth of one of their number, or to whom they bring
+ their children for the purpose, probably, of placing them under her
+ protection <a href="#linkimage-0021">[PLATE XXV., Fig. 5.]</a>, sometimes
+ they may be seen amusing themselves among birds and flowers in a garden,
+ plucking the fruit from dwarf palms, and politely handing it to one
+ another. <a href="#linkimage-0021">[PLATE XXV., Fig. 4.]</a> Their attire
+ is in every case nearly the same; they wear a long but scanty robe,
+ reaching to the ankles, ornamented at the bottom with a fringe and
+ apparently opening in front. The upper part of the dress passes over only
+ one shoulder. It is trimmed round the top with a fringe which runs
+ diagonally across the chest, and a similar fringe edges the dress down the
+ front where it opens. A band or fillet is worn round the head, confining
+ the hair, which is turned back behind the head, and tied by a riband, or
+ else held up by the fillet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Female ornaments are not perceptible on the small figures of the
+ cylinders; but from the modelled image in clay, of which a representation
+ has been already given, we learn that bracelets and earrings of a simple
+ character were worn by Babylonian women, if they were not by the men. On
+ the whole, however, female dress seems to have been plain and wanting in
+ variety, though we may perhaps suspect that the artists do not trouble
+ themselves to represent very accurately such diversities of apparel as
+ actually existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a single representation of a priestess it would seem that women of
+ that class wore nothing but a petticoat, thus exposing not only the arms,
+ but the whole of the body as far as the waist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monuments throw a little further light on the daily life of the
+ Babylonians. A few of their implements, as saws and hatchets, are
+ represented. <a href="#linkimage-0021">[PLATE XXV., Fig. 2]</a>; and from
+ the stools, the chairs, the tables, and stands for holding water-jars
+ which occur occasionally on the cylinders, we may gather that the fashion
+ of their furniture much resembled that of their northern neighbors, the
+ Assyrians. It is needless to dwell on this subject, which presents no
+ novel features, and has been anticipated by the discussion on Assyrian
+ furniture in the first volume. The only touch that can be added to what
+ was there said is that in Babylonia, the chief&mdash;almost the
+ sole-material employed for furniture was the wood of the palm-tree, a soft
+ and light fabric which could be easily worked, and which had considerable
+ strength, but did not admit of a high finish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. RELIGION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Religion of the later Babylonians differed in so few respects from
+ that of the early Chaldaeans, their predecessors in the same country, that
+ it will be unnecessary to detain the reader with many observations on the
+ subject. The same gods were worshipped in the same temples and with the
+ same rites&mdash;the same cosmogony was taught and held&mdash;the same
+ symbols were objects of religious regard&mdash;even the very dress of the
+ priests was maintained unaltered; and, could Urukh or Chedorlaomer have
+ risen from the grave and revisited the shrines wherein they sacrificed
+ fourteen centuries earlier, they would have found but little to
+ distinguish the ceremonies of their own day from those in vogue under the
+ successors of Nabopolassar. Some additional splendor in the buildings, the
+ idols, and perhaps the offerings, some increased use of music as a part of
+ the ceremonial, some advance of corruption with respect to priestly
+ impostures and popular religious customs might probably have been noticed;
+ but otherwise the religion of Nabonidus and Belshazzar was that of Urukh
+ and Ilgi, alike in the objects and the mode of worship, in the theological
+ notions entertained and the ceremonial observances taught and practised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The identity of the gods worshipped during the entire period is
+ sufficiently proved by the repair and restoration of the ancient temples
+ under Nebuchadnezzar, and their re-dedication (as a general rule) to the
+ same deities. It appears also from the names of the later kings and
+ nobles, which embrace among their elements the old divine appellations.
+ Still, together with this general uniformity, we seem to see a certain
+ amount of fluctuation&mdash;a sort of fashion in the religion, whereby
+ particular gods were at different times exalted to a higher rank in the
+ Pantheon, and were sometimes even confounded with other deities commonly
+ regarded as wholly distinct from them. Thus Nebuchadnezzar devoted himself
+ in an especial way to Merodach, and not only assigned him titles of honor
+ which implied his supremacy over all the remaining gods, but even
+ identified him with the great Bel, the ancient tutelary god of the
+ capital. Nabonidus, on the other hand, seems to have restored Bel to his
+ old position, re-establishing the distinction between him and Merodach,
+ and preferring to devote himself to the former.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A similar confusion occurs between the goddesses Beltis and Nana or
+ Ishtar, though this is not peculiar to the later kingdom. It may perhaps
+ be suspected from such instances of connection and quasi-convertibility,
+ that an esoteric doctrine, known to the priests and communicated by them
+ to the kings, taught the real identity of the several gods and goddesses,
+ who may have been understood by the better instructed to represent, not
+ distinct and separate beings, but the several phases of the Divine Nature.
+ Ancient polytheism had, it may be surmised, to a great extent this origin,
+ the various names and titles of the Supreme, which designated His
+ different attributes or the different spheres of His operation, coming by
+ degrees to be misunderstood, and to pass, first with the vulgar, and at
+ last with all but the most enlightened, for the appellations of a number
+ of gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief objects of Babylonian worship were Bel, Merodach, and Nebo.
+ Nebo, the special deity of Borsippa, seems to have been regarded as a sort
+ of powerful patron-saint under whose protection it was important to place
+ individuals. During the period of the later kingdom, no divine element is
+ so common in names. Of the seven kings who form the entire list, three
+ certainly, four probably, had appellations composed with it. The usage
+ extended from the royal house to the courtiers; and such names as
+ Nebu-zar-adan, Samgar-Nebo, and Nebushazban, show the respect which the
+ upper class of citizens paid to this god. It may even be suspected that
+ when Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s Master of the Eunuchs had to give Babylonian names
+ to the young Jewish princes whom he was educating, he designed to secure
+ for one of them this powerful patron, and consequently called him
+ Abed-Nebo&mdash;the servant of Nebo&mdash;a name which the later Jews,
+ either disdaining or not understanding, have corrupted into the Abed-nogo
+ of the existing text.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another god held in peculiar honor by the Babylonians was Nergal.
+ Worshipped at Cutha as the tutelary divinity of the town, he was also held
+ in repute by the people generally. No name is more common on the cylinder
+ seals. It is sometimes, though not often, an element in the names of men,
+ as in &ldquo;Nergal-shar-ezer, the Eab-mag,&rdquo; and (if he be a different person)
+ in Neriglissar, the king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Altogether, there was a strong local element in the religion of the
+ Babylonians. Bel and Merodach were in a peculiar way the gods of Babylon,
+ Nebo of Borsippa, Nergal of Cutha, the Moon of Ur or Hur, Beltis of
+ Niffer, Hea or Hoa of Hit, Ana of Erech, the Sun of Sippara. Without being
+ exclusively honored at a single site, the deities in question held the
+ foremost place each in his own town. There especially was worship offered
+ to them; there was the most magnificent of their shrines. Out of his own
+ city a god was not greatly respected, unless by those who regarded him as
+ their special personal protector.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Babylonians worshipped their gods indirectly, through images. Each
+ shrine had at least one idol, which was held in the most pious reverence,
+ and was in the minds of the vulgar identified with the god. It seems to
+ have been believed by some that the actual idol ate and drank the
+ offerings. Others distinguished between the idol and the god, regarding
+ the latter as only occasionally visiting the shrine where he was
+ worshipped. Even these last, however, held gross anthropomorphic views,
+ since they considered the god to descend from heaven in order to hold
+ commerce with the chief priestess. Such notions were encouraged by the
+ priests, who furnished the inner shrine in the temple of Bel with a
+ magnificent couch and a golden table, and made the principal priestess
+ pass the night in the shrine on certain occasions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The images of the gods were of various materials. Some were of wood,
+ others of stone, others again of metal; and these last were either solid
+ or plated. The metals employed were gold, silver, brass, or rather bronze,
+ and iron. Occasionally the metal was laid over a clay model. Sometimes
+ images of one metal were overlaid with plates of another, as was the case
+ with one of the great images of Bel, which was originally of silver but
+ was coated with gold by Nebuchadnezzar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The worship of the Babylonians appears to have been conducted with much
+ pomp and magnificence. A description has been already given of their
+ temples. Attached to these imposing structures was, in every case, a body
+ of priests; to whom the conduct of the ceremonies and the custody of the
+ treasures were intrusted. The priests were married, and lived with their
+ wives and children, either in the sacred structure itself, or in its
+ immediate neighborhood. They were supported either by lands belonging to
+ the temple, or by the offerings of the faithful. These consisted in
+ general of animals, chiefly oxen and goats; but other valuables were no
+ doubt received when tendered. The priest always intervened between the
+ worshipper and the deities, presenting him to them and interceding with
+ uplifted hands on his behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the temple of Bel at Babylon, and probably in most of the other temples
+ both there and elsewhere throughout the country, a great festival was
+ celebrated once in the course of each year. We know little of the
+ ceremonies with which these festivals were accompanied; but we may presume
+ from the analogy of other nations that there were magnificent processions
+ on these occasions, accompanied probably with music and dancing. The
+ images of the gods were perhaps exhibited either on frames or on sacred
+ vehicles. Numerous victims were sacrificed; and at Babylon it was
+ customary to burn on the great altar in the precinct of Bel a thousand
+ talents&rsquo; weight of frankincense. The priests no doubt wore their most
+ splendid dresses; the multitude was in holiday costume; the city was given
+ up to merry-making. Everywhere banquets were held. In the palace the king
+ entertained his lords; in private houses there was dancing and revelling.
+ Wine was freely drunk; passion Was excited; and the day, it must be
+ feared, too often terminated in wild orgies, wherein the sanctions of
+ religion were claimed for the free indulgence of the worst sensual
+ appetites. In the temples of one deity excesses of this description,
+ instead of being confined to rare occasions, seem to have been of
+ every-day occurrence. Each woman was required once in her life to visit a
+ shrine of Beltis, and there remain till some stranger cast money in her
+ lap and took her away with him. Herodotus, who seems to have visited the
+ disgraceful scene, describes it as follows. &ldquo;Many women of the wealthier
+ sort, who are too proud to mix with the others, drive in covered carriages
+ to the precinct, followed by a goodly train of attendants, and there take
+ their station. But the larger number seat themselves within the holy
+ inclosure with wreaths of string about their heads&mdash;and here there is
+ always a great crowd, some coming and others going. Lines of cord mark out
+ paths in all directions among the woman; and the strangers pass along them
+ to make their choice. A women who has once taken her seat is not allowed
+ to return home till one of the strangers throws a silver coin into her
+ lap, and takes her with him beyond the holy ground. When he throws the
+ coin, he says these words&mdash;&lsquo;The goddess Mylitta (Beltis) prosper
+ thee.&rsquo; The silver coin may be of any size; it cannot be refused; for that
+ is forbidden by the law, since once thrown it is sacred. The woman goes
+ with the first man who throws her money, and rejects no one. When she has
+ gone with him, and so satisfied the goddess, she returns home; and from
+ that time forth no gift, however great, will prevail with her. Such of the
+ women as are tall and beautiful are soon released; but others, who are
+ ugly, have to stay a long time before they can fulfil the law. Some have
+ even waited three or four years in the precinct.&rdquo; The demoralizing
+ tendency of this religious prostitution can scarcely be overrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notions of legal cleanliness and uncleanliness, akin to those prevalent
+ among the Jews, are found to some extent in the religious system of the
+ Babylonians. The consummation of the marriage rite made both the man and
+ the woman impure, as did every subsequent act of the same kind. The
+ impurity was communicated to any vessel that either might touch. To remove
+ it, the pair were required first to sit down before a censer of burning
+ incense, and then to wash themselves thoroughly. Thus only could they
+ re-enter into the state of legal cleanness. A similar impurity attached to
+ those who came into contact with a human corpse. The Babylonians are
+ remarkable for the extent to which they affected symbolism in religion. In
+ the first place they attached to each god a special mystic number, which
+ is used as his emblem and may even stand for his name in an inscription.
+ To the gods of the First Triad-Ami, Bel, and Hea or Hoa&mdash;were
+ assigned respectively the numbers 60, 50, and 40; to those of the Second
+ Triad&mdash;the Moon, the Sun and the Atmosphere&mdash;were given the
+ other integers, 30, 20, and 10 (or perhaps six). To Beltis was attached
+ the number 15, to Nergal 12, to Bar or Nin (apparently) 40, as to Hoa; but
+ this is perhaps doubtful. It is probable that every god, or at any rate
+ all the principle deities, had in a similar way some numerical emblem.
+ Many of these are, however, as yet undiscovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Further, each god seems to have had one or more emblematic signs by which
+ he could be pictorially symbolized. The cylinders are full of such forms,
+ which are often crowded into every vacant space where room could be found
+ for them. A certain number can be assigned definitely to particular
+ divinities. Thus a circle, plain or crossed, designates the Sun-god, San
+ or Shamas; a six-rayed or eight-rayed star the Sun-goddess, Gula or
+ Anunit; a double or triple thunderbolt the Atmospheric god, Vul; a serpent
+ probably Hoa; a naked female form Nana or Ishtar; a fish Bar or Nin-ip.
+ But besides these assignable symbols, there are a vast number with regard
+ to which we are still wholly in the dark. Among these may
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0022" id="linkimage-0022">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/page0229.jpg" width="100%" alt="Page 229 " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ tree, an ox, a bee, a spearhead. A study of the inscribed cylinders shows
+ these emblems to have no reference to the god or goddess named in the
+ inscription upon them. Each, apparently, represents a distinct deity; and
+ the object of placing them upon a cylinder is to imply the devotion of the
+ man whose seal it is to other deities besides those whose special servant
+ he considers himself. A single cylinder sometimes contains as many as
+ eight or ten such emblems. The principal temples of the gods had special
+ sacred appellations. The great temple of Bel at Babylon was known as
+ Bit-Saggath, that of the same god at Niffer as Kharris-Nipra. that of
+ Beltis at Warka (Erech) as Bit-Ana, that of the sun at Sippara as
+ Bit-Parra, that of Anunit at the same place as Bit-Ulmis, that of Nebo at
+ Borsippa as Bit-Tsida, etc. It is seldom that these names admit of
+ explanation. They had come down apparently from the old Chaldaean times,
+ and belonged to the ancient (Turanian) form of speech; which is still
+ almost unintelligible. The Babylonians themselves probably in few cases
+ understood their meaning. They used the words simply as proper names,
+ without regarding them as significative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. HISTORY AND CHRONOLOGY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The history of the Babylonian Empire commences with Nabopolassar, who
+ appears to have mounted the throne in the year B.C. 625; but to understand
+ the true character of the kingdom which he set up, its traditions and its
+ national spirit, we must begin at a far earlier date. We must examine, in
+ however incomplete and cursory a manner, the middle period of Babylonian
+ history, the time of obscurity and comparative insignificance, when the
+ country was as a general rule, subject to Assyria, or at any rate played
+ but a secondary part in the affairs of the East. We shall thus prepare the
+ way for our proper subject, while at the same time we shall link on the
+ history of the Fourth to that of the First Monarchy, and obtain a second
+ line of continuous narrative, connecting the brilliant era of Cyaxares and
+ Nebuchadnezzar with the obscure period of the first Cushite kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been observed that the original Chaldaean monarchy lasted, under
+ various dynasties from about B.C. 2400 to B.C. 1300, when it was destroyed
+ by the Assyrians, who became masters of Babylonia under the first
+ Tiglathi-Nin, and governed it for a short time from their own capital.
+ Unable, however, to maintain this unity very long, they appear to have set
+ up in the country an Assyrian dynasty, over which they claimed and
+ sometimes exercised a kind of suzerainty, but which was practically
+ independent and managed both the external and internal affairs of the
+ kingdom at its pleasure. The first king of this dynasty concerning whom we
+ have any information is a Nebuchadnezzar, who was contemporary with the
+ Assyrian monarch Asshur-ris-ilim, and made two attacks upon his
+ territories. The first of these was by the way of the Diyaleh and the
+ outlying Zagros hills, the line taken by the great Persian military road
+ in later times. The second was directly across the plain. If we are to
+ believe the Assyrian historian who gives an account of the campaigns, both
+ attacks were repulsed, and after his second failure the Babylonian monarch
+ fled away into his own country hastily. We may perhaps suspect that a
+ Babylonian writer would have told a different story. At any rate
+ Asshur-ris-ilim was content to defend his own territories and did not
+ attempt to retaliate upon his assailant. It was not till late in the reign
+ of his son and successor, Tiglath-Pileser I., that any attempt was made to
+ punish the Babylonians for their audacity. Then, however, that monarch
+ invaded the southern kingdom, which had passed into the hands of a king
+ named Merodach-iddin-akhi, probably a son of Nebuchadnezzar. After two
+ years of fighting, in which he took Eurri-Galzu (Akkerkuf), the two
+ Sipparas, Opis, and even Babylon itself, Tiglath-Pileser retired,
+ satisfied apparently with his victories; but the Babylonian monarch was
+ neither subdued nor daunted. Hanging on the rear of the retreating force,
+ he harassed it by cutting off its baggage, and in this way he became
+ possessed of certain Assyrian idols, which he carried away as trophies to
+ Babylon. War continued between the two countries during the ensuing reigns
+ of Merodach-shapik-ziri in Babylon and Asshur-bil-kala in Assyria, but
+ with no important successes, so far as appears, on either side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The century during which these wars took place between Assyria and
+ Babylonia, which corresponds with the period of the later Judges in
+ Israel, is followed by an obscure interval, during which but little is
+ known of either country. Assyria seems to have been at this time in a
+ state of great depression. Babylonia, it may be suspected, was
+ flourishing; but as our knowledge of its condition comes to us almost
+ entirely through the records of the sister country, which here fail us, we
+ can only obtain a dim and indistinct vision of the greatness now achieved
+ by the southern kingdom. A notice of Asshur-izir-pal&rsquo;s seems to imply that
+ Babylon, during the period in question, enlarged her territories at the
+ expense of Assyria, and another in Macrobius, makes it probable that she
+ held communications with Egypt. Perhaps these two powers, fearing the
+ growing strength of Assyria, united against her, and so checked for a
+ while that development of her resources which they justly dreaded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, after two centuries of comparative depression, Assyria once more
+ started forward, and Babylonia was among the first of her neighbors whom
+ she proceeded to chastise and despoil. About the year B.C. 880
+ Asshur-izir-pal led an expedition to the south-east and recovered the
+ territory which, had been occupied by the Babylonians during the period of
+ weakness. Thirty years later, his son, the Black-Obelisk king, made the
+ power of Assyria still more sensibly felt. Taking advantage of the
+ circumstance that a civil war was raging in Babylonia between the
+ legitimate monarch Merodach-sum-adin, and his young brother, he marched
+ into the country, took a number of the towns, and having defeated and
+ slain the pretender, was admitted into Babylon itself. From thence he
+ proceeded to overrun Chaldaea, or the district upon the coast, which
+ appears at this time to have been independent of Babylon, and governed by
+ a number of petty kings. The Babylonian monarch probably admitted the
+ suzerainty of the invader, but was not put to any tribute. The Chaldaean
+ chiefs, however, had to submit to this indignity. The Assyrian monarch
+ returned to his capital, having &ldquo;struck terror as far as the sea.&rdquo; Thus
+ Assyrian influence was once more extended over the whole of the southern
+ country, and Babylonia resumed her position of a secondary power,
+ dependent on the great monarchy of the north.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she was not long allowed to retain even the shadow of an autonomous
+ rule. In or about the year B.C. 821 the son and successor of the
+ Black-Obelisk king, apparently without any pretext, made a fresh invasion
+ of the country. Mero-dach-belatzu-ikm, the Babylonian monarch, boldly met
+ him in the field, but was defeated in two pitched battles (in the latter
+ of which he had the assistance of powerful allies) and was forced to
+ submit to his antagonist. Babylon, it is probable, became at once an
+ Assyrian tributary, and in this condition she remained till the troubles
+ which came upon Assyria towards the middle of the eighth century B.C. gave
+ an opportunity for shaking off the hated yoke. Perhaps the first successes
+ were obtained by Pul, who, taking advantage of Assyria&rsquo;s weakness under
+ Asshur-dayan III. (ab. B.C. 770), seems to have established a dominion
+ over the Euphrates valley and Western Mesopotamia, from which he proceeded
+ to carry his arms into Syria and Palestine. Or perhaps Pul&rsquo;s efforts
+ merely, by still further weakening Assyria, paved the way for Babylon to
+ revolt, and Nabonassar, who became king of Babylon in B.C. 747, is to be
+ regarded as the re-establisher of her independence. In either case it is
+ apparent that the recovery of independence was accompanied, or rapidly
+ followed, by a disintegration of the country, which was of evil omen for
+ its future greatness. While Nabonassar established himself at the head of
+ affairs in Babylon, a certain Yakin, the father of Merodach-Baladan,
+ became master of the tract upon the coast; and various princes, Nadina,
+ Zakiru, and others, at the same time obtained governments, which they
+ administered in their own name towards the north. The old Babylonian
+ kingdom was broken up; and the way was prepared for that final subjugation
+ which was ultimately affected by the Sargonids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, the Babylonians seemed to have looked with complacency on this
+ period, and they certainly made it an era from which to date their later
+ history. Perhaps, however, they had not much choice in this matter.
+ Nabonassar was a man of energy and determination. Bent probably on
+ obliterating the memory of the preceding period of subjugation, he
+ &ldquo;destroyed the acts of the kings who had preceded him;&rdquo; and the result was
+ that the war of his accession became almost necessarily the era from which
+ subsequent events had to be dated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nabonassar appears to have lived on friendly terms with Tiglath-Pileser,
+ the contemporary monarch of Assyria, who early in his reign invaded the
+ southern country, reduced several princes of the districts about Babylon
+ to subjection, and forced Merodach-Baladan, who had succeeded his father,
+ Yakin, in the low region, to become his tributary. No war seems to have
+ been waged between Tiglath-Pileser and Nabonassar. The king of Babylon may
+ have seen with satisfaction the humiliation of his immediate neighbors and
+ rivals, and may have felt that their subjugation rather improved than
+ weakened his own position. At any rate it tended to place him before the
+ nation as their only hope and champion&mdash;the sole barrier which
+ protected their country from a return of the old servitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nabonassar held the throne of Babylon for fourteen years, from B.C. 747 to
+ B.C. 733. It has generally been supposed that this period is the same with
+ that regarded by Herodotus as constituting the reign of Semiramis. As the
+ wife or as the mother of Nabonassar, that lady (according to many)
+ directed the affairs of the Babylonian state on behalf of her husband or
+ her son. The theory is not devoid of a certain plausibility, and it is no
+ doubt possible that it may be true; but at present it is a mere
+ conjecture, wholly unconfirmed by the native records; and we may question
+ whether on the whole it is not more probable that the Semiramis of
+ Herodotus is misplaced. In a former volume it was shown that a Semiramis
+ flourished in Assyria towards the end of the ninth and the beginning of
+ the eighth centuries B.C.&mdash;-during the period, that is, of Babylonian
+ subjection to Assyria. She may have been a Babylonian princess, and have
+ exercised an authority in the southern capital. It would seem therefore to
+ be more probable that she is the individual whom Herodotus intends, though
+ he has placed her about half a century too late, than that there were two
+ persons of the same name within so short a time, both queens, and both
+ ruling in Mesopotamia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nabonassar was succeeded in the year B.C. 733 by a certain Nadius, who is
+ suspected to have been among the independent princes reduced to subjection
+ by Tiglath-Pileser in his Babylonian expedition. Nadius reigned only two
+ years&mdash;from B.C. 733 to B.C. 731&mdash;when he was succeeded by
+ Ghinzinus and Porus, two princes whose joint rule lasted from B.C. 731 to
+ B.C. 726. They were followed by an Elulseus, who has been identified with
+ the king of that name called by Menander king of Tyre&mdash;the Luliya of
+ the cuneiform inscriptions; but it is in the highest degree improbable
+ that one and the same monarch should have borne sway both in Phoenicia and
+ Chaldaea at a time when Assyria was paramount over the whole of the
+ intervening country. Elulseus therefore must be assigned to the same class
+ of utterly obscure monarchs with his predecessors, Porus, Chinzinus, and
+ Nadius; and it is only with Merodach-Baladan, his successor, that the
+ darkness becomes a little dispelled, and we once more see the Babylonian
+ throne occupied by a prince of some reputation and indeed celebrity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Merodach-Baladan was the son of a monarch, who in the troublous times that
+ preceded, or closely followed, the era of Nabonassar appears to have made
+ himself master of the lower Babylonian territory&mdash;the true Chaldaea&mdash;and
+ to have there founded a capital city, which he called after his own name,
+ Bit-Yakin. On the death of his father Merodach-Baladan inherited this
+ dominion; and it is here that we first find him, when, during the reign of
+ Nabonassar, the Assyrians under Tiglath-Pileser II. invade the country.
+ Forced to accept the position of Assyrian tributary under this monarch, to
+ whom he probably looked for protection against the Babylonian king,
+ Nabonassar, Merodach-Baladan patiently bided his time, remaining in
+ comparative obscurity during the two reigns of Tiglath-Pileser and
+ Shalmaneser his successor, and only emerging contemporaneously with the
+ troubles which ushered in the dynasty of the Sargonids. In B.C. 721&mdash;the
+ year in which Sargon made himself master of Nineveh&mdash;Merodach-Baladan
+ extended his authority over the upper country, and was recognized as king
+ of Babylon. Here he maintained himself for twelve years; and it was
+ probably at some point of time within this space that he sent embassadors
+ to Hezekiah at Jerusalem, with orders to inquire into the particulars of
+ the curious astronomical marvel, or miracle, which had accompanied the
+ sickness and recovery of that monarch. It is not unlikely that the
+ embassy, whereof this was the pretext, had a further political object.
+ Morodach-Baladan, aware of his inability to withstand singly the forces of
+ Assyria, was probably anxious to form a powerful league against the
+ conquering state, which threatened to absorb the whole of Western Asia
+ into its dominion. Hezekiah received his advances favorably, as appears by
+ the fact that he exhibited to him all his treasures. Egypt, we may
+ presume, was cognizant of the proceedings, and gave them her support. An
+ alliance, defensive if not also offensive, was probably concluded between
+ Egypt and Judaea on the one hand, Babylon, Susiana, and the Aramaean
+ tribes of the middle Euphrates on the other. The league would have been
+ formidable but for one circumstance&mdash;Assyria lay midway between the
+ allied states, and could attack either moiety of the confederates
+ separately at her pleasure. And the Assyrian king was not slow to take
+ advantage of his situation. In two successive years Sargon marched his
+ troops against Egypt and against Babylonia, and in both directions carried
+ all before him. In Egypt he forced Sabaco to sue for peace. In Babylonia
+ (B.C. 710) he gained a great victory over Merodach-Baladan and his allies,
+ the Aramaeans and Susianians, took Bit-Yakin, into which the defeated
+ monarch had thrown himself, and gained possession of his treasures and his
+ person. Upon this the whole country submitted; Merodach-Baladan was
+ carried away captive into Assyria; and Sargon himself, mounting the
+ throne, assumed the title-rarely taken by an Assyrian monarch of &ldquo;King of
+ Babylon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this state of things did not continue long. Sargon died in the year
+ B.C. 704, and coincident with his death we find a renewal of troubles in
+ Babylonia. Assyria&rsquo;s yoke was shaken off; various pretenders started up; a
+ son of Sargon and brother of Sennacherib re-established Assyrian influence
+ for a brief space; but fresh revolts followed. A certain Hagisa became
+ king of Babylon for a month. Finally, Merodach-Baladan, again appeared
+ upon the scene, having escaped from his Assyrian prison, murdered Hagisa,
+ and remounted the throne from which he had been deposed seven years
+ previously. But the brave effort to recover independence failed.
+ Sennacherib in his second year, B.C. 703, descended upon Babylonia,
+ defeated the army which Merodach-Baladan brought against him, drove that
+ monarch himself into exile, after a reign of six months, and re-attached
+ his country to the Assyrian crown. From this time to the revolt of
+ Nabopolassar&mdash;a period of above three quarters of a century&mdash;Babylonia
+ with few and brief intervals of revolt, continued an Assyrian fief. The
+ assyrian kings governed her either by means of viceroys, such as Belibus,
+ Regibelus, Mesesimordachus, and Saos-duchinus, or directly in their own
+ persons, as was the case during the reign of Esarhaddon, and during the
+ later years of Asshur-bani-pal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The revolts of Babylon during this period have been described at length in
+ the history of Assyria. Two fall into the reign of Sennacherib, one into
+ that of Asshur-bani-pal, his grandson. In the former, Merodach-Baladan,
+ who had not yet given up his pretensions to the lower country, and a
+ certain Susub, who was acknowledged as king at Babylon, were the leaders.
+ In the latter, Saos-duchinus, the Assyrian viceroy, and brother of
+ Asshur-bani-pal, the Assyrian king, seduced from his allegiance by the
+ hope of making himself independent headed the insurrection. In each case
+ the struggle was brief, being begun and ended within the year. The power
+ of Assyria at this time so vastly preponderated over that of her ancient
+ rival that a single campaign sufficed on each occasion of revolt to crush
+ the nascent insurrection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A tabular view of the chronology of this period is appended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0023" id="linkimage-0023">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/page0237.jpg" width="100%" alt="Page 237 " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Having thus briefly sketched the history of the kingdom of Babylon from
+ its conquest by Tiglathi-Nin to the close of the long period of Assyrian
+ predominance in Western Asia, we may proceed to the consideration of the
+ &ldquo;Empire.&rdquo; And first, as to the circumstances of its foundation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Medes first assumed an aggressive attitude towards Assyria, and
+ threatened the capital with a siege, Babylonia apparently remained
+ unshaken in her allegiance. When the Scythian hordes spread themselves
+ over Upper Mesopotamia and wasted with fire and sword the fairest regions
+ under Assyrian rule, there was still no defection in this quarter. It was
+ not till the Scythic ravages were over, and the Medes for the second time
+ poured across Zagros into Adiabene, resuming the enterprise from which
+ they had desisted at the time of the Scythic invasion, that the fidelity
+ of the Southern people wavered. Simultaneously with the advance of the
+ Medes against the Assyrian capital from the east, we hear of a force
+ threatening it from the south, a force which can only have consisted of
+ Susianians, of Babylonians, or of both combined. It is probable that the
+ emissaries of Cyaxares had been busy in this region for some time before
+ his second attack took place, and that by a concerted plan while the Medes
+ debouched from the Zagros passes, the south rose in revolt and sent its
+ hasty levies along the valley of the Tigris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this strait the Assyrian king deemed it necessary to divide his forces
+ and to send a portion against the enemy which was advancing from the
+ south, while with the remainder he himself awaited the coming of the
+ Medes. The troops detached for the former service he placed under the
+ command of a certain Nabopolassar? (Nabu-pal-uzur), who was probably an
+ Assyrian nobleman of high rank and known capacity. Nabopolassar had orders
+ to proceed to Babylon, of which he was probably made viceroy, and to
+ defend the southern capital against the rebels. We may conclude that he
+ obeyed these orders so far as to enter Babylon and install himself in
+ office; but shortly afterwards he seems to have made up his mind to break
+ faith with his sovereign, and aim at obtaining for himself an independent
+ kingdom out of the ruins of the Assyrian power. Having formed this
+ resolve, his first step was to send an embassy to Cyaxares, and to propose
+ terms of alliance, while at the same time he arranged a marriage between
+ his own son, Nebuchadnezzar, and Amuhia, or Amyitis (for the name is
+ written both ways), the daughter of the Median monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyaxares gladly accepted the terms offered; the young persons were
+ betrothed; and Nabopolassar immediately led, or sent, a contingent of
+ troops to join the Medes, who took an active part in the great siege which
+ resulted in the capture and destruction of the Assyrian capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A division of the Assyrian Empire between the allied monarchs followed.
+ While Cyaxares claimed for his own share Assyria Proper and the various
+ countries dependent on Assyria towards the north and the north-west,
+ Nabopolassar was rewarded by his timely defection, not merely by
+ independence but by the transfer to his government of Susiana on the one
+ hand and of the valley of the Euphrates, Syria, and Palestine on the
+ other. The transfer appears to have been effected quietly, the Babylonian
+ yoke being peacefully accepted in lieu of the Assyrian without the
+ necessity arising for any application of force. Probably it appeared to
+ the subjects of Assyria, who had been accustomed to a monarch holding his
+ court alternately at Nineveh and at Babylon, that the new power was merely
+ a continuation of the old, and the monarch a legitimate successor of the
+ old line of Ninevite kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the reign of Nabopolassar the information which has come down to us is
+ scanty. It appears by the canon of Ptolemy that he dated his accession to
+ the throne from the year B.C. 625, and that his reign lasted twenty-one
+ years, from B.C. 625 to B.C. 604. During the greater portion of this
+ period the history of Babylon is a blank. Apparently the &ldquo;golden city&rdquo;
+ enjoyed her new position at the head of an empire too much to endanger it
+ by aggression; and, her peaceful attitude provoking no hostility, she was
+ for a while left unmolested by her neighbors. Media, bound to her by
+ formal treaty as well as by dynastic interests, could be relied upon as a
+ firm friend; Persia was too weak, Lydia too remote, to be formidable; in
+ Egypt alone was there a combination of hostile feeling with military
+ strength such as might have been expected to lead speedily to a trial of
+ strength; but Egypt was under the rule of an aged and wary prince, one
+ trained in the school of adversity, whose years forbade his engaging in
+ any distant enterprise, and whose prudence led him to think more of
+ defending his own country than of attacking others. Thus, while
+ Psammetichus lived, Babylon had little to fear from any quarter, and could
+ afford to &ldquo;give herself to pleasures and dwell carelessly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only exertion which she seems to have been called upon to make during
+ her first eighteen years of empire resulted from the close connection
+ which had been established between herself and Media. Cyaxares, as already
+ remarked, proceeded from the capture of Nineveh to a long series of wars
+ and conquests. In some, if not in all, of these he appears to have been
+ assisted by the Babylonians, who were perhaps bound by treaty to furnish a
+ contingent as often as he required it, Either Nabopolassar himself, or his
+ son Nebuchadnezzar, would lead out the troops on such occasions; and thus
+ the military spirit of both prince and people would be pretty constantly
+ exercised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was as the leader of such a contingent that Nabopolassar was able on
+ one occasion to play the important part of peacemaker in one of the
+ bloodiest of all Cyaxares&rsquo; wars. After five years&rsquo; desperate fighting the
+ Medes and Lydians were once more engaged in conflict when an eclipse of
+ the sun took place. Filled with superstitious dread the two armies ceased
+ to contend, and showed a disposition for reconciliation, of which the
+ Babylonian monarch was not slow to take advantage. Having consulted with
+ Syennesis of Cilicia, the foremost man of the allies on the other side,
+ and found him well disposed to second his efforts, he proposed that the
+ sword should be returned to the scabbard, and that a conference should be
+ held to arrange terms of peace. This timely interference proved effectual.
+ A peace was concluded between the Lydians and the Medes, which was
+ cemented by a royal intermarriage: and the result was to give to Western
+ Asia, where war and ravage had long been almost perpetual, nearly half a
+ century of tranquillity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Successful in his mediation, almost beyond his hopes, Nabopolassar
+ returned from Asia Minor to Babylon. He was now advanced in years, and
+ would no doubt gladly have spent the remainder of his days in the
+ enjoyment of that repose which is so dear to those who feel the
+ infirmities of age creeping upon them. But Providence had ordained
+ otherwise. In B.C. 610&mdash;probably the very year of the eclipse&mdash;Psammetichus
+ died, and was succeeded by his son Neco, who was in the prime of life and
+ who in disposition was bold and enterprising. This monarch very shortly
+ after his accession cast a covetous eye upon Syria, and in the year B.C.
+ 608, having made vast preparations, he crossed his frontier and invaded
+ the territories of Nabopolassar. Marching along the usual route, by the <i>Shephilah</i>
+ and the plain of Esdraelon, he learned, when he neared Megiddo, that a
+ body of troops was drawn up at that place to oppose him, Josiah, the
+ Jewish king, regarding himself as bound to resist the passage through his
+ territories of an army hostile to the monarch of whom he held his crown,
+ had collected his forces, and, having placed them across the line of the
+ invader&rsquo;s march, was calmly awaiting in this position the approach of his
+ master&rsquo;s enemy. Neco hereupon sent ambassadors to persuade Josiah to let
+ him pass, representing that he had no quarrel with the Jews, and claiming
+ a divine sanction to his undertaking. But nothing could shake the Jewish
+ monarch&rsquo;s sense of duty; and Neco was consequently forced to engage with
+ him, and to drive his troops from their position. Josiah, defeated and
+ mortally wounded, returned to Jerusalem, where he died. Neco pressed
+ forward through Syria to the Euphrates; and carrying all before him,
+ established his dominion over the whole tract lying between Egypt on the
+ one hand, and the &ldquo;Great River&rdquo; upon the other. On his return three months
+ later he visited Jerusalem, deposed Jehoahaz, a younger son of Josiah,
+ whom the people had made king, and gave the crown to Jehoiakim, his elder
+ brother. It was probably about this time that he besieged and took Gaza,
+ the most important of the Philistine towns next to Ashdod.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loss of this large and valuable territory did not at once arouse the
+ Babylonian monarch from his inaction or induce him to make any effort for
+ its recovery. Neco enjoyed his conquests in quiet for the space of at
+ least three full years. At length, in the year B.C. 605, Nabopolassar, who
+ felt himself unequal to the fatigues of a campaign, resolved to entrust
+ his forces to Nebuchadnezzar, his son, and to send him to contend with the
+ Egyptians. The key of Syria at this time was Carchemish, a city situated
+ on the right bank of the Euphrates, probably near the site which was
+ afterwards occupied by Hierapolis. Here the forces of Neco were drawn up
+ to protect his conquests, and here Nebuchadnezzar proceeded boldly to
+ attack them. A great battle was fought in the vicinity of the river, which
+ was utterly disastrous to the Egyptians, who &ldquo;fled away&rdquo; in confusion, and
+ seem not to have ventured on making a second stand. Nebuchadnezzar rapidly
+ recovered the lost territory, received the submission of Jehoiakim, king
+ of Judah, restored the old frontier line, and probably pressed on into
+ Egypt itself, hoping to cripple or even to crush his presumptuous
+ adversary. But at this point he was compelled to pause. News arrived from
+ Babylon that Nabopolassar was dead; and the Babylonian prince, who feared
+ a disputed succession, having first concluded a hasty arrangement with
+ Neco, returned at his best speed to his capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arriving probably before he was expected, he discovered that his fears
+ were groundless. The priests had taken the direction of affairs during his
+ absence, and the throne had been kept vacant for him by the Chief Priest,
+ or Head of the Order. No pretender had started up to dispute his claims.
+ Doubtless his military prestige, and the probability that the soldiers
+ would adopt his cause, had helped to keep back aspirants; but perhaps it
+ was the promptness of his return, as much as anything, that caused the
+ crisis to pass off without difficulty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nebuchadnezzar is the great monarch of the Babylonian Empire, which,
+ lasting only 88 years&mdash;from B.C. 625 to B.C. 538&mdash;was for nearly
+ half the time under his sway. Its military glory is due chiefly to him,
+ while the constructive energy, which constitutes its especial
+ characteristic, belongs to it still more markedly through his character
+ and genius. It is scarcely too much to say that, but for Nebuchadnezzar,
+ the Babylonians would have had no place in history. At any rate, their
+ actual place is owing almost entirely to this prince, who to the military
+ talents of an able general added a grandeur of artistic conception and a
+ skill in construction which place him on a par with the greatest builders
+ of antiquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have no complete, or even general account of Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s wars. Our
+ chief, our almost sole, information concerning them is derived from the
+ Jewish writers. Consequently, those wars only which interested these
+ writers, in other words those whose scene is Palestine or its immediate
+ vicinity, admit of being placed before the reader. If Nebuchadnezzar had
+ quarrels with the Persians, or the Arabians, or the Medes, or the tribes
+ in Mount Zagros, as is not improbable, nothing is now known of their
+ course or issue. Until some historical document belonging to his time
+ shall be discovered, we must be content with a very partial knowledge of
+ the external history of Babylon during his reign. We have a tolerably full
+ account of his campaigns against the Jews, and some information as to the
+ general course of the wars which he carried on with Egypt and Phoenicia;
+ but beyond these narrow limits we know nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appears to have been only a few years after Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s triumphant
+ campaign against Neco that renewed troubles broke out in Syria. Phoenicia
+ revolted under the leadership of Tyre; and about the same time Jehoiakim,
+ the Jewish king, having obtained a promise of aid from the Egyptians,
+ renounced his allegiance. Upon this, in his seventh year (B.C. 598),
+ Nebuchadnezzar proceeded once more into Palestine at the head of a vast
+ army, composed partly of his allies, the Medes, partly of his own
+ subjects. He first invested Tyre; but, finding that city too strong to be
+ taken by assault, he left a portion of his army to continue the siege,
+ while he himself pressed forward against Jerusalem. On his near approach,
+ Jehoiakim, seeing that the Egyptians did not care to come to his aid, made
+ his submission; but Nebuchadnezzar punished his rebellion with death, and,
+ departing from the common Oriental practice, had his dead body treated
+ with indignity. At first he placed upon the throne Jehoia-chin, the son of
+ the late monarch, a youth of eighteen; but three months later, becoming
+ suspicious (probably not without reason) of this prince&rsquo;s fidelity, he
+ deposed him and had him brought a captive to Babylon, substituting in his
+ place his uncle, Zedekiah, a brother of Jehoiakim and Jehoahaz. Meanwhile
+ the siege of Tyre was pressed, but with little effect. A blockade is
+ always tedious; and the blockade of an island city, strong in its navy, by
+ an enemy unaccustomed to the sea, and therefore forced to depend mainly
+ upon the assistance of reluctant allies, must have been a task of such
+ extreme difficulty that one is surprised it was not given up in despair.
+ According to the Tyrian historians their city resisted all the power of
+ Nebuchadnezzar for thirteen years. If this statement is to be relied on,
+ Tyre must have been still uncaptured, when the time came for its sister
+ capital to make that last effort for freedom in which it perished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After receiving his crown from Nebuchadnezzar, Zedekiah continued for
+ eight years to play the part of a faithful vassal. At length, however, in
+ the ninth year, he fancied he saw a way to independence. A young and
+ enterprising monarch, Uaphris&mdash;the Apries of Herodotus&mdash;had
+ recently mounted the Egyptian throne. If the alliance of this prince could
+ be secured, there was, Zedekiah thought, a reasonable hope that the yoke
+ of Babylon might be thrown off and Hebrew autonomy re-established. The
+ infatuated monarch did not see that, do what he would, his country had no
+ more than a choice of masters, that by the laws of political attraction
+ Judaea must gravitate to one or other of the two great states between
+ which it had the misfortune of lying. Hoping to free his country, he sent
+ ambassadors to Uaphris, who were to conclude a treaty and demand the
+ assistance of a powerful contingent, composed of both foot and horse.
+ Uaphris received the overture favorably; and Zedekiah at once revolted
+ from Babylon, and made preparations to defend himself with vigor. It was
+ not long before the Babylonians arrived. Determined to crush the daring
+ state, which, weak as it was, had yet ventured to revolt against him now
+ for the fourth time, Nebuchadnezzar came in person, &ldquo;he and all his host,&rdquo;
+ against Jerusalem, and after overcoming and pillaging the open country,
+ &ldquo;built forts&rdquo; and besieged the city. Uaphris, upon this, learning the
+ danger of his ally, marched out of Egypt to his relief; and the Babylonian
+ army, receiving intelligence of his approach, raised the siege and
+ proceeded in quest of their new enemy. According to Josephus a battle was
+ fought, in which the Egyptians were defeated; but it is perhaps more
+ probable that they avoided an engagement by a precipitate retreat into
+ their own country. At any rate the attempt effectually to relieve
+ Jerusalem failed. After a brief interval the siege was renewed; a complete
+ blockade was established; and in a year and a half from the time of the
+ second investment, the city fell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nebuchadnezzar had not waited to witness this success of his arms. The
+ siege of Tyre was still being pressed at the date of the second investment
+ of Jerusalem, and the Chaldaean monarch had perhaps thought that his
+ presence on the borders of Phoenicia was necessary to animate his troops
+ in that quarter. If this was his motive in withdrawing from the Jewish
+ capital, the event would seem to have shown that he judged wisely. Tyre,
+ if it fell at the end of its thirteen years&rsquo; siege, must have been taken
+ in the very year which followed the capture of Jerusalem, B.C. 585. We may
+ suppose that Nebuchadnezzar, when he quitted Jerusalem and took up his
+ abode at Eiblah in the Coele-Syrian valley, turned his main attention to
+ the great Phoenician city, and made arrangements which caused its capture
+ in the ensuing year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The recovery of these two important cities secured to the Babylonian
+ monarch the quiet possession thenceforth of Syria and Palestine. But still
+ he had not as yet inflicted any chastisement upon Egypt; though policy, no
+ less than honor, required that the aggressions of this audacious power
+ should be punished. If we may believe Josephus, however, the day of
+ vengeance was not very long delayed. Within four years of the fall of
+ Tyre, B.C. 581, Nebuchadnezzar, he tells us, invaded Egypt, put Uaphris,
+ the monarch who had succored Zedekiah, to death, and placed a creature of
+ his own upon the throne. Egyptian history, it is true, forbids our
+ accepting this statement as correct in all its particulars. Uaphris
+ appears certainly to have reigned at least as late as B.C. 569, and
+ according to Herodotus, he was put to death, not by a foreign invader, but
+ by a rebellious subject. Perhaps we may best harmonize the conflicting
+ statements on the subject by supposing that Josephus has confounded two
+ distinct invasions of Egypt, one made by Nebuchadnezzar in his
+ twenty-third year, B.C. 581, which had no very important consequences, and
+ the other eleven years later, B.C. 570, which terminated in the deposition
+ of Uaphris, and the establishment on the throne of a new king, Amasis, who
+ received a nominal royalty from Chaldaean monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such&mdash;as far as they are known&mdash;were the military exploits of
+ this great king. He defeated Neco, recovered Syria, crushed rebellion in
+ Judaea, took Tyre, and humiliated Egypt. According to some writers his
+ successes did not stop here. Megasthenes made him subdue most of Africa,
+ and thence pass over into Spain and conquer the Iberians. He even went
+ further, and declared that, on his return from these regions, he settled
+ his Iberian captives on the shores of the Euxine in the country between
+ Armenia and the Caucasus! Thus Nebuchadnezzar was made to reign over an
+ empire extending from the Atlantic to the Caspian, and from the Caucasus
+ to the Great Sahara.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The victories of Nebuchadnezzar were not without an effect on his home
+ administration and on the construction of the vast works with which his
+ name is inseparably associated. It was through them that he obtained that
+ enormous command of &ldquo;naked human strength&rdquo; which enabled him, without
+ undue oppression of his own people, to carry out on the grandest scale his
+ schemes for at once beautifying and benefiting his kingdom. From the time
+ when he first took the field at the head of an army he adopted the
+ Assyrian system of forcibly removing almost the whole population of a
+ conquered country, and planting it in a distant part of his dominions.
+ Crowds of captives&mdash;the produce of his various wars&mdash;Jews,
+ Egyptians, Phoenicians, Syrians, Ammonites, Moabites, were settled in
+ various parts of Mesopotamia, more especially about Babylon. From these
+ unfortunates forced labor was as a matter of course required; and it seems
+ to have been chiefly, if not solely, by their exertions that the
+ magnificent series of great works was accomplished, which formed the
+ special glory of the Fourth Monarchy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief works expressly ascribed to Nebuchadnezzar by the ancient
+ writers are the following: He built the great wall of Babylon, which,
+ according to the lowest estimate, must have contained more than
+ 500,000,000 square feet of solid masonry, and must have required three or
+ four times that number of bricks. He constructed a new and magnificent
+ palace in the neighborhood of the ancient residence of the kings. He made
+ the celebrated &ldquo;Hanging Garden&rdquo; for the gratification of his wife,
+ Amyitis. He repaired and beautified the great temple of Belus at Babylon.
+ He dug the huge reservoir near Sippara, said to have been 140 miles in
+ circumference, and 180 feet deep, furnishing it with flood-gates, through
+ which its water could be drawn off for purposes of irrigation. He
+ constructed a number of canals, among them the Nahr Malcha or &ldquo;Royal
+ River,&rdquo; a broad and deep channel which connected the Euphrates with the
+ Tigris. He built quays and breakwaters along the shores of the Persian
+ Gulf, and he at the same time founded the city of Diridotis or Teredon in
+ the vicinity of that sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To these constructions may be added, on the authority either of
+ Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s own inscriptions or of the existing remains, the
+ Birs-i-Nimrud, or great temple of Nebo at Bor-sippa; a vast reservoir in
+ Babylon itself, called the Yapur-Shapu; an extensive embankment along the
+ course of the Tigris, near Baghdad; and almost innumerable temples, walls,
+ and other public buildings at Cutha, Sippara, Borsippa, Babylon, Chilmad,
+ Bit-Digla, etc. The indefatigable monarch seems to have either rebuilt, or
+ at least repaired, almost every city and temple throughout the entire
+ country. There are said to be at least a hundred sites in the tract
+ immediately about Babylon, which give evidence, by inscribed bricks
+ bearing his legend, of the marvellous activity and energy of this king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may suspect that among the constructions of Nebuchadnezzar was another
+ great work, a work second in utility to none of those above mentioned, and
+ requiring for its completion an enormous amount of labor. This is the
+ canal called by the Arabs the <i>Kerek Saideh</i>, or canal of Saideh,
+ which they ascribe to a wife of Nebuchadnezzar, a cutting 400 miles in
+ length, which commenced at Hit on the Euphrates, and was carried along the
+ extreme western edge of the alluvium close to the Arabian frontier,
+ finally falling into the sea at the head of the Bubian creek, about twenty
+ miles to the west of the Shat el-Arab. The traces of this canal which
+ still remain indicate a work of such magnitude and difficulty that we can
+ scarcely ascribe it with probability to any monarch who has held the
+ country since Nebuchadnezzar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pallacopas, or canal of Opa (Palga Opa), which left the Euphrates at
+ Sippara (Mosaib) and ran into a great lake in the neighborhood of
+ Borsippa, whence the lands in the neighborhood were irrigated, may also
+ have been one of Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s constructions. It was an old canal, much
+ out of repair, in the time of Alexander, and was certainly the work, not
+ of the Persian conquerors, but of some native monarch anterior to Cyrus.
+ The Arabs, who call it the Nahr Abba, regard it as the oldest canal in the
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some glimpses into the private life and personal character of
+ Nebuchadnezzar are afforded us by certain of the Old Testament writers. We
+ see him in the Book of Daniel at the head of a magnificent Court,
+ surrounded by &ldquo;princes, governors, and captains, judges, treasurers,
+ councillors, and sheriffs;&rdquo; waited on by eunuchs selected with the
+ greatest care, &ldquo;well-favored&rdquo; and carefully educated; attended, whenever
+ he requires it, by a multitude of astrologers and other &ldquo;wise men,&rdquo; who
+ seek to interpret to him the will of Heaven. He is an absolute monarch,
+ disposing with a word of the lives and properties of his subjects, even
+ the highest. All offices are in his gift. He can raise a foreigner to the
+ second place in the kingdom, and even set him over the entire priestly
+ order. His wealth is enormous, for he makes of pure gold an image, or
+ obelisk, ninety feet high and nine feet broad. He is religious after a
+ sort, but wavers in his faith, sometimes acknowledging the God of the Jews
+ as the only real deity, sometimes relapsing into an idolatrous worship,
+ and forcing all his subjects to follow his example. Even then, however,
+ his polytheism is of a kind which admits of a special devotion to a
+ particular deity, who is called emphatically &ldquo;his god.&rdquo; In temper he is
+ hasty and violent, but not obstinate; his fierce resolves are taken
+ suddenly and as suddenly repented of; he is moreover capable of bursts of
+ gratitude and devotion, no less than of accesses of fury; like most
+ Orientals, he is vainglorious but he can humble himself before the
+ chastening hand of the Almighty; in his better moods he shows a spirit
+ astonishing in one of his country and time&mdash;a spirit of real piety,
+ self-condemnation, and self-abasement, which renders him one of the most
+ remarkable characters in Scripture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few touches of a darker hue must be added to this portrait of the great
+ Babylonian king from the statements of another contemporary, the prophet
+ Jeremiah. The execution of Jehoi-akim, and the putting out of Zedekiah&rsquo;s
+ eyes, though acts of considerable severity, may perhaps be regarded as
+ justified by the general practice of the age, and therefore as not
+ indicating in Nebuchadnezzar any special ferocity of disposition. But the
+ ill-treatment of Jehoiakim&rsquo;s dead body, the barbarity of murdering
+ Zedekiah&rsquo;s sons before his eyes, and the prolonged imprisonment both of
+ Zedekiah and of Jehoiachin, though the latter had only contemplated
+ rebellion, cannot be thus excused. They were unusual and unnecessary acts,
+ which tell against the monarch who authorized them, and must be considered
+ to imply a real cruelty of disposition, such as is observable in Sargon
+ and Asshur-bani-pal. Nebuchadnezzar, it is plain, was not content with
+ such a measure of severity as was needed to secure his own interests, but
+ took a pleasure in the wanton infliction of suffering on those who had
+ provoked his resentment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, we obtain from the native writer, Berosus, one amiable
+ trait which deserves a cursory mention. Nebuchadnezzar was fondly attached
+ to the Median princess who had been chosen for him as a wife by his father
+ from political motives. Not content with ordinary tokens of affection, he
+ erected, solely for her gratification, the remarkable structure which the
+ Greeks called the &ldquo;Hanging Garden.&rdquo; A native of a mountainous country,
+ Amyitis disliked the tiresome uniformity of the level alluvium, and pined
+ for the woods and hills of Media. It was to satisfy this longing by the
+ best substitute which circumstances allowed that the celebrated Garden was
+ made. Art strove to emulate nature with a certain measure of success, and
+ the lofty rocks and various trees of this wonderful Paradise, if they were
+ not a very close imitation of Median mountain scenery, were at any rate a
+ pleasant change from the natural monotony of the Babylonian plain, and
+ must have formed a grateful retreat for the Babylonian queen, whom they
+ reminded at once of her husband&rsquo;s love and of the beauty of her native
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most remarkable circumstance in Nebuchadnezzar&rsquo;s life remains to be
+ noticed. Towards the close of his reign, when his conquests and probably
+ most of his great works were completed, in the midst of complete
+ tranquillity and prosperity, a sudden warning was sent him. He dreamt a
+ strange dream, and when he sought to know its meaning, the Prophet Daniel
+ was inspired to tell him that it portended his removal from the kingly
+ office for the space of seven years, in consequence of a curious and very
+ unusual kind of madness. This malady, which is not unknown to physicians,
+ has been termed &ldquo;Lycanthropy.&rdquo; It consists in the belief that one is not a
+ man but a beast, in the disuse of language, the rejection of all ordinary
+ human food, and sometimes in the loss of the erect posture and a
+ preference for walking on all fours. Within a year of the time that he
+ received the warning, Nebuchadnezzar was smitten. The great king became a
+ wretched maniac. Allowed to indulge in his distempered fancy, he eschewed
+ human habitations, lived in the open air night and day, fed on herbs,
+ disused clothing, and became covered with a rough coat of hair. His
+ subjects generally, it is probable, were not allowed to know of his
+ condition, although they could not but be aware that he was suffering from
+ some terrible malady. The queen most likely held the reins of power, and
+ carried on the government in his name. The dream had been interpreted to
+ mean that the lycanthropy would not be permanent; and even the date of
+ recovery had been announced, only with a certain ambiguity. The
+ Babylonians were thereby encouraged to await events, without taking any
+ steps that would have involved them in difficulties if the malady ceased.
+ And their faith and patience met with a reward. After suffering
+ obscuration for the space of seven years, suddenly the king&rsquo;s intellect
+ returned to him. His recovery was received with joy by his Court. Lords
+ and councillors gathered about him. He once more took the government into
+ his own hands, issued his proclamations, and performed the other functions
+ of royalty. He was now an old man, and his reign does not seem to have
+ been much prolonged; but &ldquo;the glory of his kingdon,&rdquo; his &ldquo;honor and
+ brightness&rdquo; returned; his last days were as brilliant as his first: his
+ sun set in an unclouded sky, shorn of none of the rays that had given
+ splendor to its noonday. Nebuchadnezzar expired at Babylon in the
+ forty-fourth year of his reign, B.C. 561, after an illness of no long
+ duration. He was probably little short of eighty years old at his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The successor of Nebuchadnezzar was his son Evil-Mero-dach, who reigned
+ only two years, and of whom very little is known. We may expect that the
+ marvellous events of his father&rsquo;s life, which are recorded in the Book of
+ Daniel, had made a deep impression upon him, and that he was thence
+ inclined to favor the persons, and perhaps the religion, of the Jews. One
+ of his first acts was to release the unfortunate Jehoiachin from the
+ imprisonment in which he had languished for thirty-five years, and to
+ treat him with kindness and respect. He not only recognized his royal
+ rank, but gave him precedence over all the captive kings resident at
+ Babylon. Josephus says that he even admitted Jehoiachin into the number of
+ his most intimate friends. Perhaps he may have designed him some further
+ advancement, and may in other respects have entertained projects which
+ seemed strange and alarming to his subjects. At any rate he had been but
+ two years upon the throne when a conspiracy was formed against him; he was
+ accused of lawlessness and intemperance; his own brother-in-law,
+ Neriglissar, the husband of a daughter of Nebuchadnezzar, headed the
+ malcontents; and Evil-Merodach lost his life with his crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neriglissar, the successful conspirator, was at once acknowledged king. He
+ is probably identical with the &ldquo;Nergal-shar-ezer, Rab-Mag,&rdquo; of Jeremiah,
+ who occupied a prominent position among the Babylonian nobles left to
+ press the siege of Jerusalem when Nebuchadnezzar retired to Riblah. The
+ title of &ldquo;Rab-Mag,&rdquo; is one that he bears upon his bricks. It is doubtful
+ what exactly his office was; for we have no reason to believe that there
+ were at this time any Magi at Babylon; but it was certainly an ancient and
+ very high dignity of which even kings might be proud. It is remarkable
+ that Neriglissar calls himself the son of Bel-sum-iskun, &ldquo;king of Babylon&rdquo;&mdash;a
+ monarch whose name does not appear in Ptolemy&rsquo;s list, but who is probably
+ to be identified with a chieftain so called, who assumed the royal title
+ in the troubles which preceded the fall of the Assyrian Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During his short reign of four years, or rather three years and a few
+ months, Neriglissar had not time to distinguish himself by many exploits.
+ So far as appears, he was at peace with all his neighbors, and employed
+ his time principally in the construction of the Western Palace at Babylon,
+ which was a large building placed at one corner of a fortified inclosure,
+ directly opposite the ancient royal residence, and abutting on the
+ Euphrates. If the account which Diodorus gives of this palace be not a
+ gross exaggeration of the truth, it must have been a magnificent erection,
+ elaborately ornamented with painting and sculpture in the best style of
+ Babylonian art, though in size it may have been inferior to the old
+ residence of the kings on the other side of the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neriglissar reigned from B.C. 559 to B.C. 556, and dying a natural death
+ in the last-named year, left his throne to his son, Laborosoarchod, or
+ Labossoracus. This prince, who was a mere boy, and therefore quite unequal
+ to the task of governing a great empire in critical times, was not allowed
+ to retain the crown many months. Accused by those about him&mdash;whether
+ justly or unjustly we cannot say&mdash;of giving many indications of a bad
+ disposition, he was deposed and put to death by torture. With him power
+ passed from the House of Nabopolassar, which had held the throne for just
+ seventy years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the death of Laborosoarchod the conspirators selected one of their
+ number, a certain Nabonadius or Nabannidochus, and invested him with the
+ sovereignty. He was in no way related to the late monarch, and his claim
+ to succeed must have been derived mainly from the part which he had played
+ in the conspiracy. But still he was a personage of some rank, for his
+ father had, like Neriglissar, held the important office of Rab Mag. It is
+ probable that one of his first steps on ascending the throne was to
+ connect himself by marriage with the royal house which had preceded him in
+ the kingdom. Either the mother of the late king Laborosoarchod, and widow
+ of Neriglissar, or possibly some other daughter of Nebuchadnezzar, was
+ found willing to unite her fortune with those of the new sovereign, and
+ share the dangers and the dignity of his position. Such a union
+ strengthened the hold of the reigning monarch on the allegiance of his
+ subjects, and tended still more to add stability to his dynasty. For as
+ the issue of such a marriage would join in one the claims of both royal
+ houses, he would be sure to receive the support of all parties in the
+ state. Very shortly after the accession of Nabonadius (B.C. 555) he
+ received an embassy from the far north-west. An important revolution had
+ occurred on the eastern frontier of Babylonia three years before, in the
+ reign of Neriglissar; but its effects only now began to make themselves
+ felt among the neighboring nations. Had Cyrus, on taking the crown,
+ adopted the policy of Astyages, the substitution of Persia for Media as
+ the ruling Arian nation would have been a matter of small account. But
+ there can be little doubt that he really entered at once on a career of
+ conquest, Lydia, at any rate, felt herself menaced by the new power, and
+ seeing the danger which threatened the other monarchies of the time, if
+ they allowed the great Arian kingdom to attack them severally with her
+ full force, proposed a league whereby the common enemy might, she thought,
+ be resisted with success. Ambassadors seem to have been sent from Sardis
+ to Babylon in the very year in which Nabonadius became king. He therefore
+ had at once to decide whether he would embrace the offer made him, and
+ uniting with Lydia and Egypt in a league against Persia, make that power
+ his enemy, or refuse the proffered alliance and trust to the gratitude of
+ Cyrus for the future security of his kingdom. It would be easy to imagine
+ the arguments pro and contra which presented themselves to his mind at
+ this conjuncture; but as they would be destitute of a historical
+ foundation, it is perhaps best to state simply the decision at which he is
+ known to have arrived. This was an acceptance of the Lydian offer.
+ Nabonadius consented to join the proposed league; and a treaty was
+ probably soon afterwards concluded between the three powers whereby they
+ united in an alliance offensive and defensive against the Persians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Knowing that he had provoked a powerful enemy by this bold act, and
+ ignorant how soon he might be called upon to defend his kingdom, from the
+ entire force of his foe, which might be suddenly hurled against him almost
+ at any moment, Nabonadius seems to have turned his attention at once to
+ providing means of defence. The works ascribed by Herodotus to a queen,
+ Nitocris, whom he makes the mother of Nabonadius (Labynetus) must be
+ regarded as in reality constructions of that monarch himself, undertaken
+ with the object of protecting Babylon from Cyrus. They consisted in part
+ of defences within the city, designed apparently to secure it against an
+ enemy who should enter by the river, in part of hydraulic works intended
+ to obstruct the advances of an army by the usual route. The river had
+ hitherto flowed in its natural bed through the middle of the town.
+ Nabonadius confined the stream by a brick embankment carried the whole way
+ along both banks, after which he built on the top of the embankment a wall
+ of a considerable height, pierced at intervals by gateways, in which were
+ set gates of bronze. He likewise made certain cuttings, reservoirs, and
+ sluices at some distance from Babylon towards the north, which were to be
+ hindrances to an enemy&rsquo;s march, though in what way is not very apparent.
+ Some have supposed that besides these works there was further built at the
+ same time a great wall which extended entirely across the tract between
+ the two rivers&mdash;a huge barrier a hundred feet high and twenty thick&mdash;meant,
+ like the Roman walls in Britain and the great wall of China, to be
+ insurmountable by an unskillful foe; but there is ground for suspecting
+ that this belief is ill-founded, having for its sole basis a misconception
+ of Xenophon&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nabonadius appears to have been allowed ample time to carry out to the
+ full his system of defences, and to complete all his preparations. The
+ precipitancy of Croesus, who plunged into a war with Persia single-handed,
+ asking no aid from his allies, and the promptitude of Cyrus, who allowed
+ him no opportunity of recovering from his first false step, had prevented
+ Nabonadius from coming into actual collision with Persia in the early part
+ of his reign. The defeat of Croesus in the battle of Pteria, the siege of
+ Sardis, and its capture, followed so rapidly on the first commencement of
+ hostilities, that whatever his wishes may have been, Nabonadius had it not
+ in his power to give any help to his rash ally. Actual war was thus
+ avoided at this time; and no collision having occurred, Cyrus could defer
+ an attack on the great kingdom of the south until he had consolidated his
+ power in the north and the northeast, which he rightly regarded as of the
+ last importance. Thus fourteen years intervened between the capture of
+ Sardis by the Persian arms and the commencement of the expedition against
+ Babylon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When at last it was rumored that the Persian king had quitted Ecbatana
+ (B.C. 539) and commenced his march to the south-west, Nabonadius received
+ the tidings with indifference. His defences were completed: his city was
+ amply provisioned; if the enemy should defeat him in the open field, he
+ might retire behind his walls, and laugh to scorn all attempts to reduce
+ his capital either by blockade or storm. It does not appear to have
+ occurred to him that it was possible to protect his territory. With a
+ broad, deep, and rapid river directly interposed between him and his foe,
+ with a network of canals spread far and wide over his country, with an
+ almost inexhaustible supply of human labor at his command for the
+ construction of such dikes, walls, or cuttings as he should deem
+ advisable, Nabonadius might, one would have thought, have aspired to save
+ his land from invasion, or have disputed inch by inch his enemy&rsquo;s advance
+ towards the capital. But such considerations have seldom had much force
+ with Orientals, whose notions of war and strategy are even now of the
+ rudest and most primitive description. To measure one&rsquo;s strength as
+ quickly as possible with that of one&rsquo;s foe, to fight one great pitched
+ battle in order to decide the question of superiority in the field, and
+ then, if defeated, either to surrender or to retire behind walls, has been
+ the ordinary conception of a commander&rsquo;s duties in the East from the time
+ of the Ramesside kings to our own day. No special blame therefore attaches
+ to Nabonadius for his neglect. He followed the traditional policy of
+ Oriental monarchs in the course which he took. And his subjects had less
+ reason to complain of his resolution than most others, since the many
+ strongholds in Babylonia must have afforded them a ready refuge, and the
+ great fortified district within which Babylon itself stood must have been
+ capable of accommodating with ease the whole native population of the
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we may trust Herodotus, the invader, having made all his preparations
+ and commenced his march, came to a sudden pause midway between Ecbatana
+ and Babylon. One of the sacred white horses, which drew the chariot of
+ Ormazd, had been drowned in crossing a river; and Cyrus had thereupon
+ desisted from his march, and, declaring that he would revenge himself on
+ the insolent stream, had set his soldiers to disperse its waters into 360
+ channels. This work employed him during the whole summer and autumn; nor
+ was it till another spring had come that he resumed his expedition. To the
+ Babylonians such a pause must have appeared like irresolution. They must
+ have suspected that the invader had changed his mind and would not venture
+ across the Tigris. If the particulars of the story reached them, they
+ probably laughed at the monarch who vented his rage on inanimate nature,
+ while he let his enemies escape scot free.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyrus, however, had a motive for his proceedings which will appear in the
+ sequel. Having wintered on the banks of the Gyndes in a mild climate,
+ where tents would have been quite a sufficient protection to his army, he
+ put his troops in motion at the commencement of spring, crossed the Tigris
+ apparently unopposed, and soon came in sight of the capital. Here he found
+ the Babylonian army drawn out to meet him under the command of Nabonadius
+ himself, who had resolved to try the chance of a battle. An engagement
+ ensued, of which we possess no details; our informants simply tell us that
+ the Babylonian monarch was completely defeated, and that, while most of
+ his army sought safety within the walls of the capital, he himself with a
+ small body of troops threw himself into Borsippa, an important town lying
+ at a short distance from Babylon towards the south-west. It is not easy to
+ see the exact object of this movement. Perhaps Nabonadius thought that the
+ enemy would thereby be obliged to divide his army, which might then more
+ easily be defeated; perhaps he imagined that by remaining without the
+ walls he might be able to collect such a force among his subjects and
+ allies as would compel the beleaguering army to withdraw. Or, possibly, he
+ merely followed an instinct of self-preservation, and fearing that the
+ soldiers of Cyrus might enter Babylon with his own, if he fled thither,
+ sought refuge in another city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It might have been supposed that his absence would have produced anarchy
+ and confusion in the capital; but a step which he had recently taken with
+ the object of giving stability to his throne rendered the preservation of
+ order tolerably easy. At the earliest possible moment&mdash;probably when
+ he was about fourteen&mdash;he had associated with him in the government
+ his son, Belshazzar, or Bel-shar-uzur, the grandson of the great
+ Nebuchadnezzar. This step, taken most likely with a view to none but
+ internal dangers, was now found exceedingly convenient for the purposes of
+ the war. In his father&rsquo;s absence Belshazzar took the direction of affairs
+ within the city, and met and foiled for a considerable time all the
+ assaults of the Persians. He was young and inexperienced, but he had the
+ counsels of the queen-mother to guide and support him, as well as those of
+ the various lords and officers of the court. So well did he manage the
+ defence that after a while Cyrus despaired, and as a last resource
+ ventured on a stratagem in which it was clear that he must either succeed
+ or perish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Withdrawing the greater part of his army from the vicinity of the city,
+ and leaving behind him only certain corps of observation, Cyrus marched
+ away up the course of the Euphrates for a certain distance, and there
+ proceeded to make a vigorous use of the spade. His soldiers could now
+ appreciate the value of the experience which they had gained by dispersing
+ the Gyndes, and perceive that the summer and autumn of the preceding year
+ had not been wasted. They dug a channel or channels from the Euphrates, by
+ means of which a great portion of its water would be drawn off, and hoped
+ in this way to render the natural course of the river fordable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When all was prepared, Cyrus determined to wait for the arrival of a
+ certain festival, during which the whole population were wont to engage in
+ drinking and revelling, and then silently in the dead of night to turn the
+ water of the river and make his attack. It fell out as he hoped and
+ wished. The festival was held with even greater pomp and splendor than
+ usual; for Belshazzar, with the natural insolence of youth, to mark his
+ contempt of the besieging army, abandoned himself wholly to the delights
+ of the season, and himself entertained a thousand lords in his palace.
+ Elsewhere the rest of the population was occupied in feasting and dancing.
+ Drunken riot and mad excitement held possession of the town; the siege was
+ forgotten; ordinary precautions were neglected. Following the example of
+ their king, the Babylonians gave themselves up for the night to orgies in
+ which religious frenzy and drunken excess formed a strange and revolting
+ medley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, outside the city, in silence and darkness, the Persians watched
+ at the two points where the Euphrates entered and left the walls.
+ Anxiously they noted the gradual sinking of the water in the river-bed;
+ still more anxiously they watched to see if those within the walls would
+ observe the suspicious circumstance and sound an alarm through the town.
+ Should such an alarm be given, all their labors would be lost. If, when
+ they entered the river-bed, they found the river-walls manned and the
+ river-gates fast-locked, they would be indeed &ldquo;caught in a trap.&rdquo;
+ Enfiladed on both sides by an enemy whom they could neither see nor reach,
+ they would be overwhelmed and destroyed by his missiles before they could
+ succeed in making their escape. But, as they watched, no sounds of alarm
+ reached them&mdash;only a confused noise of revel and riot, which showed
+ that the unhappy townsmen were quite unconscious of the approach of
+ danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last shadowy forms began to emerge from the obscurity of the deep
+ river-bed, and on the landing-places opposite the river-gates scattered
+ clusters of men grew into solid columns&mdash;the undefended gateways were
+ seized&mdash;a war-shout was raised&mdash;the alarm was taken and spread&mdash;and
+ swift runners started off to &ldquo;show the King of Babylon that his city was
+ taken at one end.&rdquo; In the darkness and confusion of the night a terrible
+ massacre ensued. The drunken revellers could make no resistance. The king
+ paralyzed with fear at the awful handwriting upon the wall, which too late
+ had warned him of his peril, could do nothing even to check the progress
+ of the assailants, who carried all before them everywhere. Bursting into
+ the palace, a band of Persians made their way to the presence of the
+ monarch, and slew him on the scene of his impious revelry. Other bands
+ carried fire and sword through the town. When morning came, Cyrus found
+ himself undisputed master of the city, which, if it had not despised his
+ efforts, might with the greatest ease have baffled them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war, however, was not even yet at an end. Nabonadius still held
+ Borsippa, and, if allowed to remain unmolested, might have gradually
+ gathered strength and become once more a formidable foe. Cyrus, therefore,
+ having first issued his orders that the outer fortifications of Babylon
+ should be dismantled, proceeded to complete his conquest by laying siege
+ to the town where he knew that Nabonadius had taken refuge. That monarch,
+ however, perceiving that resistance would be vain, did not wait till
+ Borsippa was invested, but on the approach of his enemy surrendered
+ himself. Cyrus rewarded his submission by kind and liberal treatment. Not
+ only did he spare his life, but (if we may trust Abydenus) he conferred on
+ him the government of the important province of Carmania.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus perished the Babylonian empire. If we seek the causes of its fall, we
+ shall find them partly in its essential military inferiority to the
+ kingdom that had recently grown up upon its borders, partly in the
+ accidental circumstance that its ruler at the time of the Persian attack
+ was a man of no great capacity. Had Nebuchadnezzar himself, or a prince of
+ his mental calibre, been the contemporary of Cyrus, the issue of the
+ contest might have been doubtful. Babylonia possessed naturally vast
+ powers of resistance&mdash;powers which, had they been made use of to the
+ utmost, might have tired out the patience of the Persians. That lively,
+ active, but not over-persevering people would scarcely have maintained a
+ siege with the pertinacity of the Babylonians themselves or of the
+ Egyptians. If the stratagem of Cyrus had failed&mdash;and its success
+ depended wholly on the Babylonians exercising no vigilance&mdash;the
+ capture of the town would have been almost impossible. Babylon was too
+ large to be blockaded; its walls were too lofty to be scaled, and too
+ massive to be battered down by the means possessed by the ancients. Mining
+ in the soft alluvial soil would have been dangerous work, especially as
+ the town ditch was deep and supplied with abundant water from the
+ Euphrates. Cyrus, had he failed in his night attack, would probably have
+ at once raised the siege; and Babylonian independence might perhaps in
+ that case have been maintained down to the time of Alexander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even thus, however, the &ldquo;Empire&rdquo; would not have been continued. So soon as
+ it became evident that the Babylonians were no match for the Persians in
+ the field, their authority over the subject nations was at an end. The
+ Susianians, the tribes of the middle Euphrates, the Syrians, the
+ Phoenicians, the Jews, the Idumseans, the Ammonites and Moabites, would
+ have gravitated to the stronger power, even if the attack of Cyrus on
+ Babylon itself had been repulsed. For the conquests of Cyrus in Asia
+ Minor, the Oxus region, and Afghanistan, had completely destroyed the
+ balance of power in Western Asia, and given to Persia a preponderance both
+ in men and in resources against which the cleverest and most energetic of
+ Babylonian princes would have struggled in vain. Persia must in any case
+ have absorbed all the tract between Mount Zagros and the Mediterranean,
+ except Babylonia Proper; and thus the successful defence of Babylon would
+ merely have deprived the Persian Empire of a province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In its general character the Babylonian Empire was little more than a
+ reproduction of the Assyrian. The same loose organization of the provinces
+ under native kings rather than satraps almost universally prevailed, with
+ the same duties on the part of suzerain and subjects and the same results
+ of ever-recurring revolt and re-conquest. Similar means were employed
+ under both empires to check and discourage rebellion&mdash;mutilations and
+ executions of chiefs, pillage of the rebellious region, and wholesale
+ deportation of its population. Babylon, equally with Assyria, failed to
+ win the affections of the subject nations, and, as a natural result,
+ received no help from them in her hour of need. Her system was to exhaust
+ and oppress the conquered races for the supposed benefit of the
+ conquerors, and to impoverish the provinces for the adornment and
+ enrichment of the capital. The wisest of her monarch&rsquo;s thought it enough
+ to construct works of public utility in Babylonia Proper, leaving the
+ dependent countries to themselves, and doing nothing to develop their
+ resources. This selfish system was, like most selfishness, short-sighted;
+ it alienated those whom it would have been true policy to conciliate and
+ win. When the time of peril came, the subject nations were no source of
+ strength to the menaced empire, On the contrary, it would seem that some
+ even turned against her and made common cause with the assailants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Babylonian civilization differed in many respects from Assyrian, to which
+ however it approached more nearly than to any other known type. Its
+ advantages over Assyrian were in its greater originality, its superior
+ literary character, and its comparative width and flexibility. Babylonia
+ seems to have been the source from which Assyria drew her learning, such
+ as it was, her architecture, the main ideas of her mimetic art, her
+ religious notions, her legal forms, and a vast number of her customs and
+ usages. But Babylonia herself, so far as we know, drew her stores from no
+ foreign country. Hers was apparently the genius which excogitated an
+ alphabet&mdash;worked out the simpler problems of arithmetic&mdash;invented
+ implements for measuring the lapse of time&mdash;conceived the idea of
+ raising enormous structures with the poorest of all materials, clay&mdash;discovered
+ the art of polishing, boring, and engraving gems&mdash;reproduced with
+ truthfulness the outlines of human and animal forms&mdash;attained to high
+ perfection in textile fabrics&mdash;studied with success the motions of
+ the heavenly bodies&mdash;conceived of grammar as a science&mdash;elaborated
+ a system of law&mdash;saw the value of an exact chronology&mdash;in almost
+ every branch of science made a beginning, thus rendering it comparatively
+ easy for other nations to proceed with the superstructure. To Babylonia,
+ far more than to Egypt, we owe the art and learning of the Greeks. It was
+ from the East, not from Egypt, that Greece derived her architecture, her
+ sculpture, her science, her philosophy, her mathematical knowledge&mdash;in
+ a word, her intellectual life. And Babylon was the source to which the
+ entire stream of Eastern civilization may be traced. It is scarcely too
+ much to say that, but for Babylon, real civilization might not even yet
+ have dawned upon the earth. Mankind might never have advanced beyond that
+ spurious and false form of it which in Egypt, India, China, Japan, Mexico,
+ and Peru, contented the aspirations of the species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_APPE" id="link2H_APPE">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A. STANDARD INSCRIPTION OF NEBUCHADNEZZAR.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Inscription begins with the various titles of Nebuchadnezzar. It then
+ contains prayers and invocations to the Gods, Merodach and Nebo. The
+ extent of N.&lsquo;s power is spoken of&mdash;it reaches from one sea to the
+ other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An account is then given of the wonders of Babylon, viz.:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The great temple of Merodach. (The mound of Babil is the tower or
+ ziggurat of this.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The Borsippa temple (or Birs).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Various other temples in Babylon and Borsippa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The subjoined description of the city follows: &ldquo;The double inclosure which
+ Nabopolassar my father had made but not completed, I finished.
+ Nabopolassar made its ditch. With two long embankments of brick and mortar
+ he bound its bed. He made the embankment of the Arahha. He lined the other
+ side of the Euphrates with brick. He made a bridge (?) over the Euphrates,
+ but did not finish its buttresses (?). From... (the name of a place) he
+ made with bricks burnt as hard as stones, by the help of the great Lord
+ Merodach, a way (for) a branch of the Shimat to the waters of the
+ Yapur-Shapu, the great reservoir of Babylon, opposite to the gate of Nin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The <i>Ingur-Bel</i> and the <i>Nimiti-Bel</i>&mdash;the great double
+ wall of Babylon&mdash;I finished. With two long embankments of brick and
+ mortar I built the sides of its ditch. I joined it on with that which my
+ father had made. I strengthened the city. Across the river to the west I
+ built the wall of Babylon with brick. The Yapur-Shapu-the reservoir of
+ Babylon&mdash;by the grace of Merodach I filled completely full of water.
+ With bricks burnt as hard as stones, and with bricks in huge masses like
+ mountains (?), the Yapur-Shapu, from the gate of Mula as far as Nana, who
+ is the protectress of her votaries, by the grace of his godship (i.e.
+ Merodach) I strengthened. With that which my father had made I joined it.
+ I made the way of Nana, the protectress of her votaries. The great gates
+ of the Ingur-Bel and the Nimiti-Bel-the reservoir of Babylon, at the time
+ of the flood (lit. of fulness), inundated them. These gates I raised.
+ Against the waters their foundations with brick and mortar I built. [Here
+ follows a description of the gates, with various architectural details, an
+ account of the decorations, hangings, etc.] For the delight of mankind I
+ filled the reservoir. Behold! besides the Ingur-Bel, the impregnable
+ fortification of Babylon. I constructed inside Babylon on the eastern side
+ of the river a fortification such as no king had ever made before me,
+ viz., a long rampart, 4000 ammas square, as an extra defence. I excavated
+ the ditch: with brick and mortar I bound its bed; a long rampart at its
+ head (?) I strongly built. I adorned its gates. The folding doors and the
+ pillars I plated with copper. Against presumptuous enemies, who were
+ hostile to the men of Babylon, great waters, like the waters of the ocean,
+ I made use of abundantly. Their depths were like the depths of the vast
+ ocean. I did not allow the waters to overflow, but the fulness of their
+ floods I caused to flow on, restraining them with a brick embankment....
+ Thus I completely made strong the defences of Babylon. May it last
+ forever!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Here follows a similar account of works at Borsippa.] &ldquo;In Babylon&mdash;the
+ city which is the delight of my eyes, and which I have glorified&mdash;when
+ the waters were in flood, they inundated the foundations of the great
+ palace called Taprati-nisi, or &lsquo;the Wonder of Mankind;&rsquo; (a palace) with
+ many chambers and lofty towers; the high-place of Royalty; (situated) in
+ the land of Babylon, and in the middle of Babylon; stretching from the
+ Ingur-Bel to the bed of the Shebil, the eastern canal, (and) from the bank
+ of the Sippara river, to the water of the Yapur-Shapu; which Nabopolassar
+ my father built with brick and raised up; when the reservoir of Babylon
+ was full, the gates of this palace were flooded. I raised the mound of
+ brick on which it was built, and made smooth its platform. I cut off the
+ floods of the water, and the foundations (of the palace) I protected
+ against the water with bricks and mortar: and I finished it completely.
+ Long beams I set up to support it: with pillars and beams plated with
+ copper and strengthened with iron I built up its gates. Silver and gold,
+ and precious stones whose names were almost unknown [here follow several
+ unknown names of objects, treasures of the palace], I stored up inside,
+ and placed there the treasure-house of my kingdom. Four years (?), the
+ seat of my kingdom in the city..., which....did not rejoice (my) heart. In
+ all my dominions I did not build a high-place of power; the precious
+ treasures of my kingdom I did not lay up. In Babylon, buildings for myself
+ and the honor of my kingdom I did not lay out. In the worship of Merodach
+ my lord, the joy of my heart (?), in Babylon, the city of his sovereignty
+ and the seat of my empire, I did not sing his praises (?), and I did not
+ furnish his altars (i.e. with victims), nor did I clear out the canals.&rdquo;
+ [Here follow further negative clauses.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As a further defence in war, at the Ingur-Bel, the impregnable outer
+ wall, the rampart of the Babylonians&mdash;with two strong lines of brick
+ and mortar I made a strong fort, 400 ammas square inside the Nimiti-Bel,
+ the inner defence of the Babylonians. Masonry of brick within them (the
+ lines) I constructed. With the palace of my father I connected it. In a
+ happy month and on an auspicious day its foundations I laid in the earth
+ like.... I completely finished its top. In fifteen days I completed it,
+ and made it the high-place of my kingdom. [Here follows a description of
+ the ornamentation of the palace.] A strong fort of brick and mortar in
+ strength I constructed. Inside the brick fortification another great
+ fortification of long stones, of the size of great mountains, I made. Like
+ Shedim I raised up its head. And this building I raised for a wonder; for
+ the defence of the people I constructed it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ B. ON THE MEANINGS OF BABYLONIAN NAMES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The names of the Babylonians, like those of the Assyrians, were
+ significant. Generally, if not always, they were composed of at least two
+ elements. These might be a noun in the nominative case with a verb
+ following it, a noun in the nominative with a participle in apposition, or
+ a word meaning &ldquo;servant&rdquo; followed by the name of a god. Under the first
+ class came such names as &ldquo;Bel-ipni&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Bel has made (me)&rdquo;&mdash;from
+ Bel,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0024" id="linkimage-0024">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/page0263.jpg" width="100%" alt="Page 263 " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0025" id="linkimage-0025">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/page0264.jpg" width="100%" alt="Page 264 " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0026" id="linkimage-0026">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/page0265.jpg" width="100%" alt="Page 265 " />
+ </div>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
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